Former
President Olusegun Obasanjo has said it has become imperative to review
the laws establishing the local government with the aim of checking the
excesses of state governments regarding the running of the councils.
Obasanjo argued that reviewing the council laws would
put an end to the current situation whereby the state governments are
usually accused of “ambushing” funds allocated to the councils.
The former president said this when the National
Executive members of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria led
by its National President, Nwabueze Okafor, visited him in Abeokuta on
Friday.
He added that state governments lacked the legal
backing to carry out such unconstitutional process of deducting funds
from the councils’ allocation.
He said, “It is the states that will be sitting on
the local government money without recourse to their legislature and
appropriation process. Therefore, they have to get their money too.
“Since the National Assembly is talking about
constitution amendments, may be it is also important to talk about
amending the local government laws so that there is no means or way the
states will ambush the local government money and there will be also how
we can call the local government to order; how they can be called to
account, to be held responsible.”
Obasanjo, whose military regime promulgated the Local
Government Administration Laws in 1976, also expressed regret that the
essence of creating the third tier of government had been defeated with
recent events.
He added, “When we brought the reform nationally, we
then said it is the third tier of government in Nigeria. What we are
saying in other word is that the local government is the closest
government to the people.
“Unfortunately, the adjustments followed, people
started asking for local government in their backyards. The military
succumbed and what we have is that they could not be able to deliver.”
The ALGON president stated that Obasanjo remained the
father of local government administration in the country having
spearheaded the 1976 local government reforms.
Okafor said, “This was again manifested in the
creation of ALGON in 1999 when you were democratically elected as a
civilian President.”
Meanwhile, Forum of State Chairmen of the Conference
of Nigerian Political Parties, South-South Zone, has called on the
National Assembly to make proper legislation that would grant the
autonomy to local government administration in the country.
In a communiqué issued in Port Harcourt shortly after
a meeting of the CNPP chairmen on Saturday, the forum explained that
such legislation would encourage development at the local government
level.
The communiqué signed by signed by the Rivers State
CNPP Chairman, Dr. Manaidi Dagogo-Jack, his counterpart from Akwa Ibom
State, Mr. Linus Udofia, and four others took exception to the
state/local government joint allocation account supervised by state
governments.
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