Speaker
of the Osun State House of Assembly, Honourable Najeem Salaam, on Wednesday,
confirmed it received a copy of the petition written by a serving female judge
in the state, Justice Folahanmi Oloyede against Governor Rauf Aregbesola, over
non-payment of salaries.
Speaking
with journalists in Osogbo, on Wednesday, Salaam said: “I can confirm that the
assembly received the petition. But, there is an ongoing strike now, therefore,
we cannot do anything serious on it.
“A copy of the petition had been sent to Governor Aregbesola for
him to state his own defence.”
The Nigerian Tribune said it gathered that the assembly had
written another letter to Aregbesola, requesting him to react to the content of
the petition.
Justice Oloyede had called on the state House of Assembly to
investigate the alleged mismanagement of the state financial resources by the
governor and his deputy, in accordance with sections 128 and 129 of the 1999
Constitution, saying there was no moral justification for their continued stay
in office.
In a 30-page petition, she also urged the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC), United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime, Amnesty
International, Transparency International, among others, to investigate any
other person found to be responsible for what he described as “deliberate
mismanagement of the economy of Osun State.”
“I declare that in addition to the media-hype of Osun’s parlous
financial condition, I have firsthand experience which constitutes evidence of
the unfortunate situation in which Osun currently finds itself. Even Mr
Governor has admitted publicly the fact that Osun is in financial quagmire and
that he is clueless on how to pull it out of the doldrums,” the petition read
in part.
“Mr Governor’s argument that salaries can only be paid from
statutory allocations is also faulty, we demand that he substantiate his claim
by giving the section of the law that so provides. In any event, all funds, all
allocations and all expenditures are expected to be backed by legislation, and
are statutory, otherwise, they are illegal.
“Consequently, the admitted inability of Mr Governor and his
deputy to pay pensions, salaries and allowances for periods ranging from eight
to 11 months now, as a consequence of their own decision to accumulate debts
beyond the capacity of the state internally generated revenue, whilst the very
‘actors’ Mr Governor and his deputy continue to enjoy their security allowances
in hundreds of millions, is a violation of their oaths of office.”
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