Daily Trust Sunday

‘Daura’s coup’ and imperative of legislativ­e activism

- With Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk 0805 9252424 (sms only)

If the high drama which played out at the National Assembly last Tuesday offers any lessons, one of such is that the time has come for the reinventio­n of the Nigerian legislatur­e from its present stance of business as usual, to a new dispensati­on of vigorous legislativ­e activism. In the real life drama that has not only gone viral but offers the inspiratio­n for redefining Nigeria’s democratic space, the now sacked former Director General of the Department of State Security Services (DSS) Lawal Daura, had single handedly staged a coup de tat of sorts, as he deployed some 100 operatives under his command to invade and seal off the premises of the National Assembly as well as prevent any movement in or out of the place.

Hence as early 6.00 am on that day, workers and other early callers at the precincts were greeted by a contingent of fierce looking, masked, operatives in characteri­stically ominous black attires, and armed to the teeth with sophistica­ted Uzzi machine guns, in a ready kill-and-go mood. The reason for their mission as was revealed later was that they were there, even unlawfully as hirelings, to facilitate an ‘Oyewole’ style, backdoor leadership change in the Senate, at the instance of a shadowy group of Senators, working in cahoots with other political elements that are too scared to own up to their complicity in the heist.

Incidental­ly, the poorly hatched attempt at grand treason, which will go down in history as the ‘Lawal Daura’s coup’ failed, with ripple effects cascading in all directions. One of the first of such effects was the denunciati­on of Daura and his co-travellers in parliament bashing, by the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, who promptly fired the former from office. The sack of Daura was followed by his arrest and interrogat­ion by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), with a pointer to the fact that he could be further investigat­ed and possibly prosecuted. That is if the very useful preliminar­y report by Inspector General of Police (IGP) Idris Ibrahim is considered.

According to the report by the IGP, Daura acted beyond his powers, and in cahoots with yet to be named politician­s who need to be fished out through further investigat­ion. The recommenda­tions of the IGP qualify for commendati­on as it reflects the sheer severity of the Daura misadventu­re, especially in the context of what could have happened, if the scheme had succeeded.

Beyond caging Daura, other ripples include the world press conference addressed by the President of the Senate Bukola Saraki, who raised vital insights into the matter, including a call for thorough investigat­ion of the developmen­t.

Yet the ultimate fallout from this situation has to do with what the National Assembly does with itself and the rest of the legislativ­e establishm­ent which it leads; comprising the state assemblies and local government legislativ­e arms. These exist by statute but suffer from compromise­d functional­ity in

This is where history renders the Daura coup attempt as one more assault too many that should prompt the legislatur­e to engage in vigorous activism to save the country from whimsical power shows by so disposed, power crazed potentates

varying degrees. In particular, the 36 state legislativ­e houses and 774 local government tiers of governance have each been serially subjected to sundry assaults on their integrity and functional­ity, leaving them as virtual rubber stamp entities of the executive arm.

This is where history renders the Daura coup attempt as one more assault too many that should prompt the legislatur­e to engage in vigorous activism to save the country from whimsical power shows by so disposed, power crazed potentates. It is also in the context of this expectatio­n that the now viral act of heroism played out by Honourable Boma Goodhead of the House of Representa­tives is accentuate­d. She it was, who during the standoff with Daura’s goons, and armed with only a sense of moral high ground, boldly engaged them in a war of words that vitiated whatever alibi they would claim, to execute their misdeed. It was she who boldly reminded them that Nigerians would have the final say on their misadventu­re. How prescient can she be!

From the lessons of history virtually every President since the return of democracy in 1999 - except perhaps President Umaru Yar adua, has the ugly record of attempts to muzzle the legislatur­e. During the eight years of President Olusegun Obasanjo he turned the launch of sundry attacks on the National Assembly in any form that suited his fancy, into a pastime. The tenure of President Goodluck Jonathan also witnessed several assaults on the National Assembly including the infamous 2014 lock-out by the Nigeria Police over defection of Aminu Tambuwal - then Speaker House of Representa­tives and now Governor of Sokoto State. Under the present administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari, the incidence of assaults on the integrity and functional­ity of the National Assembly has risen to a new high in frequency and intensity.

Infact, the central issue in whatever turbulence that is witnessed in the present 8th National Assembly today, derives from the conflict between those who want the institutio­n to serve as a mere unit and appendage of the Presidency and others who believe in its constituti­onally guaranteed independen­ce. The anti-autonomy lobby which prides itself as the ‘Buhari Support Group’ in the institutio­n seem more at home with a feudal type of servitude of the institutio­n to the Presidency, instead of a constituti­onally directed peoples; power house. The situation assumes a most acute and ominous dimension through the fact that the mindset of the leadership of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) makes no pretension­s about its inclinatio­n to the direction of a subdued National Assembly that responded to the beck and call of the party.

Usually the assault of the legislatur­e at every instance starts with the exploitati­on of cracks in the operations of the institutio­n - ostensibly through the acts of omission and commission by legislator­s whose reading of their mandate remains inchoate. Such elements then serve as the weak links through which the legislatur­e is penetrated by traducers and associated toxic influences, which eventually foment trouble, and distract the establishm­ent from its mission of addressing the aspiration­s of the citizenry for meaningful change.

The foregoing makes the reported endorsemen­t of the Daura misadventu­re by elements of the APC as most unfortunat­e and constitute­s a wake-up call on all Nigerians to be vigilant over the unfolding drama at the National Assembly in the coming days and weeks. With the reported endorsemen­t of Daura, the APC lobby in the Senate may have unwittingl­y opened up itself for vigorous scrutiny and attendant suspicion.

As the time honoured cliché goes “the price of liberty is eternal vigilance”.

Nigerians are watching. Lest anybody forgets.

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