Uproar In Senate As PDP Senator Accuses Buhari Of Buying PVCs With SIP Funds

There was an uproar in the Senate on Wednesday after a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lawmaker accused the federal government of using Nigerians “collective funds to maintain a political party.”

Minority leader of the Senate, Biodun Olujimi, had accused the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration of alleged of using the Social Investment Programme (SIP) funds to secure permanent voter cards ahead of the 2019 elections.

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Olujimi said ‘I Stand With Buhari’ is written on the forms given to recipients of the SIP funds.

“Right now the funds are being used for political reasons and they are being dispensed and given freely to people who can bring up their PVCs and signed several copies. The issuant are now in charge,” she said.

“One of the forms is here with me and it is being disbursed by the special intervention body.

“This one has ‘I Stand With Buhari’ and it has a place where your PVC will be written with your gender and an attachment from access bank where money will be dispensed to. There is no corruption greater than people using our collective funds to maintain a political party.

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“There is a need for the committee to be set up to look into this issue. There has to be a high powered ad hoc committee that must look into this. It is an election year and people are using these funds that are not the best to buy PVCs and put them to use on Election Day.”

Senate President Bukola Saraki thereafter asked the Senate leader, Ahmed Lawan to comment but was interrupted by an All Progressives Congress (APC) senator, Adeola Olamilekan who loudly protested against Senator Olujimi’s allegation.

In reaction, Saraki said: “This drama that is going on is on unnecessary. Minority leader has spoken, let majority leader have the floor, let him speak.”

He then urged Lawan to speak, but Dino Melaye, senator representing Kogi West said the motion needed to be seconded before Lawan could speak.

When he finally had the floor, Lawan said the SIP programme of the federal government is transparent.

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“I have listed attentively to the motion raised by the senate minority leader. Let me say from the onset that SIP of this administration is computer-based, very transparent,” he said.

“That is why for the first time in the history of Nigeria, we have a fool-proof system that anywhere you may be in Nigeria, you will apply online.”

The Senate, however, resolved to set up an ad hoc committee to probe Olujimi’s allegation.

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