Tag: Amaechi

  • PDP senators walk out  as Amaechi is confirmed

    PDP senators walk out as Amaechi is confirmed

    Tempers flared at the Senate yesterday during the confirmation of former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi as a minister.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) senators and their Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterparts took on one another on the propriety or otherwise of clearing him.

    PDP senators tried to block his confirmation, but walked out when they could not have their way.

    But Deputy Senate President (DSP) Ike Ekweremadu (PDP Enugu West) stayed back and joined APC senators to confirm Amaechi and 17 other nominees. The Senate had about two weeks ago also confirmed 18 nominees. Others confirmed yesterday are Adebayo Shittu, Khadija Abba-Ibrahim, Heineken Lokpobiri, Claudius Omoleye Daramola, Baba Shehuri Mustapha, Ocholi Enojo James,  Adewole Isaac Folorunso, Bawa Bwari, Geoffrey Onyeama, Zainab Ahmed, Mansur Mohammed Dan Ali, Usani Usani Uguru, Okechukwu Eyinna Enelamah, Anwuka Anthony Gozie, Mohammed Musa Bello, Adamu Adamu and Aisha Abubakar.

    APC has 59 senators, including Senate President Bukola Saraki; PDP, 49. The 109th senator, who was an APC member, died few months ago. His seat has yet to be filled.

    A ministerial-nominee requires simple majority to be confirmed.

    In the last dispensation  when PDP was in the majority, the Senate confirmed ministerial nominees without considering the opposition’s position.

    Alhaji Jelili Adesiyan and Senator Musiliu Obanikoro were cleared by the then David Mark-led Senate despite the objection of APC senators.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) said the confirmation of the would-be ministers showed that there is no longer any division within the party.

    It hailed its senators for a job well done, saying democracy was clearly at work in the Senate during the ministerial screening.

    Trouble started yesterday with the presentation of the report of the Committee on Ethics, Priviledges and Public Petitions which considered a petition against Amaechi’s nomination.

    A self-styled “The Integrity Group” had petitioned the Senate, kicking against the confirmation of Amaechi who it accused of mismanaging N71 billion of Rivers fund when he was governor.

    Presenting the committee report, its Chairman, Senator Samuel Anyanwu (PDP Imo East), said the panel had recommended that Amaechi’s confirmation be put on hold because he is in court challenging the allegation against him.

    The committee, he said, also reviewed the White Paper on an administrative panel of inquiry, which he said, indicted Amaechi.

    According to him, going ahead to confirm Ameachi would amount to preempting the court’s decision on the matter. Anyanwu said eight of the 11-member committee signed the report.

    Reacting to the report, Majority Leader Senator Ali Ndume said Amaechi should be cleared since the committee agreed that the upper chamber cannot enquire into a matter that is in court.

    Minority Leader Senator Godswill Akpabio disagreed, pointing out that PDP senators had earlier refrained from participating in Amaechi’s screening because the petition against him was being investigated.

    The PDP caucus, he said, changed its position because the Anyanwu committee has submitted its report.

    Senator Thompson Sekibo (PDP Rivers East) came down hard on Amaechi and the Senate, warning against the implications of going ahead to confirm the nominee.

    Sekibo, who represents Amaechi’s district, said: “We represent our people and the Nigerian people are in the majority. The Nigerian people are the ones giving value to what we are doing.

    “There are allegations of corruption, mismanagement of funds, sale of government assets against the nominee. There is a moral burden on all of us here. Whatever we do today, we would be encouraging corruption by confirming Amaechi”.

    Senator Biodun Olujimi (Ekiti South) warned of the moral burden on the Senate and President Muhammadu Buhari if Amaechi was cleared. According to her, the President came to power on the crest of being an anti-corruption crusader and as such his administration should not be seen encouraging graft.

    She said: “There is a weighty allegation against the nominee and there is need to allow the court to clear the nominee before he can be confirmed. Nigerians will now know that this government is not out to fight corruption”.

    Earlier, Ndume, who came under Senate Rule 53(7), called on Saraki to proceed with Amaechi’s confirmation procedure.

    He urged the Senate not to take further action on the panel report, a statement which drew the ire of Akpabio and other PDP senators, who argued otherwise.

    But Senator Babajide Omoworare (APC Osun East) picked holes in their arguments.

    Citing Sections 147(2) and 66 of the Constitution, Omoworare pointed out that where a law is in conflict with the Constitution, such law “must automatically bow to the supremacy of the Constitution”.

    Omoworare cited constitutional provisions to back APC senators’ position.

    As Senator Barnabas Gemade (APC Benue Northeast) rose to speak, the PDP senators started walking out of the chambers.

    They shunned Gemade’s and other APC senators’ plea not to leave. They left without Ekweremadu, who waited till the end of proceedings.

    Following their exit, Saraki called for voice vote on Amaechi’s confirmation.

    The response was a deafening and prolonged “aye”, with many of the senators rising on their feet and screaming their affirmation in excitement.

    Addressing reporters in the Senate Hearing Room 1 later, Akpabio, who spoke on PDP senators’ behalf, claimed that they were denied their right to speak.

    He said: “We were shut out when we wanted to react to the report when it was laid.

    There was a little bit of something we don’t think is in conformity with morality there. Once a case is before a competent court of law, any action on that matter is subjudice and the committee was able to establish that the issues that were brought  against the nominee are already issues that were adjudicated upon by the Court of Appeal and other courts of competent jurisdiction. So the issue of taking further action on his nomination whether by way of appointment or otherwise did not exist . We tried to make  this point but they felt as a majority party there was no need to comply with the law.

    “The law is very clear that once a matter is before a court of competent jurisdiction you can take no  further action. So there was nothing wrong with suspending the issue of confirmation until those cases are disposed of and in this case I understand it is the nominee that went to court.

    “It could have been a good idea for the nominee to withdraw his cases from court to allow the Senate to go into the matter but when that did not happen  we felt that as lawmakers we have a responsibility  to Nigerians not to partake in that kind of charade.

    “It is not normal for PDP senators to stage a walk out. This is the first time and it is because we feel very strongly that there is a total breach  of the law in this case that where a matter is before a court of competent jurisdiction that any action you take will be subjudice. Our colleagues did not allow us to air our view, they were bent on what they had already discussed and performing an illegality and we will not be part  of that illegality. Walking out will not be constant in the Senate but this was very clear.”

  • Amaechi: PDP Senators walk out

    Amaechi: PDP Senators walk out

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Senators Thursday staged a walk out after a heated debate on the confirmation of the appointment of Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi.

    The action of the opposition Senators did not however stop the Senate from going ahead with the confirmation of Amaechi.

    However, the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu did not walk out with other PDP Senators.

     

  • PDP Senators meet over Amaechi, others’ confirmation

    PDP Senators meet over Amaechi, others’ confirmation

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Senators held a crucial secret meeting on Wednesday to take a position on the confirmation of former Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi and 17 others as ministers of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The confirmation of 18 outstanding ministerial nominees including Amaechi has been slated for Thursday.

    Senate President, Bukola Saraki, deferred confirmation of the nominees after the Senate screened five more nominees on Wednesday.

    Those screened on Wednesday included Mr. Okechukwu Eyinna Enelamah (Abia), Prof. Anthony Anwukah (Imo), Mohammed Musa Bello (Adamawa), Adamu Adamu(Bauchi) and Ms. Aisha Bello (Sokoto).

    The PDP Senators launched into the closed door meeting at Senate Hearing Room 1, immediately after Saraki adjourned plenary.

    Insiders said the meeting was specifically to enable the opposition lawmakers take position on some of the nominees.

    A competent source who attended the meeting said “you know we have just concluded the screening of the remaining nominees. We need to meet to ask some critical questions on some of the nominees. We need to take collective decision as a caucus.

    “Some of the nominees impressed, others did not. Some of them are controversial, others are not. We need to resolve and agree on our voting pattern. We are a caucus and we should be seen to vote as a block. It is normal in every political arrangement.”

    Asked whether Amaechi’s issue came up following the opposition of PDP Senators to the former governor’s screening, he noted that “nothing was foreclosed.”

    All Progressives Congress (APC) Senators on the other hand are said to be determined to ensure that all the nominees scaled through the confirmation hurdle.

    Senate Leader, Mohammed Ali Ndume, had consistently said the Senate belongs to APC as the majority party in the chamber.

    He also said the minority would be allowed its say while the majority would have its way.

    Ndume assured that PDP Senators cannot stop the confirmation of any nominee.

    Another PDP Senator also at the meeting said that “Amaechi will be cleared just like other nominees.”

    He noted that though there are some who still harboured hard feelings against Amaechi, “the consensus is that we should allow him to go.”

  • Ministerial screening: Fresh plot to stop Amaechi thickens

    Ministerial screening: Fresh plot to stop Amaechi thickens

    •APC, PDP senators flex  muscles

    Senators elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) are fuming over fresh plot by their Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterparts to stop the Red Chamber from approving the nomination of former River State Governor, Mr. Chubuike Rotimi Amaechi, as minister.

    The PDP Senators are understood to have returned to the drawing board to restrategise after Amaechi appeared before the Senate on Thursday for screening.

    Amaechi responded to questions from only All Progressives Congress (APC) senators, following the decision of the PDP Senators to abstain from asking him questions because, according to the Minority Leader, Senator Godswill Akpabio, “we have just received Senator Samuel Anyawu’s report on the petition on corruption against Amaechi.”

    This sparked a war of words between Senate Leader Mohammed Ali Ndume and Akpabio.

    Amaechi’s screening was delayed until Thursday on account of opposition by the PDP Senators.

    Reports from their camp yesterday suggested that they are not prepared to back down from their opposition to Amaechi who defected from the PDP to the APC in 2014 and went on to play a key role in the defeat of the PDP in the last elections.

    They are still bitter that Senate President Bukola Saraki ignored the consideration of the Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions report on alleged fraud against Amaechi and called him for screening.

    The committee’s report, presented by Chairman of the panel minutes before Amaechi was ushered into the Senate chamber for screening, is said to have recommended that Amaechi be advised to go and clear himself since issues in the petition against him is in court.

    It was also gathered that the issue of Amaechi was discussed at a closed door meeting the Senate held before the screening began.

    The opposition Senators accused Saraki of breaching Senate rules by side tracking the report, and opted for Amaechi’s screening.

    A reliable source in the Senate said: “It was the consensus that Amaechi should be advised to go and clear himself of allegations of fraud, according to the recommendation of the Ethics Committee.”

    He added: “We believe that Amaechi should not have been screened in the first place.

    “That he was screened does not give us a good image especially in the light of the fight against corruption.

    “What impression have they created by screening him? What image have they given to the Senate? Are they saying that the petition has no merit?

    “These are some of the issues.”

    The South-South senator said that they met after plenary on Thursday to decide “our next line when the actual confirmation comes up next week.”

    Their decision is to oppose Amaechi’s confirmation next week.

    He noted that “Amaechi has only been screed in fragrant abuse of our rules but he has not been confirmed.

    “We will still raise our voice to oppose his confirmation because his screening did not follow due process. The screening cannot past due diligence test.”

    He said that “even if the Senate President does not mention the report whenever Amaechi’s confirmation comes up, we are going to raise the issue of the report and the consideration of the report because we have the right to be heard.”

    But an APC senator close to the leadership of the Senate dismissed the PDP Senators’ move to frustrate Amaechi’s confirmation as a non-issue.

    The North East lawmaker insisted that “when we get to the bridge we’ll cross it.

    “We are not new to all these schemings and attempts to force back the hand of the clock.

    “Do the PDP senators you are talking about have the number to block the confirmation of any nominee? Even if we go for division of the house, do they have the number to stop the confirmation of any nominee not just Amaechi?

    “Politics remains a game of number and as at today, the APC has the ace in the Senate. Nobody can take that away from us. PDP senators or the party itself cannot stop the confirmation of any nominee because they remain the opposition in the chamber.”

    He noted that the Senate could not have stopped the screening of Amaechi based on “mere allegation.”

  • Senate still for screening of Amaechi,  four others

    Senate still for screening of Amaechi, four others

    It was an anti-climax. Sparks did not fly at the Senate yesterday when former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi appeared for screening as a minister.

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators opposed to his nomination did not take him up at the session.

    Amaechi only fielded questions from All Progressives Congress (APC) senators.

    Minority Leader, Senator Godswill Akpabio, said PDP senators and the party’s Senate caucus would not ask Amaechi questions “because we have just received Senator Samuel Anyanwu’s report on the petition on corruption against Amaechi”.

    His remark paved the way for Amaechi’s screening, but the exercise was not without drama.

    PDP senators kicked when Majority Leader Ali Ndume said Amaechi could just be asked “ to take a bow and go” following Akpabio’s statement.

    “You people have said you will not ask questions. We are glad about that,” he said.

    The words “you people” angered PDP senators, who insisted that Ndume must withdraw them.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki calmed frayed nerves, noting that Ndume had withdrawn the words. He also apologised to PDP senators.

    The Senate began sitting around noon and went into a closed-door session to adopt the procedure for the screening immediately after the adoption of the votes and proceedings of the previous day.

    Listed for screening were Amaechi, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri (Bayelsa), Prof. Cladius Omoleye Daramola (Ondo), Prof. Adewole Isaac Folorunso (Osun), Baba Shehuri  Mustapha (Borno) and Ocholi Enojo James (Kogi).

    After the closed session, Ayanwu, the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions Chairman was called to submit the report on the petition filed against Amaechi by a self-styled Integrity Group.

    Anyanwu presented the report but it was not considered.

    Amaechi, the first to be screened, in his introductory remark, recognised the Senate leadership; Senator George Thompson Sekibo, who presented the petition against him and Senator Olaka Nwogu, who served as his Commissioner of Finance when he was governor.

    The Senate erupted in laughter when he recognised them.

    Fielding questions from the APC senators, Amaechi said he had never received bribe in his life, claiming that his confirmation as a minister would be a credit to the Buhari administration.

    He said he fought to ensure the defeat of former President Goodluck Jonathan because he felt that Jonathan was not suitable for the country.

    The Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) was formed to check executive recklessness on use of funds belonging to the three tiers of government, he said.

    Former Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang, who is now a senator, walked out at this stage. Jang contested for the NGF chair with Amaechi in 2013.

    Amechi scored 19 votes and Jang, 16, but former President Jonathan chose to recognise Jang as the forum’s leader.

    On the formation of Governors Forum he said: “I don’t know what I will say that will annoy my political opponents on the side of the PDP. In the spirit of peace, I will like to answer questions that are very peaceful.”

    Amaechi, clad in Niger Delta regalia, said he was so dressed because he “came in peace”.

    On the Rivers State commission of inquiry set up by Governor Nyesom Wike to investigate him, Amaechi said:

    “I was born to test my rights and fight for my rights, I was once a student union leader and believe me, if there is one man who does not like corruption, I do not like corruption.

    “I came here with a copy of the so-called panel report, there is no where that the panel indicted me.

    “I am ready to tender this report before the Senate. I am ready for questions on it and I brought the panel report so the Senate can juxtapose it with the white paper.

    On sending ministerial nominees for confirmation without their portfolios he said: “Portfolio issue is a constitutional matter. Mr. President has the power to do whatever he wants to do.

    “If the legislature wants ministers to be appointed with portfolios then they must make that amendment in the Constitution.

    “If it is not there in the Constitution then the president can only apply his powers as allowed him by the constitution.

    “I will be glad if I see a list with portfolios, that way, everybody knows where he is going, but now you don’t know where I am going and you don’t know whether to ask me about my expertise in education or health or Niger Delta”.

    On the East-West road, Amaechi said: “It is not just for the Niger Delta, it is an economic road that will lead to economic prosperity for Nigeria. If I become the Minister of Niger Delta, that will be the first road that I will address.

    On unemployment he said: “When you deal with the issue of massive unemployment, you deal with the change in the economic mantra.

    Asked to define corruption, the nominee said: “Corruption is very difficult to define. If you are a public officer and you don’t take bribe; I’ve never taken bribe in my life but if they send a girl to you and you sleep with the girl and do her favour, you are corrupt. Corruption is a very wide concept. If people are contesting for a position and you offer your son, brother or sister an opportunity to hold that position, probably the person is not qualified, you are corrupt. So, it is difficult for me to define corruption.”

    At the Senate lobby, a senator, said: “What happened in the chamber over the so-called screening of Amaechi was a flagrant abuse of Senate rules. What happened today is an interesting precedent that Nigerians should watch.”

    Lokpobiri Daramola, Mustapha and Ocholi were also screened.

    But Adewole, the outgoing University of Ibadan Vice Chancellor, was not screened apparently because of the petition against him.

    Lokpobiri spoke about environmental protection. He said there was a lacuna in the environmental protection law.

    The Bayelsa nominee said there should be a law to empower individuals to seek redress where the environment is being destroyed.

    Daramola said a mechanism should be put in place to track the money appropriated for universities to avoid incesant strikes.

    The nominee said he would do his best to serve the country if confirmed.

    Mustapha described himself as a grassroots politician.

    The nominee said he does not represent any particular political interest but remains the voice of the common man.

    He said local governments should be made autonomous and their funds released directly to them.

    Ocholi said the long detention of suspects awaiting trial robbed them of their productive years.

    “Keeping young boys and young girls in prison, in itself, creates a lot of problems.

    “It creates a lot of overhead cost; they are kept there; they are not educated; they don’t have the time to go school.

    “There is little or no school in the prison for them to go to.

    “Major parts of their lives are wasted and the time they are coming out after 14, 15 years in prison, maybe they are not even convicted, they are made to start their lives afresh.”

  • How Nigerians reacted to Amaechi’s corruptions claims

    How Nigerians reacted to Amaechi’s corruptions claims

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  • Senate screens Amaechi, four other nominees

    Senate screens Amaechi, four other nominees

    The Senate on Thursday screened the immediate past Governor of Rivers State, Rotimi Amaechi and four other ministerial nominees.

    Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, Prof. Claudius Omoleye Daramola, Hon. Baba Shehiru Mustapha and James Ocholi were the other nominees screened on Thursday.

    The sixth nominee, Prof. Isaac Adewole, would be screened next Tuesday.

    Amaechi, who finally appeared at the Senate on Thursday after two previous postponements, was hailed by lawmakers when he entered the Senate chamber.

    While fielding questions from Senators, Amaechi insisted that he has never been indicted for corruption by any panel of inquiry.

    After he took his exit, the ex-governor also exchanged banters with Senators and his supporters outside the chamber were heard shouting “we don win! we don win!! we don win!!!”

    Daramola, who is a nominee from Ondo State, said the major problem facing the nation’s education sector is irregular payment of teachers’ salaries.

    According to him, regular payment of salaries will boost teachers’ morale and impact positively on students.

     

     

  • Amaechi could be minister, but…

    SIR: One of the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution is that the President must appoint at least one minister from each of the states of the federation. Rotimi Amaechi is from Rivers State, a state currently under the leadership of the rival PDP. Notwithstanding the corruption allegations against him, the President nominated him to become a minister and his name was among the first names sent to the Senate for confirmation. Though I am not a fan of Amaechi, but I consider his nomination as sufficiently proper both as per the quota for Rivers State and to compensate him for a job well done for his political party, APC.

    The news we hear from the Senate is that senators are doing everything possible to clear Amaechi and confirm his nomination. This interrogates the essence of the entire confirmation exercise by the Senate. Does the Senate have any authority to investigate and exonerate Amaechi from the accusations levelled against him? The answer is simply no because the Senate does not have any power of adjudication in such matters. It is the courts that can do so. Secondly, in the process of confirming a nominee, the Senate would like to confirm the state of origin of the nominee and whether the nominee had paid his/her tax up to date. Reasonableness requires that the President should have checked all these basic requirements before nominating Amaechi and indeed any other nominee. As per appropriate work experience, the Presidency should have also ensured that the nominee is qualified and has deep understanding of the sector or portfolio where he/she would be assigned.

    Fundamentally, was Buhari right to have nominated Amaechi for a ministerial position? My answer is yes. Amaechi deserves to be nominated because he worked hard for the successful election of President Buhari and also to fill Rivers State quota. Moreover Amaechi has not been found guilty by any court to warrant being disqualified. All we hear are rumours, “k-legs” (according to former President Olusegun Obasanjo who judged Amaechi in about 2006 based on allegations), allegations and accusations; these are not facts. Yet Amaechi should not in any way be exempted from defending himself before the court on these allegations against him.

    May I suggest also that the check for corrupt practices by public office appointees be extended to all public officers before they come into office: councillors, local government chairmen, governors, and deputy governors, state house of assembly members, National Assembly members (Senate and House of Representatives), President And Vice President. It is a disservice to public morality to see public officers who may be richly guilty of corruption interviewing would-be public officers on allegations of corruption. Are we saying that all the senators are corruption-free and therefore have moral justification to interrogate Amaechi on corruption allegations?

     

    • Okachikwu Dibia

    Abuja.

     

  • Saraki and anti-Amaechi cabal

    Saraki and anti-Amaechi cabal

    In this piece, Dr Fred Latimore Oghenesivbe, an All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain in Delta State, examines rthe power game surrounding the ongoing screening and confirmation of ministerial nominees by the Senate, saying Senate President Bukola saraki and his supporters in the upper legislative chamber are determined to have their way. 

    The 8th Senate began with serious controversy for which Senator Bukola Saraki emerged as the President of the distinguished Senate. It was glaring to the nation that the 8th Senate will be full of surprises and with signs of vindictive radicalism, politically.

    To my mind, there seem to be a mega political force against the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Senator Asiwaju Bola Tinubu which may have prompted the setbacks suffered by his key loyalists at the Senate and House of Representatives while the struggle for key positions in the two Chambers lasted.

    It is a truism that former Governor Rotimi Amaechi is also one of Asiwaju’s key political associates. Therefore, it will be safe to assert that the AmaechiGate is a double edge sword. First, for the roles he played to dislodge PDP from national government and two, for being a close buddy of the APC National Leader.

    I am particularly pained that the 8th Senate is hitting back at those who spent time and huge financial resources to stabilize our democracy and assisted in several ways to stop the 16 years of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) misrule which is now reflected in the retrogressive socioeconomic status of our nation.

    Corruption also bedeviled the PDP 16 years of mismanagement of valuable resources and looting of our commonwealth for which the likes of former Petroleum Minister, Mrs. Deziani Allison Maduekwe is being held for criminal charges in the United Kingdom over money laundering and corruption involving trillions of dollars carted away through the back-door from our national treasury while our people languish in abject poverty, joblessness and penury.

    Before now, Senate President Saraki was in the Senate and showed signs of loyalty to the APC while the 7th Senate lasted. But indications are ripe to show that his loyalty in the 8th Senate may not be as solid as it was during the 7th Senate.

    The question is: Why the sudden U-turn by Senator Saraki? This question can only be answered by him and other key players in our national polity.

    However, the funny scenario playing out at the Senate since inception coupled with the power game surrounding the screening and confirmation of Amaechi are bad signs for the way forward and conjures not too good omen for the present administration of President Buhari. It has to be resolved urgently if the nation must achieve the Change mantra dreams that Nigerians massively voted for.

    Another political cobra to watch out for in the 8th Senate is Senator Dino Melaye, Senate Committee Chairman on Media. He has demonstrated sufficient political rascality in the discharge of his duties to suggest that the APC as a party is parading a sizable number of BLACK LEGS among its fold in the Red Chambers. This has to be tackled by the party leadership.

    Where do we go from here?  The APC leadership will have to meet with President Buhari to immediately identify the INVISIBLE HANDS operating in the 8th Senate and House of Representatives. There is a mega political force behind Senate President Saraki and his highly radicalized group  and this must be checked and handled with the strictest political tactics that it deserves.

    Senator Dino Maleye told the nation a while ago that Amaechi will be screened tomorrow (Wednesday). This is the wish and aspirations of Nigerians, for Amaechi to get on board quickly as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, to enable him continue with his superlative leadership roles in the Niger Delta in particular and to generally continue to serve our great nation in higher capacity.

    Senate President Saraki and his political machinery at the Senate should know it that Nigerians are watching, the world is watching and that whatever he is up to now will certainly determine where he will be tomorrow.

    With due respect to the 8th Senate and to Senate President Saraki, I am indeed flabbergasted and only wish that my Champagne will get out of the fridge tomorrow and be poured into glasses so as to celebrated the long awaited confirmation of the political Lion of the Niger Delta as Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The truth is bitter but it MUST to be told for the good of society and in obedience to GOD’s command.

  • Senate’s crisis over Amaechi deepens

    Senate’s crisis over Amaechi deepens

    •Plenary adjourned
    for Saraki’s trial

    Rather than abate, the crisis over the screening of ministerial nominee Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi is deepening at the Senate.

    Yesterday, his name was removed from the Order Paper after being listed among the eight nominees for screening.

    The number was pruned to three – Adebayo Shittu (Oyo), Hajia Khadija Abba-Ibrahim (Yobe) and Claudius Daramola (Ondo), who was not on the first Order Paper.

    Only Shittu and Hajia Abba-Ibrahim were, however, screened.

    On the first Order Paper before Amaechi’s name was removed are Shittu, Hajia Abba Ibrahim, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri (Bayelsa), Bawa Bwari (Niger), James Ocholi (Kogi), Mansur Muhammed (Zamfara) and Zainab Ahmed (Kaduna).

    Amaechi, who is on the first list of 21 nominees sent to the Senate by President Muhammadu Buhari on September 30, has not been screened because of the petition filed against him by the self-styled The Integrity Group.

    Amaechi has since denied the allegation against him and taken the matter to court.

    The Senate yesterday suspended plenary today without stating reasons. But, it may not be unconnected with the resumption of Senate President Bukola Saraki’s trial before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) for alleged false assets declaration today.

    The Senate Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions Committee which considered the petition against Amaechi was set to submit its findings yesterday but the report’s submission was also deleted from the Order Paper.

    Its Chairman Senator Samuel Anyanwu was listed to submit the report before the item, just like Amaechi’s name, was removed from the Order Paper.

    No reasons were given for the removal. Efforts to find out why they were removed failed.

    At the office of the Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Senator Babajide Omoworare, nobody was ready to speak on the matter. An aide, after conferring with the lawmaker, told The Nation: “The time and terrain are too sensitive, so oga willnot say a word.”

    But, it was learnt that “the leadership of the Senate decided to shift Amaechi’s screening to pave the way for constructive consultation with hardliner Senators, particularly of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).”

    According to a source, the Senate leadership decided to shorten plenary to allow time for a meeting of the PDP caucus.

    No member of the caucus spoke to reporters after the meeting but an insider said they were unable to resolve how to treat Amaechi’s case.

    The source noted that while a few members of the caucus “wanted us to soft pedal and support the nomination of Amaechi, others were vehement that we should not back down on our stand .”

    He added: “It is an open ended situation. Anything can still happen between today and tomorrow. The PDP caucus has not concluded. Nothing is cast in iron in politics. Some thing can still happen.”

    The caucus, he said, would still meet at the party headquarters on the issue.

    Another source said it was wrong of the Senate to continue to delay Amaechi’s screening.

    According to the source, if Amaechi is screened, the Senate has the right to confirm or reject his nomination.

    He said:  “Even though PDP senators are insisting that Amaechi should not be screened, it is better for us to screen the nominee and take a decision on him. I have it on good authority that most PDP Senators have vowed to stop Amaechi’s screening but at the end of the day, good conscience will prevail because we are talking to one another on this sensitive issue.”

    At his screening, Shittu described the upper chamber as “the most productive Senate on the soil of Africa.”

    The nominee said if he is confirmed he would do his best to ensure that the Executive and the National Assembly work in tandem for the country’s development.

    He said: “If confirmed, I will be a round peg in any ministerial posting that I’m given.”

    Shittu denied that he was indicted by a panel for religious intolerance in Oyo State, nothing that he was in Saudi Arabia when the incident occurred and couldn’t have had anything to do with it.

    The panel that investigated the matter, he said, never invited him, adding that the list of those invited was gazetted.

    The panel, he said, merely “advised him” to refrain from writing books that could inflame religious passion, adding: “It was only an advice and not an indictment.”

    Shittu said the government had since pardoned all those indicted by the panel.

    On why he lost his governorship election in 2011 on the Congress for progressive Change (CPC) platform, the nominee said he did not lose because of his personality.

    He said he lost because “the whole of South West people decided to vote for the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).”

    Shittu said: “It was obvious in 2011 that in the whole of the Southwest, the ACN was the party to beat. If you have all the money and you are the best candidate our people have already formed their opinion about the party to vote for. My loss was not about my personality but about the opinion of the Southwest to vote for ACN.”

    He said going to the ministry of culture and tourism would not be going to a foreign land because he had done it before.

    The nominee said he was part of the people who crafted the APC manifesto, with the hope that if implemented, the country would have a new lease of life.

    The students feeding programme of the APC if implemented, he said, would not only create jobs for Nigerians but would also attract many children to school.

    The nominee noted that as a Muslim, his world view and aspiration were in line with what Islam teaches.

    Shittu said he would never support coercing people to embrace any religion against their wish.

    The nominee said even if Boko Haram insurgents lay claim to Islam, their activities have nothing whatsoever to do with Islam and denied that his publication, “Path to Paradice” is the sect’s guiding principle.

    Hajia Abba-Ibrahim’s screening was full of drama. Saraki described her as an affiliate member of the 8th Senate, an affiliate member of the Nigeria Governors Forum, and a three-time member of the House of Representatives.

    She said her last appointment before she joined active politics was as commissioner for Transport and Energy in Yobe State, adding that she was involved in the rural electrification programme in the 17 local government area of the state.

    Asked by Saraki to take the first question, her husband, Senator Bukar Abba Ibrahim asked her how she would react if “I ask you to take a bow and go.”

    There was general laughter in the chamber.

    When the laughter subsided, Saraki asked the nominee to take a bow and go.

    Senator Athanasius Achonu (Imo North) told the Senate that he has 10 petitions against the nomination of Professor Anthony Anwukah.

    The petitions were referred to the ethics committee.

    Anyanwu asked the Senate to give the committee time to treat the petitions since 10 petitions could not be treated in one day.

    Sixteen other ministerial nominees are awaiting to be screened.