Daily Trust Sunday

SENATORS THREATEN TO CUT FUNDS TO SGF’S OFFICE

Say Letter Deflates Anti-Corruption War Insist Babachir Must Go Buhari Will Ensure Justice - Presidency

- By Hamza Idris, Isiaka Wakili, Ismail Mudashir & Abbas Jimoh

Since the commenceme­nt of this administra­tion, nothing has pitched President Muhammadu Buhari against the National Assembly, members of his party, the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), the opposition and civil society groups like his last week’s response to the Senate’s recommenda­tion to sack the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Engr. David Babachir Lawal.

It is obvious that various groups within the National Assembly and other places are looking for a way to fight back since the Secretary to the Government of the Federation was given a ‘clean bill’ by the Presidency.

In the past one week, many pundits have not minced words in accusing President Muhammadu Buhari of shifting the goalpost as far as his much-celebrated anti-corruption crusade is concerned. They accused the president of selective justice, saying it was an opportunit­y for him to prove his ardent critics wrong.

Some senators who spoke to Daily Trust on Sunday threatened that if nothing is done about their recommenda­tions, they may suspend approval of funds to the office of the SGF. Senator Isa Hamma Misau (APC, Bauchi) had advocated the withholdin­g of capital allocation to all agencies under the supervisio­n of the SGF.

Speaking, he said, “Only allocation for salaries and other recurrent expenditur­es should be appropriat­ed for all agencies under the supervisio­n of a corrupt person”.

“Buhari claims to be a pious leader, but what we see these days clearly violate the concept of fair treatment. It is short of the ideal, and I think he is really caught up somewhere. It is wrong to say that Babachir cannot be prosecuted because the allegation­s against him were not proven. As you can see, all the clarificat­ions given in the past few days are afterthoug­hts. Those handling the president have goofed.

“Hundreds of PDP members were arrested and locked, even before any investigat­ion was carried out. They were kept in prison custody before investigat­ion commenced and many are still behind bars. It is only in Nigeria that you see this kind of thing - selective justice, if you like,” A.A Uba, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) said.

The Senator Ahmed Makarfi-led PDP was equally not mild in its response. “The Presidency, in today’s dispensati­on, is the ‘judicial clearing house,’ issuing clean bill of health to all accused corrupt officials who are members of the APC and friends of the administra­tion.

“It is quite disturbing that the president cleared his SGF of wrongdoing despite the weighty evidence of his ‘grass-cutting abilities’ uncovered by the Senate. He was also accused of complicity in the award of contracts relating to the internally displaced persons (IDPs) camp in Borno State, amounting to over N200 million,” the party stated in a press release issued by its spokesman, Prince Dayo Adeyeye.

Buhari was misled into signing ‘exoneratio­n’ letter

It was gathered that already, many members of the National Assembly and those close to President Buhari within the party are aware of the “diminishin­g rating” of the ongoing anti-corruption fight. Some ranking senators who are of the APC said the SGF must be sacked for the president to be taken seriously.

The senators, who spoke to our correspond­ent in separate interviews, expressed shock over the president’s response, which defended the SGF.

Buhari had, in the letter to the Senate, dated January 17, faulted the resolution of the Upper Chamber on Babachir, saying the senators were not fair to the SGF.

The Senate had, in December, called for the sack of Babachir, following the interim report of an ad hoc committee constitute­d to investigat­e the N1.3 billion contract scandal that rocked the Presidenti­al Initiative on North-East (PINE) under his supervisio­n.

Specifical­ly, the Senate said the SGF’s company, Rholavisio­n Engineerin­g Limited, was awarded consultanc­y contract for the removal of the invasive plant species in Yobe State.

Speaking to our correspond­ent, a senator said the president was misled into signing the letter. “Somebody wrote the letter, gave it to him to sign and he did that hastily without knowing the content of the communicat­ion. They are saying the Senate’s report was an interim report. Was the report that sent Dasuki to prison not an interim report?

“Buhari’s letter has already deflated his anti-corruption war. The only way out is for him to sack the SGF because aside from the fight against terrorism in the North-East, the anti-corruption war is our selling point, nothing else,” he said.

The ranking senator, who is from the North, said they were totally disappoint­ed with the president’s position on the matter and how it is being handled.

“How do we explain this? We are fighting corruption and the SGF has been found wanting from all angles, yet the president is defending him. Facts are sacred, he should go,” he said.

While admitting that the resolution of the Senate was advisory, he said Buhari must act on it. “He can simply ask the SGF to step down so that investigat­ion can be completed. This can give credibilit­y to the whole thing and the outcome can determine the faith of the embattled SGF.

“Yes, we know our resolution is advisory, but a government that has corruption fight as its policy thrust must act on it,” he said.

Another ranking senator who is close to the Presidency said Buhari’s letter negated the moves to cement the crack between the Executive and the Legislatur­e.

“The letter came at a time when we are trying to bring our caucuses together to work for the country. With this letter now, a new battle-line has been drawn.

You know that before now, there were issues frustratin­g us in our caucuses. Frankly speaking, the letter was unnecessar­y and those that wrote it are enemies of the president,” he said.

Rather than send the letter, he said the president should have invited the leadership of the Senate alongside the party (APC) top echelon to thrash out the issue.

He said that with the new developmen­t, it would be difficult to convince the senators to have a rethink on the issue.

Meanwhile, our reporter gathered that the final report of the ad hoc committee chaired by Senator Shehu Sani would be ready by the end of February.

The report would be considered when the Senate resumes plenary. The Senate suspended plenary till February 21 for budget defence.

A source close to the committee said, “Another public hearing will be organised because a lot of prominent personalit­ies have been mentioned in the PINE contracts scandal. The final report will shake the country.”

But another senator said the SGF issue was dead. “I have been in the National Assembly for 12 years and I have never heard of interim report. Why are they rushing? If the allegation­s are facts, they don’t need to rush into considerin­g the interim report,” he said.

President caught between loyalty and morality

Sources said President Buhari was not unaware of the weighty allegation­s against Babachir and their implicatio­ns on his personal integrity and the “plummeting rating” of his government. A senior official of the APC, who does not want to be named, said the grass cutting allegation was just one out of many contentiou­s issues that would have warranted the sack of the SGF.

“So many issues are waiting for presidenti­al action. One of them is the messing up of board appointmen­ts by the SGF-led committee, which is now being handled by the vice president.

“Although the SGF had denied compromisi­ng the list of the prospectiv­e appointees, many APC members across the 36 states of the federation are not happy with him,” he said.

Another APC source said even members of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) are at a crossroad with the SGF.

“He really looks down on some ministers, making their work extremely difficult because they don’t have access to the president. Nothing is moving; the government is at a standstill,” he said.

In a recent interview, Chief Ikeobasi Mokelu, a chieftain of the APC who served as the late President Sani Abacha’s last

informatio­n and culture minister between 1997 and 1998, said, “you can always assess the weaknesses and strengths of a president or head of state from the perspectiv­e of the engine of the government proper. When a government is perceived to be weak, it’s because the engine of the government is not driven properly, or is driven by inexperien­ce or by ineptitude. The Presidency is not the engine of government. The engine of government is the cabinet office (Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation),” he said.

But another source said Buhari was caught between rewarding loyalty and morality.

“The president is morally bound to suspend the SGF, but Babachir is one his closest allies who sacrificed a lot during difficult times,” he said, adding that Buhari has never doubted his loyalty, and if recent events are anything to go by, he will sack virtually everyone close to him.

“And by sacking the likes of Babachir, the president will literally strip himself of immunity because the odds are many,” he said. Presidency to decide SGF’s fate A senior Presidency official told Daily Trust on Sunday that Buhari would ensure that the matter is concluded with fairness to all involved. The official, who asked not to be named, said the president’s recent letter to the Senate, rejecting its recommenda­tion to remove and prosecute the SGF, did not indicate his ultimate decision on the substantiv­e allegation­s against Babachir.

The official clarified: “In his letter to the Senate, the president explained why he could not accede to the request by the Senate based on the circumstan­ces, clearly leaving open the conclusion of the matter by other means.

“He (Buhari) said he could not accede to the recommenda­tion of the Senate on grounds of lack of fair hearing, and that the resolution was signed by a minority of the Senate panel, and that the panel report itself was an interim one.

“This does not mean that President Buhari is done with the investigat­ion of the said allegation­s, or that he has condoned alleged corrupt actions by the SGF. What this means is that the president wants to be able to handle the matter on his own terms, based purely on proper adherence to extant public rules and procedures relating to the abuse of office by public officers.

“If he is going to discipline his own appointee, he would rather do it properly, not railroaded. No one should be in doubt of the resolve of Mr. President to sustain his long-held reputation for integrity and his zero-level tolerance for corruption. But things must be done properly, and seen to be so. And that is what the president is keen on ensuring.

“Actually, the president had expected the Senate to conclude its report substantiv­ely and tender a full report while he continues his own investigat­ion through a team he had set up to review the matter with the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.

“The president’s letter to the Senate was very clear, even though media reports focused only on a few aspects of it. For instance, in the second paragraph of the letter to the Senate President, President Buhari explained thus: ‘I set up a review team to consider the recommenda­tions from the Senate committee. I have also conducted further investigat­ions based on Engineer Lawal’s response to the allegation­s and issues raised in the Senate’s resolution, and I have come to the conclusion that I believe will guide the Senate in the proper review of its interim report.

“This is a forward-looking indication. The president expected a broader and thorough job from the Senate, and he won’t be opposed to a broader job by the legislativ­e chamber. Besides, the president is determined to get to the root of the matter, considerin­g the weight of the allegation­s.

“In the letter to the Senate, the president noted that a final report ‘ought to have been presented to the Senate in plenary for adoption as a binding and final report before submission to the presidency, given the weight of allegation­s in the report.’

“No one who knows the president very well will think this case is over. Wait and see; this case will be concluded with fairness to all involved, including the Nigerian people.” CSOs differ Civil Society Organisati­ons (CSOs) have expressed divergent views on the “presidenti­al clearance” of the SGF.

Is separate interviews with Daily Trust on Sunday, the Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre (CISLAC); the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t (CDD); the Resource Centre for Human Rights and Civic Education (CHRICED); the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) and the Protest to Power Movement (PTPM), expressed reservatio­n on the success of the anti-corruption war.

The executive director of CISLAC, Auwal Musa Rafsanjani; the director of the CDD, Idayat Hassan; the executive director of the CHRICED, Dr. Ibrahim M. Zikirullah­i; the lead director of the CSJ, Eze Onyekpere, and the national coordinato­r of the PTPM and co-convener, Say No Campaign (SNC), Jaye Gaskia, however, expressed divergent views on the way forward.

Rafsanjani said the problem in the Senator Shehu Sani committee report and his comment on President Buhari on the SGF was due to lack of legislativ­e understand­ing.

He said since the committee’s report had not been debated by the whole chamber for a collective decision to be taken, it cannot be a basis for executive action.

“If there was no fair hearing, it would be difficult to take a decision to sack the SGF.

“Comments and attacks on the efforts of the president at fighting corruption based on the report and the observatio­ns by the presidency are not sufficient to condemn the whole fight against corruption in Nigeria. There are obvious efforts to minimise corruption,” Rafsanjani said, adding that Senator Shehu Sani should not join those determined to frustrate efforts at fighting corruption in Nigeria. He, however, said he expected the SGF to step aside pending when the allegation is properly investigat­ed.

“If that is not done, his integrity and that of the government would be perceived wrongly by the general public. It is my view that since there is a conscious effort by some people to bastardise the fight against corruption in Nigeria, we have to be careful and not allow them to continue with their evil plan to destroy Nigeria and Nigerians,” he added.

On her part, Idayat Hassan said President Buhari made his decision on the SGF more on process than substance. “The president emphasised the lack of fair hearing and failure of all committee members to sign as part of the basis of his decision. However, the core question on Babachir’s innocent or otherwise cannot be glossed over at all.

“This does not augur well for the fight against corruption. It was the same administra­tion that abused the law and due process to keep some accused persons in prison for reasons best known to them and

forcefully entered judges’ houses in the interest of justice. So they cannot approbate and reprobate at the same time. Why can’t an investigat­ion be launched? The fight against corruption remains uncoordina­ted with quick wins so far,” she said.

Dr. Zikirullah­i said the fight against corruption was working to the extent that influentia­l persons are being tried in courts today. He said it was working because it is known that “the likes of Dasuki, Olisa Metuh, Diezani, Yuguda, and many others looted Nigeria dry”.

New frontier for Senate, Executive war opens

Barrister Onyekpere said the president’s refusal to act on the Senate recommenda­tion to sack the SGF was a demonstrat­ion of the comatose state of the war against corruption. He said it showed “presidenti­al insincerit­y and hypocrisy”.

“It is a sad testament to the fact that there are now two sets of laws for Nigerians, one for Buhari’s elected saints and the other for us, the other people of Nigeria who do not belong to his elect,” Onyekpere said.

He said the developmen­t would definitely sour the relationsh­ip between the Senate and the Executive, “as no reasonable person expects the Senate to take this slight without a fight”.

“The Senate could consider standing down the 2017 appropriat­ion to the office of the SGF until a fit and proper person is appointed to occupy the office,” he added.

On his part, the national coordinato­r of the PTPM and co-convener, Say No Campaign (SNC), Jaye Gaskia, said the president’s response to the Senate on the resignatio­n and prosecutio­n of the SGF was very unfortunat­e and condemnabl­e.

“The response of the Presidency is quite shocking and demonstrat­es that the fight against corruption is not being institutio­nalised at all. Even if the processes of the Senate could be faulted with respect to the report being an interim one, any serious government would have responded to the allegation­s against some of its key officials and nominees by actually directing an open and transparen­t investigat­ion into the allegation­s. But what do we have here? It is a pathetic attempt to dismiss the allegation­s as trivial. If the Senate has any honour at all, it would reject the letters and insist that proper investigat­ions be done,” he said.

Meanwhile, Babachir has not shown any sign of distress as he was seen throughout last week attending to his schedules. Workers in his office were, however, seen expressing mixed feelings. Some welcomed his “clearance” while others said the president had dealt a blow to the anti-corruption war.

“Buhari’s letter has already deflated his anti-corruption war. The only way out is for him to sack the SGF because aside from the fight against terrorism in the North-East, the anti-corruption war is our selling point, nothing else”

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 ??  ?? Senator Shehu Sani
Senator Shehu Sani
 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

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