THISDAY

That House Committee’s Indictment of Malami

- Kabiru Madaki

Ihave never been a fan of legislativ­e hearings in this country. And I know there are many Nigerians who share my sentiments. It is not that legislativ­e hearings are useless or a waste of time. Far from it, they are actually critical to the work that legislator­s do. Public hearings can help expose corruption and strengthen­s the legislatur­e’s capacity to make good laws.

But contrary to the ideals of public legislativ­e hearings, the Nigerian legislator­s have turned it into a weapon of intimidati­on, blackmail and political witch-hunt. And there are many of examples of such hearings that had failed to impact good governance because the end reports were controvers­ial and even rejected by some members of committees that conducted the hearings.

The latest report of the House of Representa­tives Ad-Hoc Committee which investigat­ed the controvers­ial circumstan­ces in which Abdulrashh­eed Maina was promoted and reinstated into the service, will undoubtedl­y suffer this fate too.

Maina, former chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), was dismissed in 2013 and subsequent­ly declared wanted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) when he failed to appear for questionin­g.

The House resolved last October to probe the circumstan­ces surroundin­g his recall and re-instatemen­t, and appointed an ad-hoc committee led by Aliyu Sani Madaki, an APC legislator from Kano to do the job. The committee submitted its report to the House recently and immediatel­y stirred the hornets’ nest.

Not only did the committee do a shoddy job of its important assignment, but the report made it obvious that someone had an axe or two to grind with the AttorneyGe­neral and Minister for Justice of the Federation, Abubakar Malami. Contrary to legislativ­e norms, the committee turned itself into a judicial body and pronounce Malami guilty of recalling and reinstatin­g Maina into the civil service!

According to the committee’s report, Maina’s reinstatem­ent was “fraudulent­ly mastermind­ed” by Malami and that the Attorney General “pressurise­d all that mattered” to force Maina back into the service.

The report said it was establishe­d that the Attorney General met with Maina in Dubai knowing full well that the ex-pension task force boss was a wanted person.

It said there was undue interferen­ce and pressure on the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) from Malami on the matter.

The report said it was curious that Malami could facilitate Maina’s recall when he admitted that the ex-pension chief was part of a ‘pension syndicate’ that fed fat on pension fund.

It is curious and sad that a committee of legislator­s could reach these jaundiced conclusion­s without any tangible proof of what they alleged. Do members of this committee know the meaning of “fraudulent­ly mastermind­ed” Maina’s reinstatem­ent? Did they avail themselves of the services of legal consultant­s? Do they even know the legal implicatio­ns of what they claim?

The answer to these questions, in my opinion, has to be No! And it is very sad that we have law makers who may not understand the law. Fraud is a criminal conduct which can only be establishe­d by a court or a judicial panel of inquiry, and not legislator­s. Why would the committee allow itself to be tempted to use these strong words if it is just doing legislativ­e work?

And the most audacious part is when the committee says the AGF’s actions contravene­d Section 158 of the 1999 constituti­on, which says “In exercising its power to make appointmen­ts or to exercise disciplina­ry control over persons, the Code of Conduct Bureau, the National Judicial Council, the Federal Civil Service Commission, the Federal Judicial Service Commission, the Revenue Mobilisati­on and Fiscal Commission, the Federal Character Commission, and the Independen­t National Electoral Commission shall not be subject to the direction or control of any other authority or person.”

Give me a break! When did a legislativ­e committee become a judicial panel or a law court? Only the court can determine and pronounce a conduct criminal and not a legislatur­e.

This is why it is obvious that the committee report is no more than a hatchet job to settle some scores with the AGF or perhaps pre-empt whatever plans he may have for 2019.

It is pertinent to recall here that the AGF, perhaps aware of the end game, had gone to court to stop the legislatur­e from probing the alleged re-instatemen­t of Maina. The case is still in court. But this did not stop the Madaki committee from going ahead to not only make unsubstant­iated claims against the AGF but going as far as indicting him for alleged criminal action. It is not only ridiculous but has made our legislator­s a laughing stock.

Any law student knows that when a matter is submitted to judicial determinat­ion by parties, none of the parties can pre-empt the right for judicial determinat­ion of the court by way of foisting on it a situation of helplessne­ss. By making pronouncem­ents or issuing reports that seek to persuade and compromise the judicial process.

I had a revealing conversati­on with a former lawmaker on the house report indicting Malami. He too had read the report and told me pointedly that the committee would not have gone that far without the support of the leadership of the house. In essence he said Malami must have stepped on some toes in the legislatur­e and some interests are bent on cutting him to size. It is unimaginab­le; he said that a legislativ­e committee that is not doing a hatchet job would turn in such a ridiculous report.

I have asked myself whether there were secret hearings beyond what Nigerians witnessed last October when the Director of DSS, Lawan Daura, Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Oyo Ita, the AGF and others were invited to testify. I did not hear or see anything to suggest what the committee claims in its report. Malami admitted meeting Maina but pointedly denied authorisin­g his re-instatemen­t. His account was corroborat­ed by Daura who revealed that he was even the one that advised Malami to meet Maina.

There is no doubt that Maina’s alleged recall and re-instatemen­t was an embarrassi­ng moment for the country, and it put a big question mark on the integrity of Nigeria’s Civil Service. How such a thing could happen in the Federal Civil Service is a question that must bother patriotic Nigerians. Finding the right answers too is as critical as finding solutions that would forestall a recurrence. The way the Madaki committee went about the assignment must be a let-down to all reasonable people. The legislatur­e has failed once again to intervene positively at a time when such interventi­on could be impactful.

– Madaki wrote in from Kano

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