Senate seeks sack of absentee heads of MDAs 

 

The Senate Thursday called on President Bola Tinubu to sack any head of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) who refused to physically attend on going interactive sessions on projections made in the 2024 – 2026 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP).

Reading the riot act at the formal opening of the interactive session jointly organised by its committees on Finance, Appropriations, National Planning, Local and Foreign Debts, the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, said any heads of agency who refuses to attend the Session, should be sacked by President Bola Tinubu.

He said: “If  you dont plan how to succeed then you have planned to fail. I, therefore, remind our committee that  any serious appointee or any head of any agency that is interested in the success of President Bola Tinubu’s administration ought  to be here.

“The  Chairman of the lead committee (Finance), should give me the list of all the Heads of Agencies that you invited who have failed to show up in this session, this is the beginning of their failure in their various offices. 

“Any head of agency that sends representation here is not a serious person and therefore,  the President must take a second look at such a person’ s appointment.

“It is not a threat but the truth. I shelved even my appointment to appear in Owerri today for the  final rally of my party and all other schedules that I have to make sure that I appear so that we can strategise on how we can succeed.”

He added that borrowings for Nigeria , cannot be totally avoided but the current trend cannot be sustained , the very reason why at this session, strategies must be mapped out by the committees and  relevant agencies on more revenue generation for government. 

According to him, the 2024-2026 MTEF/FSP is being considered at a time that events at the global scene and locally, are putting massive negative financial and socio- economic pressure on Nigeria from most development indices.

“Internationally, the intractable Russian-Ukraine war and the sudden Israeli-Palestine war are having international economic repercussions that have consequences for our economic outlook. In addition, we are in the throes of the immediate effects of needed reform in our foreign exchange system and the equally needed removal of subsidy on petroleum products. 

“Couple with the security challenges confronting the nation, there is no doubt that we must be painstaking and bold in economic projections and policies to stimulate employment and economic growth.”