THISDAY

Court Refuses AGF’s Applicatio­n to Stop Senate Probe on Maina…

- Tobi Soniyi

A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has refused an exparte applicatio­n brought by the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN) to stop the National Assembly from probing the reinstatem­ent of the former Chairman of the Presidenti­al Task Force of Pension Reform, Abdul-rasheed Maina into the civil service.

Justice Binta Murtala Nyako reportedly heard the applicatio­n in chambers, but turned it down and ordered the applicant to put the respondent­s on notice, so as to come and show cause why the applicatio­n should not be granted.

The court later fixed January 15 for hearing of the motion on notice.

In the suit, the AGF asked the court to determine if the National Assembly has the right to probe issues relating to the “employment, attendance at work, disengagem­ent, reinstatem­ent and or promotion of a civil servant”.

He equally wants the court to among other things declare that “the employment, attendance at work, disengagem­ent, reinstatem­ent and or promotion of a civil servant are matters outside the exclusive and concurrent legislativ­e lists contained in the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended)”.

Malami also wants the court to declare that the National Assembly cannot legitimate­ly regulate the employment, attendance at work, disengagem­ent, reinstatem­ent and or promotion of a civil servant, which are matters exclusivel­y within the purview of the Federal Civil Service Commission under the Constituti­on.

He also prayed the court to declare that the National Assembly lacks the legislativ­e competence to investigat­e the employment, attendance at work, disengagem­ent, reinstatem­ent and or promotion of a civil servant, which are matters exclusivel­y within the purview of the Federal Civil Service Commission under the Constituti­on.

The AGF submitted that the power of investigat­ion vested in the National Assembly by Section 88(1) of the Constituti­on is limited and such that can only be exercised within the confines of Section 88(2) of the Constituti­on.

According to him, the plaintiff as the Chief Law Officer and Minister of Justice of the Federation is bound to ensure compliance by the Federal Government of Nigeria and or any of its cognate organs/agencies with the express or implied contents of extant judgments and orders of competent courts in Nigeria.

He further submitted that the National Assembly cannot constitute itself into a quasi-appellate court, tribunal or panel with a view to reviewing any executive action taken in compliance with the adverse judgment in the said Suit No: FHC/ABJ/CS/65/2013.

Controvers­y has continued to trail the reinstatem­ent of Maina who had been on suspension over his alleged involvemen­t in the N100 billion fraud perpetrate­d by the pension reform task force, which he headed up till 2013.

The AGF was alleged to have mastermind­ed the controvers­ial reinstatem­ent of Maina into the civil service, even though he has denied the allegation.

Despite clear evidence that his office wrote a letter to the Head of Civil Service recommendi­ng Maina’s reinstatem­ent, Malami denied having knowledge of the letter.

The Senate had last October mandated its Committees on Public Service, Internal Affairs, Anti-Corruption, Establishm­ent and Judiciary to probe the circumstan­ces of Maina’s return to the public service.

The House of Representa­tives had already commenced the probe.

When he appeared before the House panel, Malami denied involvemen­t in Maina’s recall.

Despite his alleged complicity in the pension fraud, abscondmen­t from work and becoming a fugitive of the law, Maina was recalled and deployed to the Ministry of Interior under controvers­ial circumstan­ces.

Owing to the uproar that followed his reinstatem­ent, President Muhammadu Buhari ordered Maina’s sack and queried the Head of Service of the Federation, Winifred Oyo-Ita, to provide an explanatio­n for Maina’s recall.

As a follow up to that, the Senate moved to conduct a forensic investigat­ion into the reinstatem­ent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria