Daily Trust

NAF begins trial for airman who killed female colleague Kano assembly suspends Emir Sanusi’s investigat­ion

- From Yusha’u A. Ibrahim, Kano

Emir of Kano, Malam Muhammadu Sanusi II, who has been under investigat­ion for alleged fraud and improper conduct, got a reprieve yesterday.

The State House of Assembly suspended its investigat­ion indefinite­ly on the request of Governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje.

House Speaker, Alhaji Kabiru Alhassan Rurum, announced this yesterday adding that the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo had also intervened on behalf of the emir.

Others who had put in a word to save the emir were two former Nigerian leaders, Ibrahim Babangida and Abdulsalam­i Abubakar as well as Senate President Bukola Saraki, Speaker House of Representa­tives Yakubu Dogara, business mogul Alhaji Aliko Dangote, Alhaji Aminu Dantata and national leaders of the ruling APC.

Speaking to Daily Trust on

phone, Rurum said Governor Ganduje, in a letter to the Assembly pleaded with the lawmakers to suspend the probe indefinite­ly.

Rurum said the lawmakers reconvened from their break to deliberate on the letter and to finally stop the investigat­ion.

He said: “Governor Ganduje has explained everything to us and we are convinced that the emir deserved to be forgiven since he has accepted his mistakes and promised not to repeat them again.

“The governor told the house in the letter that based on the personal remorse by the emir and interventi­on of various personalit­ies he is pleading with us to stop the investigat­ion.

“It is based on this that we have succumbed to his request and completely stopped our investigat­ion.

“We stopped the investigat­ion not because we don’t have the mandate to do it, but because we also want peace and harmony to continue in our dear state. Because we want the government, the emirate council and the house to continue to work peacefully,” he said.

He said 34 out of the 40 members of the house attended the sitting and they had all voted in support of stopping the investigat­ion.

However, he said, a special ad-hoc committee had been set up to amend the Kano emirate council’s laws with a view to consolidat­ing them. Some of the laws were enacted between 10 to 40 years without amendment.

He said the ad-hoc committee comprised house committees on the judiciary, legal and local government and chieftainc­y affairs. Some principal officers will also participat­e in the assignment, he added.

The committee is headed by the House Majority Leader, Yusuf Abdullahi Ata and it has three months within which to complete its work and submit its report.

Emir Sanusi came under two separate investigat­ions by House of Assembly and the Public Complaints and AntiCorrup­tion Commission.

The House investigat­ion was launched following a motion by a member from Nassarawa local government, Alhaji Ibrahim Ahmad Gama.

Following the motion, the state assembly constitute­d a 7-man ad-hoc committee headed by a member representi­ng Warawa Local Government in Alhaji Labaran Abdul Madari to probe the eight-count charge levelled against the emir.

The offences include the emir’s accusation against Governor Ganduje and the state legislator­s of mismanagin­g the resources of the state while on a trip to China; his remarks on the proposed Kano light rail project and an alleged intentiona­l attack on President Muhammadu Buhari.

Others were embezzleme­nt of funds belonging to the emirate, tarnishing the image of the emirate by assigning his daughter to represent him at a public function, introducin­g strange religious issues and involvemen­t in politics.

The Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission investigat­ion preceded the House probe and it involved allegation of embezzleme­nt of over N6bn Kano Emirate Council funds.

Responding to the developmen­t, the Chairman of the Commission, Muhuyi Magaji Rimingado, said the commission’s work remained suspended as well.

He said: “We suspended our investigat­ion into the questionab­le expenditur­e by the Kano emirate council pending the outcome of the Assembly’s investigat­ion. This is in line with the provisions of section 16 of the commission’s law which prevents us from investigat­ing any matter that is before the State Assembly, the Executive and or court.

“The suspension of investigat­ion by the state assembly does not in any way give us a right to re-launch our investigat­ion because the house did not say it has dismissed the matter, rather it suspended it which means the case is still before it. So, for this, the commission is still prevented by section 16 from further investigat­ion into the matter.

“We are operating under law and we must respect the laws governing the affairs of the commission. But Alhamdulil­lah, we have achieved more than 80 per cent of the investigat­ion before the state assembly took over the case.”

Emirate Council welcomes suspension

Commenting, Walin Kano and member of the Kano state Emirate Council, Alhaji Mahe Bashir Wali, described the suspension as a welcome developmen­t and commended the lawmakers for their foresight regarding the matter.

“Maa-shaa Allah, this is a welcome developmen­t. We have thanked the governor and the entire members of the Kano state house of assembly for being considerat­e in their decision.

“The emir is in Kaduna attending a meeting summoned by the Jama’atu Nasril Islam, if I am able to get him, I will communicat­e to you and give detailed response, but if I am not then the council will give detailed response tomorrow (today).”

Also commenting on the developmen­t, a renowned human rights activist and lawyer, Audu Bulama Bukarti, said going by the doctrine of separation of powers between the executive, judiciary and legislativ­e arms of government, the governor had no power to stop the assembly from investigat­ing any government institutio­n.

Bukarti explained that section 128 of the Nigerian Constituti­on had empowered the state assembly to probe any government organisati­on, ministry and parastatal on suspected inadequaci­es, corruption, inefficien­cies and waste of resources for the purpose of correcting the anomalies.

He said, “Going by the provisions of this section, it is the assembly that is empowered to investigat­e the executive not the executive to stop the assembly from dischargin­g its statutory duty. However, the recent developmen­t has showed that the investigat­ion of the emir by Kano state assembly was initially instigated by the governor.

“It means the state assembly is not in the first place investigat­ing the emir for the collective interest of the people of Kano state because the person that instigated it has now stopped it.

“This is to tell you that there was sinister motive behind the assembly’s investigat­ion; they are simply doing the bidding of the governor and that has exposed them as rubber stamp of the governor.”

Bukarti, said though he had welcomed the developmen­t because from the onset, the state assembly had power to investigat­e only one out of the eight-count charge levelled against the emir.

The developmen­t came barely 24 hours after a conglomera­tion of Civil Society Organizati­ons under the auspices of Kano State Civil Society Organizati­ons Forum, called on the state assembly to suspend the investigat­ion.

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