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National Assembly members do enormous work, it’s wrong to say they’re overpaid – Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday said those criticising the emoluments enjoyed by the National Assembly are wrong as they are not being “highly overpaid” for doing little as Nigerians think.

The President said the lack of trust in the lawmakers had made their critics not to see the enormous work they were doing for the country.

Speaking when the House of Representatives launched The Green Chamber Magazine, a publication by the House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Buhari who was represented by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, said the parliamentarians did not share money without working, Punch reports.

He said, “Hitherto, the public perception of the National Assembly is that of a bicameral legislature where overly comfortable and highly-overpaid members merely stuff wads of currency notes into their pockets for little work done. This wrong perception has resulted partly from the lack of understanding of the enormous work of lawmakers, especially outside the glare of television cameras.

“But with a magazine that will be the authoritative source of anything that goes on in the House – motions being moved, bills being passed, national issues being discussed and constituency projects – the public will be better informed on the activities of the House, and this will in turn reflect in an improved public perception.

“In addition, it will help the House to tell its own story, rather than relying on others to take charge of their narrative. It is said that no one can tell your story better than you.”

A former Director of Kenya’s Anti-Corruption Commission and Director of the Kenya School of Laws, Prof. Plo Lumumba, who was a keynote speaker at the event, asked if the lawmakers were following the footsteps of Nigeria’s founding fathers who, he said, had a clear vision for the country.

He said, “I read your great founding leaders. I read the works of Nnamdi Azikiwe and I listened to him in those early days. He was as eloquent as he was passionate in telling Nigerians and Africans – because he was called the Zik of Africa – that leadership is about service. This magazine is an occasion for you to demonstrate to Africa that you are servant-leaders.

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