BBC Homepage
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
  • Your account
  • Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • More menu
More menu
Search BBC
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
Close menu
BBC News
Menu
  • Home
  • InDepth
  • Israel-Gaza war
  • War in Ukraine
  • Climate
  • UK
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Culture
More
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Family & Education
  • In Pictures
  • Newsbeat
  • BBC Verify
  • Disability
  • Trending

The anger over money for politicians' clothes

  • Published
    19 June 2015
Share page
About sharing
Post about Nigeria's #9billion trendImage source, Twitter/frankdonga_
Image caption,

Nigerians online are criticising an alleged "wardrobe allowance" proposal for MPs

BBC Trending
What's popular and why

Nigerians are venting their frustration online after reports of an alleged proposal, external to pay huge wardrobe allowances to lawmakers.

Politicians's salaries are a sore point in Nigeria - a country where the minimum wage only amounts to about £680 (or $1080) per year, yet members of the National Assembly are among the highest paid legislators in the world, external, with a basic annual salary, external of about £120,000 ($189,500).

So when local media reported that a total of nearly 9 billion naira (£28 million or $45 million) might be offered to lawmakers as "wardrobe allowances", Twitter exploded. Hashtags #9billion, external, #UndressNass, external, #OpenNass, external and #OccupyNass, external have been mentioned thousands of times week ("Nass" being short for "National Assembly").

The government has since denied the reports, with officials saying, external that the actual yearly allowance would amount to only £1,600 ($2,500) for each senator. But the issue has become a springboard to raise larger concerns about transparency and government spending.

"Whether 500,000 or 5,000, 100% of these legislators don't need 'wardrobe allowance'. We are in an austerity season. Stop wastage," read one tweet, external, while another comment said, external: "Nigeria, 17th least prosperous country, has highest paid legislature. How is that not obscene?!" On Facebook, a post, external calculating that it will take an average Nigerian worker 1,638 years to earn the annual salary of a Nigerian senator has been shared by thousands.

Nigerian #OccupyNass memeImage source, Twitter/callmeHynes

Some of the posts were humorous in tone, but the underlying sentiment was a sense of injustice. "The hashtag #UndressNass conveys my frustrations of funding an inactive and inefficient National Assembly for the past 16 years. For a minority of individuals to expect to be clothed by the working public is absurd," Ijeoma Ezeasor, external, one of the first to use the hashtag, told BBC Trending.

Those criticising the allowance online initially planned to take their protest to the streets later this week, but the plan has been put on hold for now. Columnist Japheth Omojuwa, external, who was organising the march, told BBC Trending that they are instead giving a three-month deadline for authorities to reform the pay system.

"The National Assembly is not living in the current economic reality. It is important for us as citizens to let them understand that they are living in a different reality," Omojuwa told Trending. He also noted that money could be used, for instance, to help the estimated millions of Nigerian children who don't attend school, external.

"Nigeria has very high maternal and child mortality rates. The economy is not sophisticated and cash is limited. We need MP salaries to be reviewed and the spending of the budget to be open and transparent," he said.

Blog by Samiha Nettikkara, external

Additional Reporting by Moses Rono, BBC Monitoring

Next story: How video saved the calligraphy star

Calligraphy in the digital age

In the transient, hyper-speed world of social media, a slow and deliberate art is captivating people around the world. READ MORE

You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, external, and find us on Facebook, external. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.

Top stories

  • Live. 

    Trump says no deal but 'progress made' after Ukraine talks with Putin

    • 27017 viewing27k viewing
  • 'Next time in Moscow?': Five takeaways after Trump and Putin's Alaska summit

    • Published
      1 hour ago
  • No ceasefire, no deal. What summit means for Trump, Putin and Ukraine

    • Published
      4 hours ago

More to explore

  • 'Putin is a master of persuasion' - BBC correspondents discuss summit strategy

    Anthony Zurcher on the left and Steve Rosenberg on the right.
  • 'Ukraine's fate in their hands' and 'Praying for peace'

    A composite image of the front pages of the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror on 16 August 2025
  • PC catches 'icky' catcallers on undercover jogs

    Image shows two females running. One is dressed in all black. She has a black short-sleeved top and black leggings on with a grey running vest over the top. She has black Nike trainers on. Her hair is in a bun. The second officer has turquoise trainers on. Burgundy shorts and a brown long-sleeved tight fitting top. She has a grey running vest over the top. Her hair is in a ponytail. They are in a carpark with four cars parked alongside them. Behind them are a number of trees, grass and a main road.
  • Bowen: Netanyahu is presiding over a divided Israel - the fault lines are now chasms

    Two images: Benjamin Netanyahu on the right and on the left, relatives and supporters of Israeli hostages held captive hold their portraits during a protest in Tel Aviv
  • He found a bomb under a playground - and there were 176 more

    A composite image of Steven Parkinson and some of the bombs he discovered under a playground in Scotts Park
  • 'Tell someone about abuse' urges victim of prolific catfishing sex offender

    A mugshot of Max Hollingsbee is superimposed onto a graphic comprised of blue zero and one binary code numbers on a black background. Hollingsbee is a young man with wavy brown hair
  • Weekly quiz: Why were Italian restaurants in a rage about pasta?

    A woman with black nail varnish uses her fork to twist spaghetti in a bowl
  • 'We were never friends': A massacre on the eve of WW2 still haunts China-Japan relations

    An elderly man wearing a suit with an ear piece in his ear wipes tears off his face. Behind him more elderly men can be seen, slightly blurred
  • Government turns to TikTokers to advise on cosmetic surgery abroad

    A woman and a man in a split composite image showing TikTok influencers, the woman in a red spotty dress and the man in blue NHS uniform.
loading elsewhere stories

Most read

  1. 1

    'Next time in Moscow?': Five takeaways after Trump and Putin's Alaska summit

  2. 2

    'Ukraine's fate in their hands' and 'Praying for peace'

  3. 3

    Blackpink: K-pop band make 'epic Wembley dream' come true

  4. 4

    UK trade envoy resigns over northern Cyprus visit

  5. 5

    The 104-year-old WW2 veteran who moved the Queen to tears

  6. 6

    No ceasefire, no deal. What summit means for Trump, Putin and Ukraine

  7. 7

    Topshop returns to the High Street, but can it get its cool back?

  8. 8

    Far-right Israeli minister taunts prominent Palestinian prisoner

  9. 9

    Iceland offers £1 reward for reporting shoplifters

  10. 10

    Afghans resettled in UK hit by new data breach

BBC News Services

  • On your mobile
  • On smart speakers
  • Get news alerts
  • Contact BBC News

Best of the BBC

  • The inside story of Rupert Murdoch’s empire

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    The Rise of the Murdoch Dynasty
  • A galactic concert of planets and lightsabers

    • Attribution
      Sounds
    Proms 2025
  • New drama from writer Jimmy McGovern

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    Unforgivable
  • A vigilante matriarch with her own dark secrets

    • Attribution
      Sounds
    Crime Next Door: The Ballad of Big Mags
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Make an editorial complaint
  • BBC emails for you

Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.