President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President
Yemi Osinbajo have declared their assets to the Code
of Conduct Bureau as required by the Constitution
but failed to make the contents public.
The head of Buhari’s media team, Garba Shehu, in a
statement on Saturday, said the President and the
Vice President submitted their assets declaration
forms separately on Thursday.
Shehu added that the CCB, through its Chairman,
Sam Saba, on Friday acknowledged the receipt of the
forms.
He gave Buhari’s declaration identity number as
“President: 000001/2015.”
Shehu, however, did not disclose the contents of the
assets declaration forms.
“By declaring their assets, President Buhari and Vice
President Osinbajo may have not only fulfilled the
requirements of the Nigerian Constitution, but also
fulfilled the first of their many campaign promises.
“While seeking election into the highest office in the
land, the President had promised Nigerians that he
would publicly declare his assets as soon as he took
over government,” he wrote.
The Nigerian Constitution states in Chapter VI
Section 140 that a person elected to the Office of the
President shall not begin to perform the functions of
that office until he has declared his assets and
liabilities as prescribed in the Constitution.
Though the president’s aide believes the declaration
was in fulfillment of Buhari’s campaign promises,
analysts claim the President has not done anything
spectacular because the contents were not made
public.
In February this year, while campaigning Buhari had
said that he would publicly declare his assets and
liabilities, if voted into power.
Buhari stated this in a document. The document
highlighted what Buhari would do in his first 100
days if he assumed power on May 29.
He said he would encourage political appointees in
his administration to also declare their assets
publicly.
Had the new president kept to his words he will be
the country’s second president to publicly declare his
assets.
Reacting to the news of the asset declaration by
Buhari and Osinbajo to the Code of Conduct Bureau,
the Peoples Democratic Party’s National Publicity
Secretary, Mr. Olisa Metuh, told SUNDAY PUNCH that
the PDP was not ready to engage the All Progressives
Congress-led government on asset declaration by the
two most important persons in the country or any
other issue.
Metuh said, “No comment for now. These are early
days. At the moment, we wish them well.”
The late President, Alhaji Umaru Yar’Adua, also from
Katsina State as Buhari, was the first and the only
Nigeria’s President to have publicly declared his
assets when he assumed office.
This action forced his then deputy, Jonathan, to also
make his assets declaration forms available to the
public.
However, since he assumed office as the substantive
President, Jonathan had refused to make the forms
available to the public, saying that he did that when
he was serving as deputy to Yar’Adua.
But Buhari, in the document titled, ‘I pledge to
Nigeria’ had also said that all his political appointees
would only earn salaries and allowances as
prescribed by the Revenue and Mobilisation and
Fiscal Allocation Commission.
He said, “I pledge to publicly declare my assets and
liabilities, encourage all my appointees publicly
declare their assets and liabilities as a pre-condition
for appointment. All political appointees will only
earn the salaries and allowances determined by the
RMFAC. I pledge, as Commander-in-Chief, to lead
from the front and not behind in the comfort and
security of Aso Rock, to boost the morale of fighting
forces and the generality of all Nigerians.”
Meanwhile, about 48hours after they took their oaths
of office, President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo have yet to move into the
Presidential Villa, Abuja,
Investigation
showed that the duo only attended the events held in
the Villa on Friday and returned to town.
While Buhari was suspected to have returned to the
Defence House, the official residence of the
President-elect, which he started using shortly after
he won the March 28 presidential election, Osinbajo
might have returned to his private residence.
Immediately after they were inaugurated as
President and Vice President at the Eagle Square on
Friday, Buhari and Osinbajo moved to the
Presidential Villa for a state luncheon organised in
honour of world leaders who attended the
inauguration.
They left and later returned in the evening for the
inauguration gala night held inside the villa’s old
Banquet Hall.
“The President and the Vice President have yet to
move into the State House. I learnt that the President
returned to Defence House on Friday,” a source said.
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