#EndSARS Victims, ASUU Must Be Provided For in 2021 Budget – Gbajabiamila
Speaker of
the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, has said he will not sign the
2021 Appropriation Bill presently before the National Assembly if provisions
are not made for the compensation of the families of victims of police
brutality in the last decade.
He also said
he would also not sign the budget if the implementation of the agreement between
the Academic Staff Union of Universities and the Federal Government is not
captured by the budget.
It common
practice for the Speaker of the House and President of the Senate sign bills
passed by the National Assembly before they are transmitted to the President
for assent.
Speaking at
the opening of plenary on Tuesday, the Speaker notes that the #EndSARS protests
“have gotten more serious” with pockets of violence in parts of the country.
According to him, the protests “seem to have been hijacked” by those who have a
different agenda.
Gbajabiamila
noted that the Federal Government, through the National Human Rights
Commission, had set up a panel of enquiry to take complaints from victims of
police brutality.
According to
the Speaker, none of these have convinced the agitators to suspend the
protests.
He pointed
out that expectations from the ruling class were high, stating that, “Our
people expect action and we just deliver.”
Gbajabiamila
recalled that the House, after debating the issues with the Nigeria Police
Force and the #EndSARS protests, met with the Nigerian Bar Association last
week.
He said the
President of NBA, Olumide Apata, had also set up a panel led by Prof Deji
Adekunle (SAN) to work with the House on how to amend and create laws to reform
the police.
The Speaker
also disclosed that the House is considering the establishment of an independent body that investigates and recommends errant security operatives for
sanction and prosecution. “The police cannot be above the citizens…and above
the law,” he stated.
While
threatening to withhold his signature to the appropriation bill, Gbajabiamila
disclosed that he would be leading a delegation of lawmakers to pay condolence
visits to families of some of those killed by the police, stressing that they
would be honoured after the visits.
The Speaker,
however, urged #EndSARS protesters to be cautious in handling the matter. He
partly said, “Don’t let your righteous cause be hijacked…and bring our nation
to its needs. This is the time to move your agitation from the streets.”
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