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Outgoing lawmakers tasked to retire expenditure or lose severance benefits

The management of the National Assembly has issued a notice to lawmakers at the upper and lower chambers to retire their Expenditure within two weeks or risk not being paid their severance package, DAILY POST has learnt on Monday.

The notice, which was said to have been issued by the Clerk to the National Assembly, Sani Omolori, on Thursday last week to the outgoing and returning lawmakers covers the last four years of the 8th Assembly.

An aide to one of the outgoing lawmaker in the House of Representatives, who was seen moving out the belongings of her boss confided in the correspondent that, she, “got the notice which asks all lawmakers to retire their funds or they would have issues receiving their severance packages.”

“The notice gave us two weeks to retire and I think my own boss will abide,” she said.

Another aide, who was yet to be dispatched with the said notice, explained that he was waiting.

He said, “the retirement was not new to members”, saying that, “lawmakers were expected to retire their travelling allowances, their committee assignments and others incidentals.”

Findings carried out in the Senate, which confirmed the same thing, pointed that they were given up to 27th of May, 2019 to vacate their suites to enable repairs and maintenance ahead of June 10th inauguration of the 9th National Assembly.

Office of the Sergeant-At-Arms, the official security unit of the National Assembly is expected to enforce compliance as to the vacation of the lawmakers’ offices at the expiration of the ultimatum.

Meanwhile, information available to DAILY POST also indicated that services department, which operates directly in the office of the Clerk to the National Assembly has began allocation of offices to the incoming lawmakers at both the Senate and House of Representatives.

Sources in the services department further explained that they would observe their tradition of allocating another suite to returnee lawmakers instead of the one they are occupying now, adding that it’s only the offices of principal officers of both Chambers that remains permanent.

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