Farouk Lawan

Farouk Muhammad Lawan (born July 6th,1962) is a Nigerian politician and four-term (since 1999) member of the House of Representatives for the Bagwai/Shanono Federal Constituency of Kano State.

Farouk Lawan
Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
In office
2011–2015
Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
In office
2007–2011
Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
In office
2003–2007
Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
In office
1999–2003
Personal details
Born (1962-07-06) 6 July 1962
Shanono Village, Kano State, Nigeria
NationalityNigerian
Political partyPeople's Democratic Party (Nigeria)
ResidenceKano, Abuja
OccupationAcademician
ProfessionAcademician

Education and personal life

Lawan is a graduate of Bayero University in Kano. He is married with four children.[1]

Political career

A People's Democratic Party (PDP) member. Lawan was elected in 1999, 2003, 2007 and again in 2011, making it 4 times elected member. Lawan was the Chairman of the House Committee on Finance under the former Speaker Aminu Bello Masari.[2] He identifies his legislative interests as "Appropriation, Information and Education".[1]

During the late-2007 corruption scandal that caused the former Speaker of the House Patricia Etteh to resign, Lawan led the Integrity Group, an alliance of Representatives opposed to Etteh. He is now considered a strong candidate for the governorship of Kano state.

Fuel Subsidy Scandal

In January 2012, Lawan chaired the House of Representatives committee that investigated the Nigerian government's fuel subsidies.[3] The committee was set up in the wake of nationwide strikes in Nigeria after President Goodluck Jonathan removed a fuel subsidy. This resulted in the increase in price of fuel.[4] The Committee's report released in April the same year revealed a huge scam in which Nigerian fuel companies were being paid hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies by the government for fuel that was never delivered. It was estimated the scam cost the country $6.8 million.[5]

In February 2013, Lawan was charged with corruption after he allegedly accepted $500,000 from Femi Otedola, a Nigerian billionaire oil tycoon, as part of a $3 million bribe Lawan had solicited from Otedola.[6] Otedola claimed that Lawan demanded the bribe in order to have his company, Zenon, removed from the list of companies that the committee had implicated in the scandal. The initial fuel subsidy report said that Zenon owed more than $1 million to the government, but legislators later voted to remove the firm from the final report. Lawan said that he accepted the money in order to expose blackmail and informed the committee and Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) about it.[7]

References

  1. "Honourable Farouk Lawan". National Assembly of Nigeria. Archived from the original on 2007-10-20. Retrieved 2012-07-04.
  2. Nwankwo, Chiawo (2007-11-01). "S'West Reps: Jostling for Etteh's seat". The Punch online. Archived from the original on 2007-11-01. Retrieved 2007-11-03.
  3. Nigeria’s President Jonathan ‘must act over fuel scam’, England: BBC News, 2012
  4. Nigerian fuel subsidy: Strike suspended, England: BBC News, 2012
  5. Nigeria’s President Jonathan ‘must act over fuel scam’, England: BBC News, 2012
  6. Nigeria anti-graft lawmaker charged with $3 mln bribe, United States: Reuters, 2013
  7. Nigerian Farouk Lawan charged over $3m fuel scam ‘bribe’, England: BBC News, 2013


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.