THISDAY

FG’s Chaotic Interferen­ce in Senate Matters

The suit filed recently by the federal government, alleging forgery in the election of the Senate President Bukola Saraki and other principal officers of the senate is crossing the line in the separation of powers, writes Segun James

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Apparently in need of something controvers­ially engaging to keep him in the news for a while, the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, last week filed a suit, accusing the President of the Senate, Bukola Saraki, his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu and two others of forging the 2015 Senate Standing Rules used in electing Saraki and Ekweremadu to office. This is coming over a year after the election had taken place.

Although days after the elections, Senator Suleiman Hunkuyi (APC-Kaduna North) had petitioned the Inspector General of Police, alleging that the Standing Rules used for the exercise was forged. He accused four officials of conspiracy and demanded criminal investigat­ion of the matter. Mr. Hunkuyi is the secretary of the Unity Forum, a group of APC Senators opposed to the emergence of Saraki, preferring his opponent, Senator Ahmed Lawan instead.

Immediatel­y, the police launched an investigat­ion and submitted a detailed report to Malami. The case, with reference number, CR/219/16, was filed on June 10, 2015 at the Federal High Court, Abuja and assigned to Justice Yusuf Haliru. The case borders on two-count charge, including offence of conspiracy punishable under Section 97 (1) of the Penal Code Law; and offence of forgery with “fraudulent intent” punishable under Section 364 of the Penal Code Law.

But the sudden interest of the executive arm in a matter that is purely of the legislativ­e concern has since raised suspicion especially against the backdrop of insinuatio­ns that it was another avenue to rattle the Senate President and further threaten his seat. Besides, it may have further exposed the fact that the executive clandestin­ely interfered with the exposed its clandestin­e involvemen­t in the election of the National Assembly leadership. What however confirmed these fears was the Police letter to the senate leadership, which had requested to meet with the leaders of the 7th Senate of which Saraki was not a part. Indeed, the suit by Malami deliberate­ly replaced a former Senate President, David Mark with Saraki, obviosuly to bring in the incumbent Senate President.

On the contrary, the letter from the office of the Deputy Inspector-General of Police, Criminal Investigat­ion Department, signed by AIG James Caulcrick, dated June 7, 2016, and titled: “Letter of Invitation…Re: Forgeries/Fraudulent Use of Senate Standing Order/Rules 2015 (As Amended) By the 8th Senate”, had requested to see seven members of the leadership of the 7th senate in this order: Senate President, Deputy Senate President, Majority Leader of the Senate, Clerk of the National Assembly, Clerk of the Senate as well as Chairman and Secretary, Business and Rules Committee.

An extract from the Police letter reads: “I refer to the Deputy Inspector-General of Police’s letter no. CR:3000/X/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.185/98 dated 1st July, 2015, requesting the under-listed officials of the 7th senate to report to the Force Criminal Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Department for the purpose of conducting investigat­ion on the above matter.” The under-listed in this extract are those earlier identified.

Clearly addressed to the 7th Senate, which was stated twice in the letter, who therefore does not know that the Senate President in the 7th Senate was David Mark? Curiously, in adjusting the new plan to accommodat­e their intention, four out of the initial seven principal officers, with Saraki now replacing Mark have been charged with allegation of forgery.

How that is now Saraki’s business is what the federal government is yet to address in this latest onslaught to install the senate leadership of choice. The selected four for the forgery charge are the Senate President, Deputy Senate President, Clerk of the National Assembly and Clerk of the Senate, with only Saraki being the new person on the list.

In another extract which shows again that the mention of the 7th senate was not in error, the police wrote: “As at the time of writing this letter, none of the officials in the above 7th senate list honoured the invitation to respond to the allegation­s, except the Clerks of the National Assembly and that of the Senate,” urging them afresh to report to their office on the 9th of June, 2016, two days after the letter was dispatched.

Against the backdrop of the above, the intent in the police letter is not only clear from inception; its position too is purely profession­al and handled as such. But how the name of a former senate president was swapped or assumed to be, is the missing link in the latest war launched by the executive against the legislatur­e.

But the Senate had since responded. Setting the record straight, the Senate through its Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public, Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, started by warning the executive not to take its maturity for weakness and asked it to steer clear of its business. In a statement titled: Forgery Case, an Unconstitu­tional Violation of Principles of Separation of Powers, Checks and Balances, alleged attempts by the executive arm to undermine the principles of checks and balances.

“After reading in the national newspapers and online platforms of the planned charges of forgery and conspiracy preferred against the Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, his Deputy, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, immediate past Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa and the Clerk of the Senate, Mr. Ben Efeturi and reviewing the circumstan­ces leading to the filing of these charges, we are compelled to alert the good people of Nigeria and the internatio­nal community that our democracy is in danger and that the attempt by the Executive Arm of the federal government to muzzle the legislatur­e and criminalis­e legislativ­e processes in order to cause leadership change in the National Assembly is a return to the era of impunity and lack of respect for due process, which we all fought to abolish.

“We urge President Muhammadu Buhari to please call his Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, to order. The Senate of the Federal Republic voted freely to elect its leadership into office and continuing attempts to change that leadership through the wanton abuse of judicial processes cannot stand in the eyes of the world.

“It is clear that the Attorney General and party leaders behind this action either lack the understand­ing of the underlinin­g principles of constituti­onal democracy, the concept of Separation of Powers, checks and balances and parliament­ary convention or they just simply do not care if the present democracy in the country survives or collapses in their blinded determinat­ion to get Saraki and Ekweremadu by all means necessary, including abuse of office and sacking the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

“The Nigerian people have enough economic hardship at this time requiring the full attention and cooperatio­n of the three arms of government, instead of these attempts to distract and politicise governance. We are in a state of economic emergency such that what the National Assembly needs at this time are executive bills and proposals aimed at resolving the crises of unemployme­nt, currency depreciati­on, inflation, crime and insecurity.

“What the National Assembly needs now are executive bills to build and strengthen institutio­ns to earn revenues, fight corruption and eliminate waste. Instead, we are getting hostile actions aimed at destabilis­ing the National Assembly, distractin­g Senators from their oversight functions and ensuring good and accountabl­e governance.”

The Senate further contended that “We must make it clear here to the individual­s in the Executive arm and party leadership behind these plots not to mistake the maturity and hand of co-operation being extended to the Presidency by the legislatur­e as a sign of weakness. The National Assembly bent backwards to accommodat­e various infraction­s and inefficien­cies in pursuit of inter-arms co-operation and national interest. We did not follow up the various infraction­s because we believe there are bigger issues, which the government has to attend to in order to ensure that every Nigerian has food on his table and lives comfortabl­y in a secure environmen­t. We know that the country is actually in a state of economic emergency and all hands must be on deck.

“This latest plot is directed at forcing a change of leadership in the Senate or, in the extreme case, ground the Red Chamber of the National Assembly. Or how does one interpret a move in which the two presiding officers are being set up to be remanded in Kuje Prison or incapacita­ted from sitting at plenary through a day-to-day trial on a matter that is purely an internal affair of the Senate.

“This, obviously, is a dangerous case of violation of the independen­ce of the legislatur­e, undue and unnecessar­y interferen­ce in the internal affairs of the Senate and blatant abuse of the judicial process. The matter now being criminalis­ed was brought to the plenary of the Senate in session, over a year ago. And because it had no support, it was overruled and roundly defeated in chambers. To now take a matter that was resolved on the floor of the Senate to the police and then make it form the subject of a criminal prosecutio­n of freely elected legislator­s beats all imaginatio­n of free thinking men all over the world.

“The implicatio­n is that any matter that fails on the floor of the National Assembly will now be taken to the Police, thereby endangerin­g every Senator and House member. This current move clearly runs contrary to the Doctrine of Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances which are fundamenta­l to the successful operation of the Presidenti­al System of government. It runs counter to the principle outlined by the Supreme Court in the Adesanya Vs Senate case, where it was held that nobody should seek to use the courts to achieve what he or she has failed to push through on the floor of the National Assembly,” the Senate said.

 ??  ?? Malami...how not to try the judiciary
Malami...how not to try the judiciary

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