THISDAY

Confirmati­on: Go to Court, Senate Dares Presidency

- Tobi Soniyi and Damilola Oyedele

The Senate has said it supports the executive’s decision to go to court for interpreta­tion of Section 171 of the Constituti­on.

In order to bypass the Senate in some appointmen­ts, the presidency has been relying on section 171 of the constituti­on to make the appointmen­t.

This has resulted in a series of clashes between the Senate and the executive with the former threatenin­g to stop screening other nominees of the executive.

But reacting to the decision of the executive to seek a judicial interpreta­tion of the constituti­onal provisions, the Chairman Senate Committee on Media and Publicity, Aliyu Sabi-Abdullahi, who spoke on Channels Television programme, Sunrise, said the Senate was happy with the decision of the executive to go to court for an interpreta­tion.

He said: “Section 171 is very clear. We must be sincere to the citizens. I mean both the executive and the Senate owe the citizens a duty to be sincere. The issue of confirmati­on has been on many years. We are okay if the executive is ready to go to court. That will resolve the crisis once and for all.”

The presidency had last Sunday said it believed that only a judicial interpreta­tion of Section 171 would resolve the dispute between it and the National Assembly on whether the appointmen­t of the Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Ibrahim Magu and other appointmen­ts could be done without Senate’s approval.

Citing an advisory from ‘legal and judicial experts’, the presidency said although it believed that its position was the correct one, it neverthele­ss agreed that only the courts could finally lay the dispute to rest.

The presidency further said that although it was the view of the the federal government that certain federal appointmen­ts should not require the confirmati­on of the Senate based on Section 171 of the constituti­on, the government would, neverthele­ss, continue to send some of such appointmen­ts to the Senate pending judicial interpreta­tion of the matter.

It said: “Our position is based on a legal advisory prepared by judicial and legal experts as a working document in the presidency regarding the difference­s in the constituti­onal interpreta­tions on matters of certain federal appointmen­ts.

“In fact, the advisory unearthed a ruling of the Supreme Court on the matter where the current Chief Justice of Nigeria, before his elevation as CJN had ruled in line with the view of the presidency on the matter.”

The presidency rejected the claim that all appointmen­ts by it were based on section 171.

“This is because, even after the acting president, (who spoke when he was vice president in support of the view of some leading lawyers) the presidency has continued to send nomination­s to the Senate while the President himself was around and while away by the acting president,” it added.

The presidency said that section 171 was very clear that certain appointmen­ts did not require Senate consent, but added that the “presidency is not already behaving as if its interpreta­tion of the law has become a policy. The presidency is persuaded that its interpreta­tion is the correct one, but we are conscious and aware of the fact that only a proper judicial ruling on the matter would make it a settled policy that sits right with the rule of law. That is why we have not stopped sending all manners of nomination­s to the Senate, most of which the Senate has actually confirmed, even well after the acting president spoke.”

He said: “According to that legal advisory the divergent positions being held by the executive and then legislatur­e on the subject of confirmati­on ...is one that requires timely and ultimate resolution. Such resolution could only be reached through judicial process...Such interpreta­tion would lay to rest the lingering crises between the two arms.”

The federal government also said the advisory affirmed the powers of the president to appoint in acting capacity into positions such as the EFCC chairmansh­ip.

The advisory in question reads in part: “In the recent past, the ministeria­l nomination of the late Prof. Abraham Babalola Borishade (Ekiti State) by President Olusegun Obasanjo was rejected repeatedly by the Senate.” In fact it would be recalled that this particular nomination was presented four times in 18 months before it was eventually confirmed by the Senate.

“This position is because of the long establishe­d and entrenched principle of law that any legislatio­n that is inconsiste­nt with the provision of the constituti­on is null and void and of no effect whatsoever to the extent of such inconsiste­ncy.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria