Tag: Godswill Akpabio

  • Lawyer hails Senate President

    Lawyer hails Senate President

    Senator Godswill Akpabio has been praised for handling and managing the 10th Senate, promoting peace, fostering cooperation and collaboration in the National Assembly.

    According to a statement by a Lagos -based lawyer, Chijioke Nduibisi, the Senate President should be happy as accolades are coming from Senators themselves, especially when provocative remarks such as ‘You sexually harassed me’ enveloped the Upper Chamber.

    He said part of the encomiums pouring on the Senate President came from a group of intellectuals in the Senate led by Senator representing Ondo South Senatorial District,  Jimoh Ibrahim, adding that this underscores the level of intellectualism embedded in the 10th Senate.

    According to him, the achievements of the 10th Senate under the leadership of Akpabio were numerous, including the introduction of beneficial policies that mitigate conflict by encouraging a harmony of interests , and shared objectives.

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    He stated further that the belief in cooperation and collaboration, which is evident within the Nigerian National Assembly, had yielded positive outcomes.

    He said Akpabio’s cooperation and collaboration thesis was in pari materia with President Bola Tinubu’s political and economic ideology, and has led to political stabilisation and democratic peace in the country so far. “It is equally the contention of some political pundits in the Senate that the Senate President is indeed a true force for good and removing him in years to come may pose some challenges,” Nduibisi posited.

    As a testament to the good handling of the Senate, he  alluded to the recognition given to Akpabio by President Tinubu when he said emphatically in a video, “We are proud of you.”

    He also congratulated Akpabio for getting a vote of confidence in his leadership twice a week from his colleagues.

    While joining others in applauding  the Senate President in his rise in the political legitimacy of Classical Discourse, Nduibisi, however, warned that “it is not yet uhuru for the Senate President, and that more statesmanship approach is required in management and leading of the Senate in the interest of stabilizing our democratic Journey.”

  • Akpabio seeks South-South’s unity

    Akpabio seeks South-South’s unity

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio has called for unity, solidarity and action among nations of the Global South at the Third Edition of the South-South Parliamentary Dialogue Forum in Rabat, Kingdom of Morocco.

    He spoke before an assembly of lawmakers, diplomats and development leaders under the theme: “Inter-regional and Continental Dialogues in the Countries of the South as a Fundamental Lever to Address the Emerging Challenges of International Cooperation and Achieve Peace, Security, Stability, and Common Development”.

     Akpabio urged southern nations to move beyond rhetoric and forge a new era of cooperation, industrial growth, and political resilience.

    “We meet here today not merely to exchange words, but to forge weapons—of ideas, of solidarity, of bold policy and brave cooperation,” the Senate President declared.

    “The storms we face — economic upheavals, climate crises and political instability — will not be conquered by isolated efforts, but by united resolve,” Akpabio said, according to a statement by his media office in Abuja.

    Drawing rich historical and cultural references from Africa and beyond, Akpabio hailed Morocco as a symbol of bridging continents and traditions, praising the host nation for offering not just hospitality, but “a fulcrum upon which we may turn the heavy wheels of history”.

    In a passionate address that evoked the spirit of past liberation struggles, Akpabio reminded the gathering that apartheid fell not by isolated goodwill, but by united, determined action across nations and peoples. He called on the South to summon that same collective strength against today’s challenges.

    “No fortress of difficulty—economic, political, or social—can withstand the force of our unity and determination,” he said.

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    Senator Akpabio also highlighted Nigeria’s commitment to the cause of regional integration through platforms such as ECOWAS and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), stating that true development would be driven not by isolated national efforts, but by collaborative South-South action anchored in trust, shared vision and strategic partnerships.

    Using an African proverb — “If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go together” — Akpabio emphasised that the nations of the South must choose collective endurance over short-term ambition.

    He challenged the forum not to let the Rabat gathering be remembered merely as a symposium of speeches but as the historic moment when the Global South “rolled up its sleeves, joined hands across oceans, and lit the torch of common development that no darkness could extinguish”.

    The chairman of the forum, Mohamed Ould Errachid, Speaker of the House of Councillors of the Kingdom of Morocco and Chairman of ASSECAA, welcomed the delegates and emphasised the urgent need for deeper South-South cooperation in confronting global economic and security challenges.

    He commended the participating nations for their commitment to dialogue, describing the gathering as “a living testament to the will of the Global South to take its destiny into its own hands and build a future of shared peace, prosperity, and dignity”.

    The Third Edition of the South-South Parliamentary Dialogue Forum continues in Rabat, with participants deliberating on practical frameworks to bolster interregional cooperation, economic resilience, security, and sustainable development among southern nations.

    The Senate President led a delegation of eight senators to the conference, consisting of Senator Peter Nwaebonyi, Senator Osita Ngwu, Senator Ibrahim Dankwambo, Senator Samaila Kaila, Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong, Senator Salihu Mustapha, Senator Jimoh Ibrahim and Senator Titus Zam.

  • Akpabio not aware of planned rally in Akwa Ibom, says aide

    Akpabio not aware of planned rally in Akwa Ibom, says aide

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio is not aware of any planned rally in his support, his Special Assistant on Media, Jackson Udom, said in a press on Thursday.

    He urged the supporters of the Senate President to disregard the said rally urging security agencies to disallow the event.

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    The statement titled: “Disregard any rally in Akwa Ibom purported to be in support of Senate President Godswill Akpabio GCON, reads in part: “The attention of the office of the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, has been drawn to a planned rally purported to be in support of the Senate President and organised by an unknown association by name; Progressive Peoples’ Resolution (PPR) and led by one Ubong Idemudo, a known controversial character, slated for tomorrow 4th April, 2025

    “The President of the Senate is not aware of any rally organised in his support at any venue in Akwa Ibom and therefore urges his supporters and the peace loving people of Akwa Ibom State to disregard such rally and go about their lawful duties.

    “The planned rally, from information pieced together, is the handiwork of fifth columnists trying to use the name of the Senate President to achieve their devilish goal

    “The Police and other security agencies in the state are by this statement directed to ensure that such satanic rally is not allowed to hold, as such has no approval of the Senate President.”

  • The Natasha we knew

    The Natasha we knew

    • Constituents, ex-neighbours speak on embattled Kogi Central Senator’s past

    • Cause of collapsed marriage to ex-husbands Oseni Salihu, Saka Babamba shrouded in mystery

    • I quit her campaign train out of frustration, says former spokesman

    Not a few political observers are wondering the magic by which an in-chamber disagreement over rearrangement of seats in the Senate has snowballed into a recall process against Senator Natasha Akpoti Uduaghan and salacious tales of sexual harassment she has been reeling out against the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio. Now, the perception in the international community now is that of a gang-up to deny a woman justice for daring to speak out.

    It all began with a protest by the Kogi Central Senator against what she termed a breach of her privilege in not being informed before her seat was changed. She claimed that the incident was part of a grand plot to frustrate her legislative duties and deny the people of her constituency effective representation. To ventilate her anger, she appeared on a radio station in Abuja moments later and followed that up with an appearance on a television station where she accused the Senate President of making sexual advances to her. Akpabio promptly denied the allegation while his Wife, Nnoma, took a step further by lodging a defamation suit against Natasha at the Federal High Court.

    Apparently irked by Natasha’s actions, the Senate revisited the events of February 20 and the fuss Natasha made of the seats rearrangement at the upper chamber of the National Assembly and sent her on six-month suspension. Natasha, alleging injustice and lack of fair hearing, took it upon herself to  internationalise the matter by allegedly ‘sneaking’ into a meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) in New York to lodge her sexual harassment complaint against Akpabio.

    The Senate, however, regarded her presence at the IPU meeting as a breach of protocol. The Chairman, Senate Committee on Inter-Parliamentary Affairs, Senator Jimoh Ibrahim, who spoke on the matter in a statement, said Akpoti-Uduaghan breached protocol by attending and speaking at the IPU session without due authorization by the National Assembly.  He said Akpoti-Uduagahan’s move was baseless because she is not a member of the IPU.

    Ibrahim said: “A petition can only be lodged against another member state by a member state. This implies that the IPU cannot consider petitions from individuals who are not members. The suspended Senator Natasha is not a member of the IPU, but Nigeria is.

    “Additionally, the suspended Senator cannot represent the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I served as the interim president of the IPU in Geneva in 2023, and I am familiar with how the IPU operates after presiding over its proceedings.

    “Furthermore, as Chairman of the Inter-Parliamentary Committee in the Nigerian Senate, I did not approve or authorise the suspended Senator Natasha to attend the IPU on behalf of Nigeria to the Senate President.”

    While the dust raised by the IPU fiasco was yet to settle, Natasha alleged plans by the Senate to arrest her upon arrival in Nigeria. But the veracity of her claim remains yet a matter of conjecture, and she has made past time of telling her story in international media outlets like Sky News and British Television Network where she dramatically shared her allegation against Akpabio amid sobs, sensationally wiping tears from her cheeks.

    As events unfolded, information emerged to the effect that Natasha’s constituents had had enough of the unending drama and resolved to collect voters’ signatures from her constituency with a view to recalling her from the Senate. Some dismissed it as wishful thinking, others said what she needed at that material time was empathy, support and not recall.

    Notwithstanding, the conspiracy theories that surrounded the exercise, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) publicly acknowledged receipt of over 250,000 signatures from Natasha’s constituents and notified her of the quest by her constituents to recall her. Natasha, through her lawyer, Victor Giwa, accused the electoral umpire of partisanship and bias for accepting and agreeing to act on a petition it earlier claimed to be defective.

    In a letter to INEC through her counsel, Giwa, Natasha said: “Your position as disclosed in your press release on March 25, 2025, signed by Sam Olumekun, shows that the Commission has taken sides and has become partial in favour of the petitioners in this case.

    “The Commission has observed that the Petitioners’ Petition did not meet the threshold of the requirement of a Petition to recall a member, having not contained the required contact addresses, telephone numbers and email addresses in their covering letter forwarding the Petition as contained in Clause 1(f) of INEC Regulation and Guideline.

    “The proper thing and step to have been taken is to declare the Petition as “incompetent” and subsequently disregard same.”

    An investigation conducted by the correspondent revealed a sharp division among her supporters both within and outside her constituency. While she had enjoyed massive solidarity and support from her constituents before now, majority of them appear to have shifted base and appear to have found new reasons to say enough is enough as a result of the fallout from her faceoff with the Senate.

    One question that kept popping up from sources for or against Natasha contacted by the correspondent was “are you for us or against us?” But I told those who cared to listen that I am for everybody and for nobody (apologies to ex-President Muhammadu Buhari). As a reporter, I was doing my job in the public interest and for the information and education of those who are genuinely seeking knowledge to enable them to get a handle on the Natasha phenomenon and the current happenings around her.

    Who is Natasha?

    Investigation revealed that apart from close siblings who have all migrated to other geographical locations, Natasha was relatively unknown in her Kogi Central Senatorial District as a child until she came back in year 2000 to pursue philanthropic empowerment projects before she finally veered into full scale partisan politics.

    Mrs. Fati Amodu, a retired school teacher said: “As a child growing up, apart from academic dexterity already publicly acknowledged in testimonials from her early years of schooling, she was scarcely known beyond her immediate abode at any particular point in time.

    “Yes, her father, Jimoh Akpoti, was well known and respected, but not same for Natasha who was then a child. Even till date, an average 18 or 19-year-old person is hardly popular except in the circle of friends, playmates and classmates, unless they were into vices injurious to society, for which she has never been associated.”

    To those who are her core supporters, Akpoti-Uduaghan may take wrong steps but she does no evil. They see her first through the prism of her father, the late Dr. Jimoh Abdul Akpoti, who was reputed for using his profession (medical practice) and resources to serve the people while he was alive. They also see her as a role model on how to conquer adversity and get to the top in life. They see her as an inspiration and a philanthropist in her own right who is genuinely out to fill the void created by lack of exposure, empowerment and education for the majority in the society.

    They see her aspiration, journey and progress as those of the entire women folk in Kogi State in particular and Nigeria in general, and one who is leading them to overcome the many cultural, political and social encumbrances on the way of women, which prevent them from confronting authorities and speaking truth to power. But her opponents see her as over-ambitious. They accuse her of lacking in finesse and local sense to handle issues maturely, be they existential issues or those that concern her private life.

    Often, they view her marital travails as part of the challenges faced by most women in the country.

    “Yes, people are saying she has been in and out of two marriages, what is wrong with that? This is not in any way peculiar to her. People marry and divorce in this country almost on a daily basis.

    “That she has two former husbands should not be the yardstick to judge her. What is important is that she was able to rise from her adversities and today she is making a difference in the country and internationally,” said Mrs. Amodu.

    Also responding to a question, Mr. Ganiyu Aliyu, a constituent, said: “I know that as a young girl she was married to a cousin of the popular Bishop Haruna Yakubu of the Anglican Church in Okene. His name is Oseni Saliu from the Wokili family.

    “After the unfortunate divorce, which was blamed on alleged abuse on the part of her former husband, she again found love and married one Mr Saka Babamba. Some call him Zakari. He is from the Oziomoye Clan.

    “The circumstances that led to their divorce are not in public domain, because at that period, she had not attained the fame she has presently. But it is widely believed to have been a mutual decision by the then couple to go their separate ways for reasons best known to them.

    “There are claims that Saka is presently into real estate business in Abuja, but I don’t know how true that information is. As for the first husband, I don’t have information concerning his whereabouts.

    “We are happy that today, Natasha has shown the way to our young girls that despite their conditions, they can rise to become persons of repute within the community and beyond through education like she has done.

    “I want to say that it is highly unfortunate that some persons within the constituency have chosen this her time of trials and suspension from the Senate to initiate her recall from the Senate. That is human beings for you.

    “We quickly forget the past, good or bad. My prayer is that they will fail.

    “Natasha, I can say, is the best Senator that has represented the district in recent past and getting the people to vote her out would not be easy.

    “We are praying for her.”

    Speaking to our correspondent in Okene, a businessman, Mr. Ojo Jimoh, said her two failed marriages were not her fault. He said her present marriage to High Chief Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan epitomises her resilience and the plight of the average woman in Nigeria who is supposed to be seen and not heard. He sees a sort of emancipation of womanhood in her journey and through her the people either dream better for themselves or vow to ensure their female wards would one day rise to the top from obscurity like Natasha.

    “We are happy that she has found a man who loves her, and today, they are living happily together,” Jimoh said.

    However, a visit to Akpoti-Uduaghan’s family house in Obeiba-Ihima directly opposite the road to Igwehi and deposed Obobanyin of Ihima’s Compound in Okehi Local Government Area, showed people going about their regular routines apparently oblivious of the fate that may likely befall their daughter and sister through the recall process now being considered by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The modern bungalow painted with cream or off-white paint with brown roofing sheets has no fence around it. According to a close family member who did not want his name in print, “Our daughter has tried. If at this time they want to remove her, let her come back home. God knows everything and our people know she has been good to them.

    “Natasha may have had issues with even family members and leaders in the state, but such is the nature of a true leader and reformer. We are a family. We are proud of her.”

    It was also discovered that from the talks about Natasha’s achievements and occasional heroics in street corners, the conversation has shifted to both the social and traditional media with those for and against her expressing their opinions freely.

    One of her constituents, Mr. Victor Daniel, in a post on Facebook on March 7, 2025, said: “I’m deeply sentimental about Natasha. She’s not just my Senator – she’s from my village, and we come from the same clan.”

    According to Daniel, “a lot of you are just hearing about her, but people who come from where I come from have known Natasha since she was a child. If you grew up in Ihima, you knew Dr. Akpoti.

    “Women in Ihima talk about Natasha like they all watched her grow up. There’s a familiar fondness in their voices when they talk about her, as if they’re speaking about a neighbour’s child.

    “But people take one look at her – biracial, refined – and assume she’s some spoiled rich girl who floated into power on privilege. That couldn’t be more wrong.

    “It’s not in my place to narrate her struggles with poverty and lack, but I can damn well talk about her war with political authority.”

    Daniel revealed that he started hearing about Natasha when she took on the Kogi State Government over Ajaokuta Steel in 2015.

    “Who was she? ‘Doctor Akpoti’s daughter,’ they said. Since 2015, she has locked horns with Yahaya Bello – without holding any political office. As a private citizen, she took on the state government, even up to the federal level, fighting for causes she believed in.

    “When she finally ran for office and was rigged out, our grandmothers took to the streets in protest. She ran again, and again, and again. The last time, she was rigged out yet again – until the election tribunal ruled in her favour.

    “Remember the story from the last elections where Yahaya Bello allegedly had a ditch dug to block election materials from reaching a certain candidate’s hometown? That candidate was Natasha.”

    He further claimed that the six months suspension of Natasha from the Senate was meant to punish her for daring to accuse the Senate President of sexual harassment.

    He said: “Now to the matter at hand: every Nigerian understands the injustice of leadership – until it happens to someone they don’t like. How dare she accuse the Senate President of sexual harassment?

    “This is not about whether her allegations are right or wrong. Everything that has happened to Natasha was orchestrated to punish her for daring to accuse him in the first place.

    “A sitting Senator was not only denied fair hearing – her colleagues openly celebrated her downfall. Some even bragged that she would never return to the Senate. Then, within 24 hours of the hearing, they suspended her for six months without pay.

    “The message was clear: punish the petitioner, make an example of her, warn other women – regardless of status – against ever accusing powerful men of harassment.

    “It doesn’t even matter whether Natasha’s allegations are true. The way they handled it was a disgrace, even by Nigeria’s rotten standards. Senators went on TV saying women should undergo mental evaluations before contesting for office – because Natasha accused Akpabio.

    “The accused not only remained the senate president but presided over the decision to suspend his accuser. And even regular people want a ‘perfect’ victim. ‘She has six children with six different men.’

    “Lol. She’s the ‘pretty, biracial, articulate, woman in the Senate’ whose private life doesn’t align with some manufactured moral checklist is automatically undeserving of dignity. She should just swallow abuse and sit down because, according to them, she doesn’t represent the so-called right kind of woman.

    “Funny enough, I don’t feel any sense of dread for her future. She has never shied away from confronting authority and bearing the consequences, and all it ever did was elevate her in the long run. Sheybi those other senators (including the disgraceful women amongst them) have reached their career ceilings. I hope we all live long enough to witness what’s coming.”

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    Daniel described Natasha as caring, saying: “I once randomly messaged Natasha about how much my mother admires her. Not only did she respond – she asked for my mother’s number and personally called to greet her. My mother holds no political power. She’s of no electoral significance to Natasha. This is who Natasha is to me…”

    On his part, a former Head of Media of the Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s campaign Council, Mr. David Itopa, said working with her was herculean, hence his decision to quit the job. Itopa, who spoke during an interview on News Central Television, said: “People are different and people are built differently. If you are talking about question of character, I want to believe that people have different characters and react to issues maybe the way it appears to them on different pulse, if I must say.

    “I do not think that she is somebody that is easy to deal with. And then the question of gender bias, I disagree with that because in Nigeria we’ve had lots of women taking serious, highly ranked political positions.

    “In terms of decision making positions in Nigeria, we have the likes of Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and so many of them. And then if you are also speaking about the parliament, we’ve also had great women in the parliament.

    “At some point in time, I think we had Mrs. Patricia Ette as the Speaker House of Representatives and so many other persons like that. So, I don’t want to align with that school of thought that women are being harassed and not allowed to make decisions in Nigeria. I don’t think that is completely true.

    “And then if you look at the situation in our Senatorial District that culminated in the current recall process of Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan, you would find that it is not about the issue of popularity, because if you’re talking about popularity going into that election, I mean there were people that believed that if she contested with the man as well. I think Senator Sadiku Ohere of the APC, and he was quite popular in his own right.

    “But I’m not his spokesperson and I’m not here to speak for him. But then people felt like okay, there is a woman and she can do better. At the time they felt so and then they also deserve the right to also say, look we are fed up and we are tired of whatever it is and we’re not happy with. And if they decide to recall her, I think it’s within their constitutional rights as enshrined in section 69 of the constitution.”

    Speaking about the person of Natasha and whether she appears to be someone problematic while working with her, Itopa said: “While working with her, I faced a lot of challenges, and that was actually one of the reasons I walked out of the campaign council, because, of course, I wouldn’t be where my voice would be emasculated and not allowed to work.

    “So, I had to just walk out of the campaign council because it was no longer conducive and the environment was beginning to be stiffly and it looked like I was not even being allowed to do my job.

    “I had to practically resign after so many back and forth and all that.”

    But for one constituent with whom she has fallen out of grace, her continuous stay in the red chamber remains a blight on Kogi Central and Kogi State. According to him, the rationale for seeking her recall is due to what he described as “national embarrassment and empty display of ego that has brought public opprobrium to the entire people of the senatorial district.”

    Also, Comrade Ivava Bello, while appearing on Channels Television programme, “Politics Today”, claimed that the people of the Kogi Central Senatorial District are left with no option but to recall her to forestall worse tendencies that could further embarrass the people.

    Comrade Ivava Bello, who signed the recall letter accompanying the sacks full of documents containing signatures of over 250,000 Kogi Central constituents, further explained that the Senator, who was overwhelmingly voted into office, had allegedly “lost track, abandoned the cause of her representation and was now chasing self-agenda rather than championing the cause of the people for federal government’s attention, infrastructure development and job security for the teaming youth of the senatorial district.”

    He described Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan as a woman who came to the people with strong appeal which prompted the people to see her as someone who had the ability to represent their interests.

    He however added that the last two years has shown that she lacked the maturity, the emotional intelligence and concentration to represent the people.

    He alleged that the Senator had shown that she is representing external interests different from what her people dearly need at this time. He further argued that Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan has represented her business interests and that of her husband more than the interests of the people who voted her.

    On the issue of sexual harassment against Senate President Akpabio, Comrade Ivava said he is less bothered until she provided evidence to prove her allegation. He said they have had too much of her accusations against the likes of former Governor Yahaya Bello, Senator Dino Melaye and former Presidential aide, Reno Omokri, all of which allegedly went unsubstantiated, signaling that this allegation may also be like all the previous cases.

    He said while not completely dismissing her allegation, the constituents have to be wary not to get involved in a matter that may end up like the other cases she claimed in the past.

    According to one of her constituents, Esther Audu, “Natasha is supposed to be a pride, but my own displeasure against her is that you cannot ruin all your relationships here and there.

    “You keep ruining your relationships even with some people who have had an impact in your life. You don’t care, you don’t give a hoot and you destroy it beyond redemption.

    “For me, I believe that there are things that women, but this is not to say that I am an enabler for wrong actions, there are things women should not be seen to make public, especially for somebody who has once had your back. Even if they had acted foolishly there are ways the issue can be trashed.

    “I don’t know, maybe her fight is what has taken her this far and she wants to continue in that line. She is supposed to be a pride to us, but when your excesses become too much, it will begin to overshadow the good about you.”

    Miss Audu however dismissed claims that she visited Okene as captured in the viral video that was circulated on social media early in the week. “She has not visited the constituency since this issue started. The video that was being circulated is a record of her visit to Okene after the Appeal Court gave her victory as the Senator to represent Kogi Central. You can see that she was holding a red folder or thick cardboard box. It was not a recent video,” she said.

    For now, it is not clear how the cases and counter cases that have emanated from Natasha’s sexual harassment allegation against the Senate President would pan out in the courts. Neither is any constituent sure whether her ongoing recall process would hit a brick wall or succeed in taking her out of the Senate. However, her supporters are upbeat that the exercise would flop like the one carried out against Dino Melaye in Kogi West Senatorial District during the 8th Senate.

    Again, whether her international junketing and disparaging comments about the country may spur her arrest and possible prosecution or a political solution would be adopted is hard to tell.

  • In 50 years, Akpabio never exhibited sexual harassment trait, says classmate

    In 50 years, Akpabio never exhibited sexual harassment trait, says classmate

    •’We nicknamed him ‘Gody A’ for his sense of humour’

    Charles Preye Zuofa, a former classmate of the Senate President, Dr. Godswill Akpabio, has dismissed the allegations of sexual harassments leveled against the former Akwa Ibom State governor, saying it is inconsistent with Akpabio’s character.

    Zuofa, who hails from Kaiama in Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, said for the more than 50 years he had known Akpabio, nothing of such could describe his character.

    He said unless otherwise proven in court, Akpabio had never displayed any attitude suggestive of sexual harassment in the over 50 years he had closely related with him, insisting that the allegations leveled by Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan and the one made earlier by a former Interim Administrator of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Joy Nunueh, were all strange to him.

    Zuofa, in an interview on Friday, went down memory lane to recall how his relationship with Akpabio started at the Federal Government College (FGC) in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, saying Akpabio was fondly called Gody A because of his sense of humour and intelligence.

    He said: “Gody A, as we used to call him back then in FGC, Port Harcourt, was a very intelligent yet humorous student. Before stand-up comedy became popular in Nigeria, Gody A was a stand-up comedian. He contested, I think in our 4th year, and won the best DJ and stand-up comedian of the school. It was thereafter that we coined and gave him the nickname ‘Gody A’.

    “The Senate President was someone who made light of what would ordinarily pass for serious situations. He always cracked jokes to make everyone feel comfortable in his presence. The Senate President, even in his humorous nature, was a serious minded, studious and intelligent student who exhibited high level leadership qualities.

    “He was our Senior Prefect, and, you know, to be Senior Prefect, you must be a well-rounded individual who embodies leadership, responsibility, integrity and strong interpersonal skills. As Senior Prefect, Godswill Akpabio played a crucial role in maintaining order, fostering a positive school environment, and serving as a role model for the entire student body.

    “I am not surprised that the high-quality leadership traits he exhibited back then has now catapulted him to the leadership of the legislative arm of the Federal Government of Nigeria.”

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    Zuofa said after their FGC years, he still maintained close relationship and contact with the Senate President and was part of many public engagements, celebrations and receptions involving Akpabio.

    “A documentary was made to celebrate  Godswill Akpabio at 50.  I spoke on behalf of his friends in the documentary. I was also present at his 59th birthday held in Uyo. I was further present at his 61st birthday and well attended triumphant homecoming held at the world renowned Godswill Akpabio Stadium.

    “My presence and active involvement at the organization of these milestone events underscore the durability and depth of our relationship,” he said.

    Acknowledging the seriousness of the allegations leveled against Akpabio by Natasha, he said: “But the allegations of sexual harassment do not align with the behaviour and conduct of the Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio that I have known and interacted with very closely for 50 years.

    “Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio, who is a remarkably close friend and about whom I can safely give a character opinion, has always displayed and treated women with utmost courtesy and respect.  I must restate that the current allegations of sexual harassment are entirely contrary to my personal experience of the Senate President, and I would consider it totally unfounded until otherwise proven.”

    Zuofa said he was present at the guided tour of Akpabio’s House in Uyo, where Natasha claimed that the Senate President made some improper comments about her.

    He said: “Specifically, on the allegations of improper comments made during the guided tour of the new residence of the Senate President in Uyo, I want to state that I was at his residence on the eve of the celebration of his 61st Birthday.  I met Sen. Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan and her husband, High Chief Uduaghan, and I was also part of those that went on the guided tour of the new home, alongside the Uduaghans.

    “Thereafter, we all (including the Uduaghans) gathered just before midnight in the chapel located within the new residence, and at precisely midnight, we all prayed, sang and all wished our friend, brother and leader (The Senate President) a happy birthday. All of us departed the residence shortly afterwards because the immediate family wanted to continue the praise & worship session with the Senate President.

    “On the morning of 9th day of December, 2023, which was the actual birthday, we celebrated the Senate President at the stadium after which we all had lunch at his residence. We all stayed till late, until the Senate President retired. I departed Uyo on 10th December 2023.

    “At this point, it is pertinent for me to state that throughout the guided tour, I neither saw nor heard the Senate President say or do anything suggestive of inappropriate advances or comments towards Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, nor did I observe any discomfort on her part or on the part of her husband.”

    On the earlier allegations of sexual harassment made by Nunieh, Zuofa said: “The allegations as we all know occurred after a security report from Mr, Abba Kyari, the then Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari, indicating that she had issues with her NYSC programme led to her removal as Interim Administrator of NDDC so as to avoid embarrassment for the government of the day.

    “At that time, it was alleged that her NYSC certificate was forged, and if you recall, this was shortly after the then Finance Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, who had a similar problem, voluntarily resigned her position.

    “Barrister Nunieh had wrongly alleged at the time that it was because she rebuffed the advances from the then Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Dr. Godswill Akpabio, that she was removed. The clear facts of the matter proved otherwise as we all know.

    “I have been a very close friend of the uncommon Senate President for 50 years, during which period he served as Commissioner, Governor, Senator, Minister and presently the Senate President. Throughout this period, he hosted men and women from different backgrounds, and there has never been any complaint of harassment made against him (whether sexual or otherwise).”

    Zuofa added: “The instant allegation made by Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan is strange as was the one made by Joy Nunieh, which was never proven. There appears to be a common trend in these allegations to the extent that the allegations were made by the accusers after the occurrence of events that the accusers considered averse to their interest.

    “This is not to discount the fact that they reserve the right to make their allegations at any time they deem necessary provided that they can prove such allegations whenever called upon to do so.

    “Let me state again that the Senate President has never, for the 50 years I have been a close friend of his, exhibited any character trait indicative or suggestive of someone that would sexually harass anyone, and I have never heard any allegations in that regard with the exception of the allegations made by Joy Nunieh (former Interim Administrator of NDDC) and recently, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan.”

    Zuofa advised the Senate President to continue to render the support that he had always provided to the President of the country and not be discouraged by what he described as deliberate attempts at distracting him.

    He said: “The relationship between the two arms of government should be complimentary and not confrontational for the much needed synergy towards nation building and rapid infrastructural development.

    “I would also advise him that while I understand the embarrassment, ridicule and hurt that he, his wife and children as well as other well-wishers would be feeling at this time as a result of these allegations, he should, as he has always done, take it as part of the sacrifices he would make in his role as the leader of the legislative arm of government.

    “He should continue to exhibit his usual humble character and not be deterred in his resolve towards ensuring that women are given their pride of place within the politics of the nation just as he exhibited or displayed during his time as governor of Akwa Ibom State.”

  • No leakage of Presidential communication under Lado – Akpabio

    No leakage of Presidential communication under Lado – Akpabio

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio, on Thursday lauded the performance of the Special Adviser to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Senate Matters, Senator Basheer Lado, in the last eight months, saying there has been no leakage of presidential communications to the Senate during the period.

    Akpabio, who made the observation in the office of Senator Lado, described his performance as unprecedented in the area of making communication between the Senate  and the President Tinubu far easier than in the past .

    Akpabio said: “Let me put on record that since Senator Lado’s  assumption of office as Special Adviser to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on National Assembly (Senate Matters), we have not had a single leakage of private communication between the presidency and the Senate.

    “We have not had a single incidence of leakage because in government, that’s what we call the right to know and then of course, where government business is done, on pages of newspapers and on social media through leakages of information, it negatively rubs on national security.

    “So, I want to thank you for upholding the tenets of what the government should be, what separation of powers is all about.

    “Your performance in office  generally within the last eight months, is unprecedented by transforming the office itself  and making the synergy between the executive and legislature more robust and rewarding for the good of all.

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    “You are no doubt, a man of color, man of excellence, man of style who stepped into an  office and transformed it for better result delivery as it is clearly with the way you keep  track on all the bills passed by us and those assented to, by the President.

    “Ahead of 2027, with the Deputy President of the Senate, the National Chairman of APC, Dr Abdullahi Ganduje and your strategic self, Kano is already in the kitty of APC,” Akpabio said.

    Lado said President Tinubu has found in Akpabio not only a dependable ally but a statesman who understands the delicate art of governance and the importance of cooperation over confrontation.

    “Mr. Senate President, your presence here is not only symbolic of the harmony between the Executive and the Legislature, it is a testament to the power of unity, the strength of shared vision, and the boundless possibilities when leadership is anchored on service.

    “Your Excellency, permit me to especially commend your steadfast and visible support for our President, His Excellency Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR.

    “In you, Mr. President has found not only a dependable ally but a statesman who understands the delicate art of governance and the importance of cooperation over confrontation.

    “You have not merely walked alongside the President; you have championed his Renewed Hope Agenda with conviction, defending it with clarity, articulating it with passion, and advancing it through legislative action,” Lado said.

  • Senate Face-off: The many lives of Natasha

    Senate Face-off: The many lives of Natasha

    • How controversial Kogi lawmaker got married at 19, one week after admission into varsity

    • Marital exploits produce four children from three husbands

    Beyond her current face-off with Senate President Godswill Akpabio and her suspension by the Senate for unruly behaviour, there are many other parts of Kogi Central Senator, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, which are hidden from the public, SANNI ONOGU reports.

    For three weeks, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, the Senator representing Kogi Central in the National Assembly has been in the news, rocking the political landscape with her face-off with the Senate and the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio.

    It all began on February 20 with a routine administrative act of rearranging sitting arrangements in the upper chamber following which the Kogi senator was allocated a new seat. She, however, rejected the new arrangement and insisted on maintaining her old seat.

    Her attempt to address the Senate from her old seat was rebuffed by the Senate President, who insisted she would only be allowed to speak from the new seat allocated to her by the Senate’s Chief Whip. The outspoken Senator immediately made a show of the incident, accusing the Senate President and persecuting her.

    The disagreement later assumed a new dimension with an allegation by Natasha that the Senate President was opposed to her because she had previously rejected his sexual advances. She later took her case to radio and television stations, following which the Senate sent her on six-month suspension for unruly behavior.

    But rather than becoming sober, Natasha became even more defiant, dragging the Senate President and other principal officers of the upper chamber to court for contempt. Still not satisfied with involving the courts in the matter, she recently escalated the matter further by taking her case to the United Nations (UN) and the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU).

    In the beginning

    Natasha has been a formidable force in Kogi State politics since 2019, defying the odds in a male-dominated space. As a trained lawyer and entrepreneur, she first gained public recognition through her advocacy for the revival of Nigeria’s steel industry, particularly the moribund Ajaokuta Steel Company.

    Her entry into politics was marked by resilience, as she contested for the Kogi Central senatorial seat multiple times, facing strong opposition from established political structures. And despite electoral setbacks, she remained a vocal advocate for good governance, industrialization and women’s empowerment.

    Beyond politics, Akpoti-Uduaghan carved a niche for herself as an activist and philanthropist, championing causes that addressed gender inequality, youth empowerment and social justice. Through the Natasha Akpoti Foundation, she provided scholarships, vocational training and healthcare support for underprivileged Nigerians, particularly in Kogi Central, which is made up of Okene, Okehi, Adavi, Ajaokuta and Ogori-Magongo local government areas.

    The extension of her activism to exposing corruption in the steel sector apparently made her a target for political persecution. She, however, remained undeterred, using every available platform to push for reforms that could transform the lives of ordinary citizens. Her eventual success in winning a senatorial seat was seen by many as a victory for women in Nigerian politics.

    In the Senate, Akpoti-Uduaghan focused on legislative efforts to boost industrialization, enhance security and improve social welfare. She was vocal on issues affecting her constituents, especially in the areas of infrastructure, healthcare and job creation. However, her tenure has not been without challenges. Political tensions, party rivalries and legal battles have continued to shadow her journey, raising questions about her long-term political prospects.

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    Akpoti-Uduaghan’s personal life has been as eventful as her political career. Her marriage to businessman and politician Emmanuel Uduaghan brought her further into the political limelight, merging her Kogi-Central roots with Delta State’s political landscape. Their union, marked by public displays of affection and mutual political aspirations, sparked both admiration and controversy. Supporters viewed her love story as an inspiring blend of romance and politics, while critics speculated on the strategic implications of her marriage. Regardless, she maintained that love and family remained central to her drive for success.

    Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s journey may be a testament to resilience in the face of adversity. While she achieved groundbreaking success in politics and advocacy, the challenges she faced—from electoral disputes to political machinations—have shaped the trajectory of her career. Whether her influence in Nigerian politics will endure or fade remains an open question. However, one thing is certain: she has already etched her name in history as a woman who dared to challenge the status quo.

    The events of February 20 in the Senate chamber unleashed a firestorm across the country and internationally. The day had started with the Chief Whip of the Senate, Mohammed Tahir Monguno, reporting to the Senate that the Senator representing Kogi Central, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan had refused to accept a new seat allocated to her. Akpoti-Uduaghan had sought to explain her rejection of the seat. Citing order 10 of the Senate Standing Orders 2023, as amended, she claimed that her privilege was breeched.

    The Senate President Godswill Akpabio, however, thought otherwise. Akpabio said he would not recognise her to speak until she relocated to and speak from her new seat. The insistence of Akpoti Uduaghan to continue her speech amid raised voices caused commotion and led to a near open confrontation with the presiding officer. However, it was like the melee let out a dangerous genie from the vestibule of the Senate chamber which has refused to be placated.

    Shortly after that, Natasha went to court, claiming N100 billion from Akpabio for alleged defamation. She claimed that a Facebook post by Akpabio’s aide, Mfom Patrick, after the incident in the chamber ‘sexualized’ her and vowed to go down fighting.

    The Senate had the same Tuesday referred the incident at plenary to its committee on Ethics, Code of Conduct and Public Petitions for investigation. But in the midst of this, Natasha appeared on an Arise TV morning show claiming that Akpabio had been frustrating her legislative duties because she rebuffed his alleged sexual advances. But Akpabio’s wife, Nnoma, would not have any of Natasha’s allegation, hence she dragged the Senator before the Federal High Court, claiming N251 billion for defamation.

    Following the allegation, pro-Natasha protesters gathered at the National Assembly gate on Monday, calling on Akpabio to step down to allow for an unbiased investigation of the allegation of sexual harassment raised by her. She also secured an injunction stopping the Ethics committee from probing her alleged misconduct during plenary. The following day, Natasha brought a petition concerning her sexual harassment claims to the chamber. The other senators, however, kicked against it, saying it was against their rules for a Senator to present a petition authored by him or herself.

    The Ethics Committee, which threw out Natasha’s sexual harassment petition, however found her liable of misconduct upon which she was suspended for six months with other conditionalities.

    On the same day, Natasha had submitted another petition still on sexual harassment claiming it was signed by one of her constituents. This petition is yet to be considered by the Senate. However, two weeks after, precisely on Wednesday, March 12, Senator Akpabio announced a minor shakeup in the chairmanship of the Senate Standing Committees and the creation of new ones.

    Senators Natasha, Orji Uzor Kalu and Abdul Ningi, among others, were affected in the new arrangement. Akpabio appointed Senator Joel-Onowakpo Thomas (APC – Delta South) as the new chairman of the Senate Committee on Local Content formerly chaired by Natasha and reassigned her to the Senate Committee on Diaspora and NGOs.

    Parentage and upbringing

    Natasha, according to information on her website at www.natashaakpoti.com, was born on Sunday, December 9, 1979 at the Maternity Hospital, Ilorin, Kwara State (now University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital). She is the second of four children and only daughter of a Nigerian father and a Ukrainian mother.  Her mother, Ludmila Kravchenko, was born in Rakitna in the region of Chernivtsi in Ukraine, while her father, Dr. Jimoh Abdul Akpoti, was born in Obeiba-Ihima, Kogi State (then Kwara State).

    Natasha’s parents had met in the then Soviet Union where her father was a foreign medical student on scholarship at the Bolomolets Medical University, Ukraine.

    She spent her early years as a child growing up and being educated in her native communities – Okehi, Okene, Adavi and Ajaokuta towns. Her most fascinating moments during her upbringing, she said, were lessons of philanthropy and empathy for humanity that her father (who died on November 3, 1998) taught by practically treating the poor for free, paying tuition for thousands of school children, supporting hundreds of local farmers and traders with their businesses and so much more.

    “Father came home one day looking pale and faint after donating two pints of blood to patients who couldn’t afford any. That moment defined my belief that helping the poor should hurt and it formed my rhetoric rationale on becoming a social entrepreneur,” she said.

    Recalling her early childhood, Natasha loved cheering the colourful masquerades known as ‘Eku’ in her local Ebira dialect. She loathed being called Oyinbo pepper (the white one) by people of her community. “I knew my mother had a complexion different from everyone around us. She was white. However, I didn’t think I was any different from the children I played with barefoot in my village… but I surely hated being followed and teased Oyinbo by the children whenever I expressed a different point of view,” she said.

    Till date, Natasha experiences social sensitivities towards her multiracial heritage.

    Education

    Natasha attended Christ the King Nursery and Primary School, Okene, Kogi State for six years to obtain her primary school certificate. At the school she held the post of social prefect and was acknowledged in her testimonial to be very quiet, hardworking and responsible.

    Natasha had her Junior Secondary education at the Government Girls Unity Secondary School, Oboroke, Kogi State after which she proceeded to the Federal Government College Idoani, Ondo State for her Senior Secondary School. Her exceptional academic and personal performances earned her the leadership position of Head Girl.

    She graduated in 1997, with the school authorities acknowledging her as being “responsible, hardworking and a diligent prefect” in her school leaving testimonial.

    However, barely three weeks after losing her father, Natasha gained admission into the University of Abuja to obtain her Bachelor of Law.  A week later, she got married at the tender age of 19 and had her first son Daniel months after. Natasha recalled her university years as those where she learnt that “the fragility of innocence attracted mercilessly the world’s monsters.”

    In 2004, Natasha proceeded to the Nigerian Law School, Bwari, Abuja and was called to the Nigerian Bar by the Body of Benchers on the 8th November 2005.

    In 2012, Natasha bagged a Master’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Dundee in Scotland, UK.  The knowledge she gained from the course later shaped her advocacy for the resuscitation of the Nigeria’s Steel sector with focus on the revival of Ajaokuta Steel Complex in Kogi State.

    According to Natasha, her “decision to become a social entrepreneur and reformer in 2015 was born out of innate passion to position Nigeria on the fore of industrialization and judiciously harness the vast natural and human resources all in a bid to create employment and eradicate poverty in Nigeria.”

    Love and family life

    Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan is married to High Chief Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan, the Alema of Warri Kingdom. Their union has been celebrated as a blend of cultural diversity and mutual respect. Although the Deputy Chief Whip of the Senate, Senator Onyekachi Nwebonyi claimed during a show on the television that Natasha has six children from six different men, our investigation revealed that she has four children (one boy from her first husband, a boy and a girl from her second husband and another boy for High Chief Uduaghan, her present husband.

    According to a media report, Natasha and Uduaghan dated for a while before they decided to get married.

    “Before then, the wealthy businessman spoiled her silly with some of the best things that money can buy, including financing her political campaign for the 2019 governorship election in Kogi State and gifting her with a white Rolls-Royce car. Even her three children benefitted from his generosity,” the report added.

    High Chief Uduaghan, cousin of two past governors of Delta State, Chief James Ibori and Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, is also the Chief Executive Officer of Webster Group of companies. He was crowned Alema of Warri Kingdom in a grand ceremony held in 2017 reportedly in recognition of his love for the Itsekiris and contribution to the welfare of the people in terms of poverty alleviation and youth empowerment. Despite her public life being under scrutiny, Natasha has maintained a relatively private approach to her family life.

    Foray into politics

    Natasha ventured into politics in 2019, contesting for the Kogi Central Senatorial District seat under the Social Democratic Party (SDP). Although she lost to APC candidate, Yakubu Oseni, she demonstrated resilience by running for Governor of Kogi State on November 16 of same year. However, she lost to ex-Governor Yahaya Bello from whom she endured a lot of frustration politically.

    In 2023, Natasha joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and contested again for the Kogi Central Senatorial District seat. Despite facing challenges such as alleged electoral interference by the Kogi State Government, Natasha won after a rigorous legal battle. The election tribunal declared her winner on September 6, 2023, nullifying her opponent’s victory. Her triumph was further affirmed by the Court of Appeal.

    Achievements

    Natasha has numerous achievements to her credit, among which are: The first Ebira woman to be recognised with the African Women Leadership Award by Mrs. Jewel Taylor, who served as the 30th vice president of Liberia from 2018 – 2024, first Ebira woman to float NGO of international standard to take care of the aged ones and over 600 under-privileged children and orphans which earned her so many awards across the world, first Ebira Woman and indeed first Nigerian non-engineer to receive the presidential award from the Nigerian Society of Engineers on December 2017 for her efforts on Ajaokuta Steel’s revival, first Ebira woman to be elected as Senator and THISDAY Newspaper Senator of the year 2024.

    As a senator, Natasha focused on infrastructure development and healthcare initiatives. In 2024, she commissioned road networks and classroom blocks at Abdul Azeez Memorial College in Okene, oversaw solar-powered water systems across 300 locations and initiated healthcare outreach programmes and rehabilitated primary health centres and a police station. She boasts of a strong social media presence with over 370,000 followers on Facebook alone.

    Controversies and accusations

    Natasha’s allegation of sexual harassment against Senate President Godswill Akpabio had sparked political turmoil within the Senate and led to investigation by the Ethics Committee.

    A former presidential media aide, Reno Omokri, had shared a throwback video of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan accusing him of sexual harassment. The resurfaced video came just days after the Kogi senator made a similar allegation against Senate President Godswill Akpabio. Omokri posted the video on his Facebook page on Saturday, March 8, 2025.

    The footage, originally recorded on October 12, 2021, showed Akpoti-Uduaghan making the accusation while campaigning for the Kogi State governorship under the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    In the video, Akpoti-Uduaghan claimed that Omokri sexually harassed her on May 6, 2014, during a state banquet at Aso Rock Presidential Villa, hosted by then-President Goodluck Jonathan for visiting Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta.

    She also rejected Omokri’s defence that he was not in the country on the date in question. She also called on the Nigerian immigration Service to probe Omokri’s claims that he was not in the country at the time.

    But Omokri, in a rebuttal, said President Jonathan sent him to the United States as a special envoy to try to clean up Nigeria’s image after the Chibok girls’ crisis.

    He said: “On Tuesday, 12 October 2021, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan had a dispute with me, and after the dispute, she went on social media and accused me of sexually harassing her. Now, the thing is, a month before, the Chibok girls were abducted, as one of the president’s spokespersons, Goodluck Jonathan sent me to the United States as a special envoy to try to clean up Nigeria’s image.

    “I left in April and was back in Nigeria until the end of May. Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan lied. So what I did was I went on social media and published my passport stamps with my passport leaving Nigeria and then entering the United States showing the stamp. I also published a first-class British Airway ticket showing that I left Nigeria for the United Kingdom and from there to the United States. I wasn’t in Nigeria until Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan accused me.”

    Omokri noted that after he published his evidence in national dailies, Mrs Akpoti-Uduaghan deleted all her accusations across all her social media handles.

    “She had made a video insulting me, my wife and my newborn daughter; she also deleted that. The next day, I got a phone call from a prominent Christian clergyman who said they felt that, as a fellow pastor, I’d listen to a member of the body of Christ. The senior member of the body of Christ called me on three ways with Emmanuel Uduaghan, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s present husband.

    “They appealed to me and quoted scriptural references about Christians taking each other to court. I listened to them and settled the matter out of court, and I was paid a large amount of money as damages, and I let the matter go”, Omokri said.

    Suspension

    Her tenure became increasingly contentious following disputes over sitting arrangements and other procedural issues. The Senate Ethics Committee recommended her suspension for six months on charges of breaching Senate rules and bringing disrepute to the chamber.

    Alongside this suspension came penalties such as withdrawal of salary, allowances, legislative aides’ benefits and security escorts.

    Natasha condemned these actions as politically motivated attempts to silence her advocacy for justice. She vowed to challenge what she described as an abuse of power and injustice.

    But how far can she go in this battle to reverse the decision of the Senate. Her cause seems to be favoured by the opinion in some quarters that the Senate does not have the legal power to suspend her for six months.

    Will the Senate reverse its decision and recall the embattled Senator or will she be made to serve out the term? Only time will tell.

    Provide evidence or drop allegations against Akpabio, Adeyanju tells Natasha

    Human rights lawyer and activist, Deji Adeyanju, called on Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan (Kogi Central) to present concrete evidence to back her allegations of sexual harassment against Senate President Godswill Akpabio.

    Speaking at a press conference in Abuja on Friday, Adeyanju stated that without verifiable proof, Nigerians should not dwell on the matter.

    He urged the public to focus on more pressing issues, such as the Tax Reform Bill and its potential impact on low- and middle-income earners.

    According to him, solid evidence would lend credibility to Akpoti-Uduaghan’s claims and warrant public scrutiny of Akpabio’s actions.

    However, without such proof, the allegations remain unsubstantiated.

    Adeyanju also argued that the controversy had been overflogged and should be resolved in court.

    He criticised the selective outrage over the issue, noting that there was little public reaction when lawmakers received luxury cars and budgetary allocations.

    According to him, “the matter has been over-flogged. I believe that the parties should go to court and resolve their dispute. We should focus on Nigeria’s Tax Reform Bill and explore ways to galvanize opposition against its passage, as that is more important than this internal issue.”

    He also questioned why the same senators now engaged in the dispute did not oppose the anti-people policies of the current administration.

  • Akpabio gets second confidence vote in two weeks

    Akpabio gets second confidence vote in two weeks

    • Natasha files contempt of court suit against SP, others

    Amid the sexual harassment allegation against him by Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, the Senate yesterday passed a vote of confidence in its President, Godswill Akpabio.

    The resolution followed a motion by Senate Leader, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele.

    Akpabio was not present when the confidence vote was passed. But when he returned to the chamber from outside engagement, he thanked his colleagues and charged them to remain united,  focused and not be distracted by the current happenings.

    The Senate President also said Akpoti-Uduaghan’s conduct could work against female politicians in future.

    Also yesterday, Akpoti-Uduaghan filed a contempt charge against Senate President, Ethics Committee Chairman  Neda Imasuen and  Clerk of the National Assembly Kamoru Ogunlana at the Federal High Court (FHC),  Abuja.  

    Bamidele had in his lead debate said the Senate had decided that it would not be distracted further by the controversy generated by the suspension of Akpoti-Uduaghan over her alleged misconduct.

    Akpabio said: “In my absence when I was at another function, the Deputy President was presiding but  I heard on the radio that this August assembly had passed a vote of confidence in this leadership and particularly, the Senate President.

    “I said it would not be correct if I came and pretended like the Ostrich putting his head under its wings, pretending that it was dark.

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    ‘’ I needed to let you know that I deeply appreciate the vote of confidence in my leadership. And this is coming almost twice in the last two weeks.

    “The public needs to know that my colleagues are together, the Senate is one and bonded together by destiny and by God Almighty through elections.

    ‘’The 10th Senate is together and united in purpose.”

    He pointed out that it was important for the public to know that whatever decision the Senate made on the suspension of Natasha was unanimous.

      “I recall the last decision we took which concerned one of our sisters, Distinguished Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan. I’m also aware that when she left the chambers, she went to Berekete Radio and Arise Television and she distorted the facts.

    “I’m aware further that she has now externalised the matter by attempting to embarrass the Federal Republic of Nigeria by going to give a narrative at the IPU(International Parliamentary Union) at the  United Nations different from what occurred in the Senate.

    “But I want to thank Rt. Honourable member, Kafilat Ogbara, had to give a press conference in New York, United States to urge the international press not to vilify Nigeria but to note that the facts presented by her were totally out of tune with what occurred in the Nigerian parliament and that we have our internal mechanisms of resolving issues.

    “Outside this parliament, we also have the judiciary which she is even standing before. So, I don’t know why she would… even here she has brought a petition and she has not allowed us to even look into it. She went to court and then she has not allowed the court to look into it.

    “She has gone to the international community and she may not even allow the international community to look into it. She might decide to run to…I don’t know where. I don’t want to be misquoted.

    “But the reality is that we remain resolute. We are law-abiding. We operate through the rules of the Senate, which is an extension of the powers and privileges given to us by the   Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “We still are open to making sure that we remain in peace.  We left room for her to recognise that what she’s doing may even frighten a lot of men in future from even appointing or selecting female deputy governors.

    “You can imagine if somebody like Kamala (Harris), the immediate past vice president of the United States, were to go on CNN(Cable News Network) to say that President Joe Biden sexually assaulted her by shaking her hand or by holding her hand to show her the office of the President.

    “That automatically means that nobody will pick another woman as vice president. But I have four daughters, so I want to plead with politicians, to still give my four children a chance. Do not take the action of one person and punish others.

    “My religion and the Bible forbid that, that the sins of the father will no longer be visited on the children. So, please, we still have absolute confidence in our female folks.

    “In this 10th Assembly of the Senate, we have only four women and the four of them are all committee chairmen, intentionally, to give a voice to women in the parliament.

    “  I thank you for this vote of confidence. I will not take it for granted and I also have confidence in you and your ability to continue to contribute your quota towards nation-building.

    ‘’Let’s remain focused on why we are here. This is a distraction, a diversionary incident. 

    ‘’May God, using this Ramadan and Lent periods, endow you with more wisdom, protect you, protect your families and then bring more prosperity to our nation.”

     Earlier, Senator Bamidele, while citing orders 41 and 51 on matters of urgent public importance, recognised the right of the public to subject the Senate to utmost scrutiny.

    He said it is only the people who can criticise and dissolve the government and not vice versa.

    The Senate Leader said the red chamber owed Nigerians an explanation on the sexual harassment allegation.

    He stated that  Senators were never informed of any alleged sexual advances on Akpoti-Uduaghan since August 2023  until February 5 when  a motion was moved by Senator Yemi Adaramodu about “flagrant disobedience to the rules and regulations of this Senate.”

    Bamidele said the matter was consequently referred to the Senate Committee on Ethics, Code of Conduct and Public Petitions for probe.

    He added: “Secondly, I also want to make it clear to the public that the issue before us, as of the time we referred this matter to the Ethics Committee had nothing to do with sexual harassment.

    “Some of the critics who have said this Senate allowed Senator Godswill Akpabio to be a judge in his matter and to preside over his matter need to be told with all due respect that the matter before us on which Senator Godswill Akpabio presided as the President of the Senate had to do with the motion that was referred to the Senate Committee on Ethics, Code of Conduct and Public Petition.

    “While we appreciate the concern of the public, I just want to emphasise that it is important that we also seek the understanding of the general public, that we were elected to serve the people and we are guided, whatever we do in this chamber, we are guided by rules and these are our rules were also drawn pursuant to the constitution of our country.

    “So, it is not a rule of men, it is a rule of law. It is not about some men trying to gang up against a woman or anybody. It is about ensuring that our rules are respected. That is the only way we can guarantee peace, law and order.

    “That is the only way we can have an atmosphere in which we can do our job and serve the Nigerian people.  Again, some of the critics have also said we have no right to even suspend a member of this Senate.

    “Again, I will leave that within the context of jurisprudence, as the court will always speak to that. But it is very clear in our rules as to how far we can go and we are yet of the opinion that might breach either the Constitution or any of our rules.”

    Allegation an attack on N’Assembly

    Chairman,  Senate Committee on Appropriation Solomon Adeola described   Akpoti-Uduaghan’s allegation against   Akpabio as an attack on the National Assembly.

    In a statement yesterday, the third-term Senator with over 22 years as a parliamentarian at both state and federal levels, argued that the Senate did the appropriate thing by suspending her for gross violation of its rules.

    He urged the  IPU not to do anything that would diminish the status of the Nigerian parliament. 

    Adeola also said that  Akpoti-Uduaghan had no evidence to prove the allegation which according to him happened in 2023.

    Natasha files contempt charge against Akpabio

    At the Federal High Court, Abuja Akpoti-Uduaghan asked that Akpabio,  Imasuem,  and Ogunlana be tried for disobedience of a valid court order.

    Natasha, through her counsel, filed for Form 48 at the Federal High Court (FHC) in Abuja, following her six-month suspension by the Senate against the order of the court.

    Form 48 is a notice of consequence of disobedience of a court order.

    The defendants/contemnors were urged to take notice of their wilful disobedience of the order of the court made by Justice Obiora Egwuatu on March 4.

    It said the alleged disobedience rendered the Senate president, the committee chairman and the NASS clerk “liable for contempt of court, for which you may be committed to prison unless you comply with the said order.”

    Justice Egwuatu had, on March 4, granted all the prayers in Akpoti-Uduaghan’s motion, including an order declaring any action taken during the pendency of the suit as null, void and of no effect whatsoever.

    The judge made an order directing the defendants to come and show cause within 72 hours upon the service of the order on them why an order of interlocutory injunction should not be granted against them.

  • FixPolitics: Natasha’s suspension threat to democracy

    FixPolitics: Natasha’s suspension threat to democracy

    A  group, FixPolitics, has decried the six-month suspension of Sen. Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan following   allegations of sexual harassment against Senate President Godswill Akpabio, which were dismissed by the Senate’s ethics committee on procedural grounds.

    In a statement, the group’s Executive Director, Anthony Ubani,noted that the Senate through  imposing  the suspension under the pretext of rule violations, has not only silenced Akpoti-Uduaghan but  disenfranchised the people of Kogi Central, depriving them of their constitutional right to representation.

    He said the senator’s suspension highlights the systemic barriers and  entrenched misogyny that Nigerian women face in politics and society at large.

    The statement read in part:  “Female representation in the Senate has plummeted by nearly 50%—from seven women in the 9th Assembly to just four in the 10th Assembly. This decision sets a dangerous precedent that could further discourage women from political participation and silence victims of harassment.

    By imposing this suspension under the pretext of rule violations, the Senate has not only silenced Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan but has also disenfranchised the people of Kogi Central, depriving them of their constitutional right to representation.

    “This action blatantly disregards judicial precedents, including Senator Ali Ndume v. Senate of Nigeria (2018) and Senator Dino Melaye v. Senate of Nigeria (2016), which affirm that lawmakers cannot be suspended in ways that strip their constituents of representation.

    “The Senate’s repeated defiance of these rulings raises serious concerns about its commitment to democracy, the rule of law, and the integrity of Nigeria’s legislative processes. Beyond undermining democratic principles, this punitive measure also calls into question the institution’s willingness to address misconduct within its ranks.

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    “ Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s suspension highlights the systemic barriers and entrenched misogyny that Nigerian women face in politics and society at large.

    “The unconstitutional removal of a duly elected legislator denies constituents their fundamental right to representation in the National Assembly. In this case, an entire senatorial district in Kogi State is being disenfranchised—an outcome that contradicts both the spirit and letter of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

    “The Senate, as Nigeria’s highest law making body, must uphold the rule of law rather than continuously flout  court rulings that protect the rights of elected representatives and their constituents.

    “FixPolitics unequivocally condemns the Senate’s actions and demands the immediate reinstatement of Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan.

    We call on the Senate to uphold justice, transparency, and accountability by ensuring that allegations of this nature are investigated thoroughly and impartially—free from internal biases and procedural technicalities.”

  • Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s allegations: A threat to 10th Senate’s integrity

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s allegations: A threat to 10th Senate’s integrity

    By Ahmed Tijani Ibn Mustapha

    In recent weeks , Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan has embarked on a calculated campaign to tarnish the reputation of the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, and undermine the credibility of the 10th Senate. Her tactics, which include baseless accusations, character assassination, and the manipulation of facts, have not only raised eyebrows but also cast a shadow over the integrity of Nigeria’s legislative arm. This article seeks to expose the unsavoury methods employed by Senator Natasha in her quest to drag the Senate President and the institution of the Senate into disrepute.

    One of the most egregious tactics employed by Senator Natasha is her repeated accusation of sexual harassment against the Senate President. These allegations, which she has echoed in the media and public forums, are not only damaging but also lack any substantive evidence. Despite the gravity of such claims, Senator Natasha has failed to provide even the tiniest shred of proof to substantiate her accusations. This raises serious questions about her motives and the credibility of her claims.

    In a society where allegations of sexual harassment are taken seriously and can have far-reaching consequences, it is irresponsible and unethical to make such claims without evidence. By doing so, Senator Natasha not only undermines the fight against genuine cases of harassment but also weaponizes serious societal issues for personal and political gain. Her actions are a disservice to the very cause she claims to champion.

    Another example of Senator Natasha’s manipulative tactics is her distortion of the circumstances surrounding her suspension from the Senate. Contrary to her claims, her suspension was a direct result of her disorderly conduct on the floor of the Senate, a fact that has been well-documented. However, Senator Natasha has chosen to twist this narrative, falsely asserting that she was suspended for making allegations against the Senate President.

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    This deliberate misrepresentation of facts is a classic example of how Senator Natasha seeks to portray herself as a victim while deflecting attention from her own misconduct. By framing her suspension as an act of political victimization, she attempts to garner public sympathy and divert scrutiny from her actions. This tactic is not only dishonest but also undermines the integrity of the Senate’s disciplinary processes.

    Senator Natasha’s recent actions are not an isolated incident but rather part of a pattern of behavior. In 2014, she accused Reno Omokri, a former presidential aide, of making inappropriate advances during a visit to the Presidential Villa. However, Omokri vehemently denied these allegations and provided irrefutable evidence to prove that he was not even in the country on the date in question. This incident serves as a stark reminder of Senator Natasha’s propensity for making unsubstantiated claims to further her agenda.

    One can only speculate on the motivations driving Senator Natasha’s campaign of blackmail and character assassination. However, it is not unreasonable to assume that her objective is to elevate her own political standing by tearing others down. In a political landscape where public perception often shapes success, Senator Natasha appears to have chosen the path of destruction rather than constructive engagement.

    Her actions, however, come at a great cost. By targeting the Senate President and the institution of the Senate, she not only undermines the credibility of Nigeria’s legislative arm but also erodes public trust in the democratic process. Her tactics are a disservice to the Nigerian people, who deserve leaders committed to integrity, transparency, and accountability.

    Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s campaign of blackmail and character assassination is a dangerous and destructive force in Nigerian politics. Her baseless allegations, manipulation of facts, and history of unsubstantiated accusations reveal a pattern of behavior that is both unethical and damaging. As citizens, we must demand better from our leaders and hold them accountable for their actions. The integrity of our democracy depends on it.

    It is time for Senator Natasha to either provide concrete evidence to support her claims or cease her campaign of defamation. The Nigerian people deserve leaders who are committed to truth, justice, and the common good, not those who seek to rise by pulling others down. The 10th Senate, under the leadership of Senate President Godswill Akpabio, must remain focused on its mandate to serve the nation, undeterred by the distractions of those who seek to undermine its work.

    Ahmed Tijani Ibn Mustapha, Public Affairs analyst | Social commentator