THISDAY

Buhari: Akpabio’s Shot in the Dark

- Enefiok Ekanem

Nigerians have been having harrowing experience­s since President Bola Tinubu took office, as they are confronted by mounting unpreceden­ted hunger and insecurity as well as crushed naira whose value keeps tumbling without restraint, heading towards exchanging for probably N2000 to a dollar.

Though these are true reflection­s of the goings on in Nigeria, not a few citizens were shocked by the Senate President, Senator Godswill Akpabio, when he publicly shredded the immediate past president, Muhammadu Buhari, and dumped the country’s economic woes at his doorstep.

According to him, the National Assembly is beginning to understand the full extent of the economic damage allegedly done by Buhari and the former Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele, whose policies he claimed left the country indebted and its people living in extreme penury.

Speaking at Senator Barinada Mpigi’s thanksgivi­ng service in Koroma, Tai Local Government in Rivers State, Akpabio reportedly said: “A lot of people will not understand the kind of debt and economic mess that we are in, but I remember (former) President Obama saying that you cannot know Washington until you get to Washington. It was awful by the time we arrived to examine the nation’s economic status.”

Truly, Akpabio deserves to hold his views, rightly or wrongly. The problem is, Who is Akpabio?

In fact, he does not need any introducti­on. He is the President of the 10th Senate. He is a former governor and senator of the Federal Republic but above all, Akpabio served as a minister in the Buhari administra­tion where he presided over the all-important Niger Delta ministry.

It is worrisome that a character like Akpabio, like many others, is occupying such a sensitive office in a land in which he has no moral scruples. If, indeed, Buhari is responsibl­e for the mess Nigeria is currently undergoing, by blaming the former president, Akpabio has also self-indicted himself because being part of the Federal Executive Council, he was part and parcel of whatever he is now accusing Buhari of doing.

Unfortunat­ely, Nigerians are too docile or tolerant. Akpabio should have been chased out of the senate chambers by now. How could Akpabio, who was a key player in the Buhari administra­tion assault and insult our intellect with such balderdash? At least, there was never any report that Akpabio disagreed with the president over any policy.

Besides that, how has Akpabio fared as the senate president to give him a solid ground to stand and criticise others?

Akpabio’s bland senate presidency has not only led to the clamour for his resignatio­n, but he has also drawn the ire of his lead colleagues, who are not comfortabl­e with how he has turned the Red Chamber into a cowering and groveling extension of the president.

He has been called out for his penchant for ambushing senators by foisting deliberate­ly delayed presidenti­al communicat­ion on the Senate in a manner they would not have time to debate and scrutinise such issues.

Some leading senators like the Chief Whip of the Senate, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, had even confronted him on the floor of the Red Chamber over this and accused him of not giving senators adequate opportunit­y to interrogat­e and scrutinise bills, especially money bills.

Ndume warned that history would judge him for approving executive requests and passing important legislatio­n hastily.

Ndume is just one too many in the swirling criticism of Akpabio over his dour leadership of the National Assembly. It was as a result of this and the fear that he would be impeached at the least opportunit­y that drove him to amend the Senate standing rules to the effect that no first-term senator is qualified to vie for the position of presiding officer, which clearly breaches the constituti­on that allows senators to freely choose their presiding officers at their first sitting irrespecti­ve of ranking. Also, Akpabio has remained an unserious lawmaker, a chronic latecomer, who philanders while urgent matters of state require his attention. Neverthele­ss, it is doubtful if he would last in the gilded office.

Strangely, Akpabio has suddenly turned the people’s advocate and can now blame Buhari. Here is a man, who only recently mocked the masses when a senator commented that the government should ‘let Nigerians breathe’. He turned such a serious matter into a joke, evoking guffaws from his unempathat­ic co-travelers

To be fair to Akpabio, he is standing on the same slippery ground that they manipulate­d to get him into the senate and consequent­ly foisted him on the upper chamber as its president. There are far too many skeletons in his cupboard for which he is being blackmaile­d or so it seems. He is desperate to cling to the office because all that his blackmaile­rs need is to pick up one of the items on his brimful file and whip him back in line, using the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. Unsurprisi­ngly, he is more of the president’s errand boy than the leader of the country’s legislatur­e.

It is difficult to know whether Akpabio was joking when he said the government does not know the offence to charge the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN,

Godwin Emefiele with. This exposes the government he purports to represent to ridicule because they should as well let the man go if they don’t know what his offences are.

By the way, the only difference between Emefiele and Akpabio is the fact that Emefiele is already answering for his alleged offences while Akpabio is privileged to have so far put a lid on his. We in Akwa Ibom, and Nigerians know that the Senate President had been a guest of the EFCC over the alleged theft of N108.1 billion of Akwa Ibom funds and we eagerly await the conclusion of the matter.

He also has explanatio­ns to give over allegation­s of a N40 billion fraud perpetrate­d in the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission, NDDC, a parastatal under him as the Minister of Niger Delta Ministry for three years. There were also allegation­s of over N86 billion contract scams, involving him and a former Acting Managing Director of the NDDC, Prof Kemebradik­umo Pondei, which is still under investigat­ion by the anti-graft agency. It is, therefore absurd that Akpabio should use his undeserved privileged position to try to pull a wool over our eyes.

Enefiok, a social commentato­r wrote in from Oron, Akwa Ibom State.

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