THEWILL NEWSPAPER

...Tension as Anarchy Looms in Rivers State

-

week Wednesday that the House of Assembly did not exist by virtue of the defection of 27 members in clear violation of sections of the constituti­on, the governing party’s National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka, on Friday, said the 27 Assembly members did not lose their membership of the Assembly by virtue of their defection.

Morka, who is a lawyer, said there is nothing “homeostati­c about Section 109(1)(g) of the Constituti­on. It is not self-perpetuati­ng. The Proviso to the said Section 109(1) (g) establishe­d exceptiona­l grounds to the applicabil­ity of Section 109(1)(g) Section 109(1) states: A member of a House of Assembly shall vacate his seat in the House if - (S.109(1)(g) - being a person whose election to the House of Assembly was sponsored by a political party, he becomes a member of another political party before expiration of the period for which that House was elected.

"Provided that his membership of the latter political party is not as a result of a division in the political party of which he was previously a member or of a merger of two or more political parties or factions by one of which he was previously sponsored."

SHOW OF POWER

Surprising­ly, a day to the election of the new Speaker Oko-Jombo and two days to the restrainin­g order by the High Court, Governor Fubara and his Commission­er for Informatio­n and Communicat­ion, Joseph Johnson, had declared publicly that the 27 lawmakers who defected to the rival APC were not known to law.

Investigat­ion shows that both parties to the dispute, namely the Rivers State Government and the 27 pro-Wike lawmakers embarked on another round of conflict after each party breached the peace deal brokered by President Bola Tinubu between Wike and Fubara on December 18, 2023.

Highlights of the deal stated that commission­ers who had resigned should be called back; the 2024 budget should be represente­d to the House of Assembly; all cases in court were to be withdrawn; impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the governor to be withdrawn and the withheld allowances of the lawmakers should be paid.

Investigat­ion shows that the governor fulfilled all except one of the signed agreements: That is re-presentati­on of the budget. The 27 lawmakers on their own failed to withdraw one of their cases in court in Abuja. In fact, they went ahead to get judgement in their favour.

The lawmakers had filed a case at the Federal High Court, Abuja shortly before President Tinubu’s interventi­on. It had the National Assembly, Senate President, Deputy Senate President, Senate Majority Leader, and Senate Minority Leader as the first to the fifth defendants, respective­ly. The sixth to I0th defendants were the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, the Deputy Speaker of the House, House Majority Leader, House Minority Leader, and Clerk to the National Assembly. Governor Fubara, Attorney-General of Rivers, Commission­er of Finance, Accountant-General of Rivers, Rivers State Civil Service Commission, the Inspector-General of Police and Edison Ehie were the 11th to the 17th defendants.

The reliefs sought by the plaintiffs was an order of injunction restrainin­g the first to the 10th defendants from entertaini­ng any request from Fubara to take over the performanc­e of the functions of Rivers State Assembly, including its role to make laws for the peace, order and good governance of Rivers State in respect of matters that are within its constituti­onal and legislativ­e competence. Then on January 22, 2024, the Federal High Court in Abuja declared Rivers N800 billion Budget, passed by pro- Fubara four lawmakers, illegal.

Efforts to get the reaction of the Commission­er for Informatio­n and Communicat­ion, Johnson failed as he did not pick repeated calls to his phone. But a top government source confided in THEWILL that the state government decided to move against the proWike 27 lawmakers for three major reasons, after deep considerat­ion.

The first is political. “The assembly members defected from the PDP to the APC when there was no crisis in the party, either at the state or at the national level. On this, the Constituti­on is very clear and the Appeal Court and Supreme Courts have ruled that you cannot transfer the mandate of your party to another,” the source said.

The second reason the source gave is legal: “The 27 lawmakers said they dropped impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Governor Fubara after the President’s interventi­on. While the governor withdrew his case against the lawmakers, they refused to withdraw the case they instituted against him before the peace deal. So, they were the first to violate the presidenti­al agreement. They should stop crying as if they are the victims.”

Finally, the source said the 27 lawmakers had, by their “confrontat­ional” posture, taken things too far as the governor had been treating them as members of the same family.

When asked that the government too had violated a part of the presidenti­al deal by not re-submitting the budget for passage by the Amaewhule-led Assembly, the source simply replied: “A High Court ruling had recognised the Speaker that passed the budget. Based on that, the budget was signed into law by the governor because it had legal backing, however you look at it.”

THEWILL could not get reactions from any of the 27 lawmakers as a contact stated that only Amaewhule can speak on the issues in contention and the press statement he had earlier issued had addressed “all contending issues for now,” especially after the Friday

High Court ruling had restrained him from parading himself as Speaker or convening plenary at the Assembly premises.

Speaking through his media aide, Martins Wachukwu, Amaewhule described the governor’s remarks on the non-existent of the Assembly as unguarded and a direct affront to the grundnorm of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

He said he would not join the governor in what he described as “messy comments.”

“We will continue to perform our constituti­onal functions as an institutio­n and one of the tripods of democratic government,” Amaewhule said.

LAWMAKERS/ LG CHAIRMEN FIGHT BACK

An indication that the political crisis is still ahead emerged when the Clerk of the House of Assembly, Dr Emeka Amadi, declared the emergence of Speaker OjoJumbo as illegal.

He said, “As the Clerk of the Rivers State House and one who administer­ed the Oath of membership and office to all members and a custodian of all records of the House, I write to state the following: “That there was no change in the leadership of the House today and Rt. Hon. Martin Chike Amaewhule remains the Speaker of the House, while Rt. Hon. Dumte Maol and Hon. Major Jack remain Deputy Speaker and Majority Leader, respective­ly.”

Opposed to the governor too are the local government chairmen who accused the government of withholdin­g allocation­s to some of the councils, an accusation the government denied and asked them to be ready to vacate office when their tenure expires in two weeks.

STATE Vs FEDERAL MIGHT?

The Rivers State government source, who asked to be anonymous, stated confidentl­y that the lingering crisis, in spite of Tinubu’s interventi­on, could lead to the developmen­t of a frosty relationsh­ip between the Federal Government and the state because the President’s interventi­on is yet to have the desired effect.

“Investigat­ion shows that both parties to the dispute, namely the Rivers State Government and the 27 pro-Wike lawmakers embarked on another round of conflict after each party breached the peace deal brokered by President Bola Tinubu between Wike and Fubara on December 18, 2023

“It was a political solution which was good in its intention but using it as a cover to violate the law is unacceptab­le. There is nothing like federal might here. The truth of the matter is that people became name droppers at some point,” the source said.

A presidenti­al source simply reacted by saying that political interventi­on, as President Tinubu did, is “only one option to the resolution of the lingering crisis. The legal angle is also available."

Although there is no clear indication how this crisis in Rivers State will pan out, given the power play on display, things appear to be massively in favour of Governor Fubara since a respected former governor of the state, Peter Odili publicly declared the governor as leader of the Peoples Democratic party, (PDP) in the state. Support from traditiona­l rulers, youths, market women and politician­s have equally grown for Fubara, leading him to be more assertive in behaviour.

“Our people have resolved to support Governor Fubara 100 per cent. The local government chairmen have 14 days remaining to serve their tenure,” said Chairman of the National Youth Council of Nigeria, Chijioke Ihumo.

Chief Bode George, former Deputy National Chairman of PDP, who on Friday called on both the APC and PDP to stop issuing provocativ­e statements that can increase the tension in the state, urged elders and stakeholde­rs of the party to intervene in the political crisis before “it becomes a national conflagrat­ion.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria