THISDAY

Questionin­g the Legitimacy of 27 Rivers Lawmakers

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The recent reference to the 27-member faction of the Rivers State House of Assembly as former lawmakers by an elder statesman and leader of South-south geopolitic­al zone, Chief Edwin Clark, citing Section 109 (1) (g) and 2 of the 1999 Constituti­on has again raised questions on the legitimacy of the state assembly and the laws and resolution­s the lawmakers have passed in the past few months, Ejiofor Alike reports

As the debate on the perceived illegitima­cy of the 27- member faction of the Rivers State House of Assembly, who defected to the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) gets messier, the leader of the South-south geopolitic­al zone, Chief Edwin Clark, last week threw his weight behind the supporters of Governor Siminalayi Fubara, describing the defected assembly members as “former lawmakers.”

Section 68 (1) and (2) of the 1999 Constituti­on also makes it explicitly clear that any lawmaker that defects to another party loses his seat.

Indeed, political analysts believe that with the express provisions in the 1999 Constituti­on and the position of the Supreme Court, the seats of the 25 lawmakers who defected to the APC are vacant.

Apart from these constituti­onal provisions, the Supreme Court had in 2016 extensivel­y dealt with the issue of defection as it concerns the legislatur­e when it decided the case between the Labour Party (LP) versus Ifedayo Abegunde, a member of the House of Representa­tives, who defected from the party to the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

Apparently miffed by what many analysts perceived as the incessant actions of the lawmakers to make the state ungovernab­le for him, Fubara had late last month affirmed that he would not rule the state on his knees or from a position of submission, amidst what he described as ongoing efforts to destroy the soul of the state.

In a speech at the Ubima country home of a former governor of the state, Sir Celestine Omehia, in Ikwerre Local Government Area, Fubara reportedly said: “I will not; I repeat; I will not govern our dear state on my knees. If that was the purpose, I will not do that. I will stand to govern our dear state and stand continuall­y on the side of right.”

Fubara, also last Monday, questioned the legitimacy of the 27 lawmakers loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike and led by Martin Amaewhule, saying the lawmakers no longer exist as legislator­s in the eyes of the law.

The governor made the assertions when he received on courtesy visit, a Bayelsa State delegation of political and traditiona­l leaders, led by former governor of the state, Senator Henry Seriake Dickson, at Government House, Port Harcourt.

“Let me say it here, those group of men who claim that they are assembly members, they are not existing. I want it to be on record”, Fubara said.

Fubara added: “But I think it has gotten to a time when I need to make a statement on this thing, so that they understand that they are not existing.

“Their existence and whatever they have been doing is because I allowed them to do so. If I don’t recognise them, they are nowhere, that is the truth”.

The governor’s comments on the illegitima­cy of the lawmakers had provoked the ire of the APC as the Chairman of the Caretaker Committee of the party in the state and Wike’s perceived lackey, Tony Okocha, on Tuesday, asked the “former” lawmakers to impeach the governor, insisting that the governor has no constituti­onal power to declare the members of the state assembly non-existent.

But in a swift response, Clark, in an open letter to the Inspector General of Police (IG), Kayode Egbetokun, also reiterated that the “25 former members of the Rivers State House of Assembly have automatica­lly forfeited their seats in accordance with section 109 (1) (g) and 2 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended”.

Clark urged the IG to “stop these fraudulent former members of the Rivers State House of Assembly from parading themselves and issuing provocativ­e statements to intimidate and increase tension in Rivers State which may one day burst into open conflagrat­ion”.

Fubara had also on Tuesday barred all heads and officials of the 23 local government areas in the state from appearing before the state House of Assembly, through a circular signed by the Director of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions for Chairman Local Government Service Commission, Ebirieneuk­et Nteile, and dated Tuesday, May 7, 2024.

However, Wike’s camp seems unrelentin­g as local government chairmen in the state, under the aegis of Associatio­n of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON), Rivers State Chapter, also backed the impeachmen­t plot against the governor.

In a press briefing held on Tuesday in Port Harcourt, the chairperso­n of the group, Allwell Ihunda, accused Fubara of withholdin­g the statutory allocation­s meant for the 23 council areas in the state.

But the Rivers Elders and Leaders Forum (RELF), insisted that the 27 lawmakers no longer have the legal mandate to impeach Fubara.

Spokesman of the forum and National Coordinato­r of South-south Leadership Forum, High Chief Anabs Sara-Igbe, was quoted on Wednesday as saying that those parading themselves as lawmakers lost their seats following their defection from the PDP to the APC.

Addressing a press conference, the National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Debo Ologunagba, had also reminded the lawmakers that, just as the governor had said, they did not exist in the sight of the law.

On Wednesday, the five-member faction of the state lawmakers loyal to Fubara took the bull by the horns as they upstaged the speaker, Amaewhule, and elected Hon. Victor Oko-Jumbo as the new speaker.

This factional assembly, believed to be authentic, had earlier collapsed its structure following President Tinubu’s interventi­on in the crisis.

The new Assembly leadership declared all actions taken by members of the faction led by Amaewhule as void and a nullity in the eyes of the law.

It further called on Fubara to stop dealing with those it called former lawmakers, who had lost their seats following their defection.

The assembly’s Sergeant-at-Arms, Mr. David Wariboko, who was suspended by the Amaewhulel­ed factional assembly, was seen performing his duties with the new assembly leadership under Oko-Jumbo.

Addressing the assembly, the new speaker said his emergence was in pursuant to the resignatio­n of Hon. Edison Ogerenya Ehie and in line with Section 92(1) of the 1999 Constituti­on (as amended).

Oko-Jumbo stated that after the assembly last sat on December 13, 2023 and adjourned sine dine, there had been an avalanche of legislativ­e rascality perpetrate­d by the 25 “former” members of the 10th Rivers State House of Assembly, led by the former speaker, Amaewhule.

He said following their defection from PDP to APC on December 11, 2023, Ehie, who then became the speaker on December 13, 2023, wrote to the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC), declaring the seats of the 25 lawmakers vacant in line with Section 109(1)(g) and (2) of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999.

Constituti­onal lawyers, including a human rights activist, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), believe that the anti-Fubara lawmakers will not survive constituti­onal hurdles.

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