“We didn’t diversify
the economy or invest in the real sectors of the economy,” Mr Lawan said at a
press conference on Sunday, ahead of the ninth Assembly’s first year in office.
“Now we’ve come to a
point where we have to address the infrastructural gap. We don’t have the
money. If you don’t have the resources and still need these projects, will you
abandon them because you want to run away from taking loans?”
Mr Lawan was
reacting to the controversies that have trailed the approvals of, at first, the
$22.7 billion by the National Assembly, and then, the $5.513 billion external
loans by the Senate.
The Senate President
said the ripple effects the coronavirus pandemic has had on the nation’s
economy, which might lead to “over 20 million job losses,” were reasons the
legislature passed the president’s requests.
“We approved the
loans to ensure that our infrastructural development continues,’’ Punch
Newspaper quoted him saying.
Meanwhile, Mr Lawan
said the insecurity challenges in the country have persisted due to
international politics, which he said slows down efforts to acquire
sophisticated machineries needed by the security agencies to do their jobs.
“To some extent, we
are suffering from international politics. I know that in our efforts to try to
buy spare parts for their jets, they may write to a certain foreign government
and it will take six to nine months while another country will write to the
same government and maybe (get) it in one or two months.
“Also, we need more
resources for security. By resources I don’t mean just money, we need more
personnel for the armed forces. We need more personnel for the police, Nigerian
Immigration Service and almost all the agencies and paramilitary as well.’’
The Senate President
further said the leadership of the National Assembly is poised to meet with the
electoral umpire, INEC, on the proposed electronic voting starting from 2022.
“This is something
we need to sit down with INEC. We believe that the electoral environment should
be dynamic. Anything that will make it possible for elections to hold and
outcomes to have the confidence of voters; it should receive our attention,” he
told reporters.
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