Yakubu Dogara, speaker of the house of representatives, on Saturday said the media misconstrued his statement regarding the crisis rocking the house. Dogara said he was quoted out of context when he addressed journalists at the presidential villa after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, and also after a meeting with civil society groups in Abuja. In a statement issued on his behalf by Turaki Hassan, his spokesman, Dogara said he never presented himself as being above the law. “Unfortunately the media reported him as saying that padding was not a crime. This tended to insinuate that the Hon speaker admitted there was budget padding but that this did not constitute a crime,” the statement read. “There could be nothing further from the truth. The Hon Speaker’s assertion was and remains that nothing untoward had been done by the house and indeed the national assembly with respect to the 2016 budget. “In the second instance, while responding to questions at the Civil Society Dialogue at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel Abuja on Thursday 12th August, Rt. Hon Dogara made reference to Sections 3, 24 and 30 of the legislative houses (Powers and Privileges ) Act to buttress the point that the legislature while carrying out its constitutional responsibilities is protected by law. “He did not say or mean that he is above the laws of the land or that he is shielded by the law or has immunity for any infractions of the law. “Dogara should not be portrayed as insensitive or arrogant as this is contrary to his true nature of humility and humaneness that has endeared him to his colleagues and Nigerians.” Jibrin, former chairman of the house appropriation committee, had alleged that Dogara and 12 others padded the budget through “unnecessary insertions”, an allegation that the lawmakers denied. In Saturday’s statement, the speaker insisted that “no kobo” was lost in the budget saga. He said having observed the “damage Jibrin’s misrepresentations and lies” was inflicting on the country, he decided to offer some explanations. “Dogara had initially adopted silence as his response, but having observed the grievous damage Hon Jibrin’s extensive misrepresentations and lies was inflicting on the country and distracting our common and urgent resolve to tackle our distressed economy and security challenges, he opted to offer some explanations on the issues as continuous silence may have amounted to insensitivity, admission or arrogance,” the statement read. “No kobo belonging to Nigeria has been misappropriated, stolen or lost in this budget saga. There was no act of corruption by during and after the preparation of the 2016 budget.”]]>