Tag: Legislature

  • Aspirant calls for part-time legislature

    An aspirant for the House of Representative on the platform of the All Progressive Congress, Alimosho Federal Constituency, Amuludun Gbenga Ahmed has called for a part time legislature in order to cut down the cost of governance in the country.

    Gbenga disclosed this in an interview with journalists at the launch of his campaign in Alimosho area of Lagos.

    According to him,  many people are vying for public office in Nigeria because of pecuniary gain and not because they want to serve in the best interest of the people.

    “I believe that we will have fewer incidences of money bag politicians who have failed in their homes and businesses but are seeking for public office as another business investment opportunity”, he said.

    “the current representative have done his best to serve the people of Alimosho Constituency 1 but I want to improve on the representation of Alimosho people at the House of Representatives with selfless service and innovation that is needed in today’s world. Lagos is the most populated state and economy epic centre of Nigeria, Alimosho is the biggest local government in Nigeria; its deserve better representation at the National Assembly”,

    “My goal will always be clear. My agenda will always be open. At any given point, constituents will always know what I am up to. In every sense of the world, I shall be a servant-represent. My duty is to be humble enough to know what my people want, and then proceed to work for its achievement by all means necessary within the ambit of law. My law constituents will always have the final word”.

    “I will see myself as the representative of my people in Alimosho. I shall do my best to further acquire and understand All Material facts about governance and political issues. then It shall be my duty to explain it to my people at periodic town hall (Constituent)”.

    He further said his aim is to immediately register and set up a nongovernmental organisation that will be devoted to exclusively provide and give practical assistance to constituents by creating social intervention programmes for constituent of Alimosho.

    “my agenda is to provide additional education and primary health care information. at least one each in all wars in Alimosho and upgrading of existing ones sponsor bills for the creation of an additional federal constituent in Alimosho seeking for their delineation of Alimosho into more local governments to be in line with the average size of local government in the country”.

  • Aspirant calls for per-time legislature

    An aspirant for the House of Representatives on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Alimosho Constituency, Amuludun Gbenga Ahmed, has called for a part-time legislature to cut down the cost of governance in the country.

    Gbenga disclosed this in an interview with reporters at the launch of his campaign in Lagos. The event was witnessed by  friends, party faithful and party leaders.

    He said: “I am in support of part-time legislature and it will help to reduce the high cost of governance in Nigeria.”

    Has lamented that many people are vying for public office in Nigeria because of pecuniary gain and not because they want to serve in the best interest of the people.

    Ahmed said making legislative arm of government a part-time work like its was in the first republic will help to thrown up astute professionals and highly motivated people who want to give their best and skills to serve the country.

    “I believe that we will have fewer incidences of money bag politicians who have failed in their homes and businesses but are seeking for public office as another business investment opportunity”, he said.

    Amuudun noted that the current representative have done his best to serve the people of Alimosho Constituency 1, but I want to improve on the representation of Alimosho people at the House of Representatives with selfless service and innovation that is needed in today’s world.

    He said “Lagos is the most populated state and economy epic centre of Nigeria, Alimosho is the biggest local government in Nigeria; its deserve better representation at the National Assembly”,

    He noted that his grand strategy is active engagement through continuous enlightenment and respectful engagement with stakeholders in the constituency.

    “My goal will always be clear. My agenda will always be open. At any given point, constituents will always know what I am up to. In every sense of the world, I shall be a servant-represent. My duty is to be humble enough to know what my people want, and then proceed to work for its achievement by all means necessary within the ambit of law. My law constituents will always have the final word”, he said.

    He added “I will see myself as the representative of my people in Alimosho. I shall do my best to further acquire and understand All Material facts about governance and political issues. then It shall be my duty to explain it to my people at periodic town hall (Constituent)”.

    “My aim is to immediately register and set up a non-governmental organisation that will be devoted to exclusively provide and give practical assistance to constituents by creating social intervention programmes for constituent of Alimosho.

    Amuudun said my agenda is to provide additional education and primary health care information. at least one each in all wars in Alimosho and upgrading of existing ones sponsor bills for the creation of an additional federal constituent in Alimosho seeking for their delineation of Alimosho into more local governments to be in line with the average size of local government in the country.

     

  • Effective legislature: The Edo example

    The function of the parliament in any country is to make laws and legislate, as well as act as representatives of the people. To all intent and purposes, effective legislation is a panacea for accelerated development and a catalyst to good governance. The role of parliament as a vital organ of government cannot be overemphasized.

    Section 4(1) (2) (3) and (7) of the Constitution 1999 (as amended) establishes the National Assembly, and House of Assembly of the state  to make laws for the peace, order and good government of the federation, and the state respectively. As one of the three organs of government, the sanctity, dignity and the authority of the legislature cannot be sacrificed on the altar of mediocrity

    The current friction between the legislature in some states and the executive, as well as the national assembly and the presidency is quite alarming. The legislature now acts under the whims and caprice of the executive. The interference of the executive in legislative matters with the use of state apparatus such as the police, DSS etc, is a travesty on our democracy. There should be independence of every arm of government, even as each other acts as check and balances on each other in furtherance of the doctrine of separation of power as contained in section 4,5, and 6 of the constitution.

    Only recently, eight members of the Benue State House of Assembly sat under the protection of the police and issued an impeachment notice on Governor Samuel Ortom, as against constitutional requirement, thereby making a mumbo jumbo of the constitution, this offends the spirit and letters of the constitution.

    Few states enjoy harmonious working relationship between the executive and legislature like Edo State. The legislature in the state is effectively carrying out the constitutional functions entrusted on it by virtue of section 4(7) of the constitution. Edo State is a shining example in this regard.

    In the state, the fact speaks for itself. The Speaker, Kabiru Adjotu has brought sanity to legislative business. Basically the House has indeed become a true assembly as against a house of commotion and comedy that it used to be prior to this very time. The assembly has being able to pass numerous bills that touch directly on the lives and businesses of the good people of the state.

    The synergy of the legislature, the executive and the judiciary is quite commendable. This is quite commendable and a good example of what a proactive legislature should be, and quite evident for the national assembly and other legislative houses all over the country to borrow a leaf from.

    Bearing in mind that government is the amalgam of the people, the executive can function effectively and provide the basic necessities of life if there is an active and effective legislature to make laws for the good governance of the people. At any level whatsoever, the legislature is the representative of the collective will of the people. It is the symbol of democracy, and it should be active, distinct and independent.

    • By Peter Erekose,

    University of Benin, Benin City.

     

  • Appeal Court reserves judgment in elections sequence dispute between Executive, Legislature

    •National Assembly insists on power to fix election dates

    THE Court of Appeal in Abuja has reserved judgment in the appeal by the National Assembly against the April 25 judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja, voiding the Legislature’s amendment to the Electoral Act.

    The National Assembly had, in its amendment, inserted Section 25 in the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2018, which sought to dictate the sequence of the next general election.

    President Muhammadu Buhari declined to assent to the Bill, in which the National Assembly recommended, among others, the conduct of legislative elections before the Presidential election.

    The debate about whether or not the National Assembly did not usurp the powers granted the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to fix the sequence of elections, which was ignited by Buhari’s refusal to assent to Bill, caused a political party, Accord Party, to approach the Federal High Court,  Abuja for a judicial pronouncement.

    In a judgment on April 25, Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the Federal High Court, Abuja upheld the suit by the Accord Party, held that the National Assembly lacked the powers to dictate the sequence of election and voided the controversial Section 25 of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2018, a decision the National Assembly appealed.

    Arguing the appellant case yesterday, Joseph Daudu (SAN) contended that the National Assembly has the power to order the sequence of elections.

    He argued that the later decision by the National Assembly to expunge the contentious Section 25 from the original Bill did not defeat the appellant’s position that it was within its power to decide the sequence of elections.

    Daudu urged the court to disregard a letter written by the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) informing parties in the case that the National Assembly has expunged the controversial Section 25 from the latter version of the Bill sent to President Buhari.

    He contended that the letter was merely sent for administrative purposes and as such did not form part of the case.

    Daudu further contended that the letter by the AGF, with the revised bill attached to it, would not render his client’s appeal academic.

    In his appellant’s brief, Daudu said: “The Court of Appeal has to decide whether or not a bill, which is not yet an Act, can be challenged in court. Our position is that it cannot be challenged.

    “The National Assembly is entitled to protect its independence because we are not sure that the new bill that was sent to the President will not be challenged through another originating summons.

    “In order not to allow this to keep re-occurring, this court has to make a pronouncement so that whoever is not satisfied can go to the Supreme Court.”

    Daudu added: “In other words, unlike under the original constitutional provisions, the 3rd respondent (INEC) no longer enjoys the freedom to fix the sequence for elections at will: such fixtures must be in accordance with the Electoral Act enacted by the appellant (National Assembly).

    “That is what the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill seeks to achieve, yet the 1st respondent (Accord Party) rushed to court to challenge the powers of the appellant to exercise its constitutional powers.”

    In his response, Accord Party’s lawyer Wole Olanipekun (SAN) urged the court to note the fact that the National Assembly had sent a fresh Bill, without “the offensive Section 25”.

    Olaniekun, who cited some Supreme Court decisions, contended that since Section 25 of the earlier amended Act, which formed the foundation of the judgment appealed against, has been expunged, the appeal was now academic.

    Relying on section 122(1) (b) of the Evidence Act, 2011, he insisted that the court was bound to take judicial notice of such factual developments.

    “When the law says the court shall take judicial notice, there must be a consequence,” Olanipekun said.

    Solicitor General of the Federation (SGF) Dayo Apata, who represented the AGF and lawyer to INEC, Femi Falana (SAN), also opposed the appeal on the grounds that the appeal had become academic in the light of the new development.

    Falana noted that the National Assembly did not dispute the fact that a new bill, which no longer contained the controversial provision, had been sent to the President.

    He added that in view of the new development, the National Assembly ought to withdraw their appeal having shifted position from the original issue that formed the foundation of the suit, which the lower court ruled upon.

    After listening to parties, a five-man panel of the court, headed by the Court of Appeal President, Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa, announced that a date for judgment would be communicated to parties later.

  • Executive not muzzling legislature – Enang

    The Muhammadu Buhari-led executive arm of government is not interested in muzzling the legislature, his Senior Special Adviser on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Senator Ita Enang, said yesterday.

    All the executive wants is for the   lawmakers to act according to the constitution, he told lawyers from Akwa Ibom State who visited him in Abuja.

    “The executive is not muzzling the legislature. It is only asking the legislature to act within its constitutional powers and not get into executive realm, otherwise the executive will continue to resist,” Enang informed the Akwa Ibom Lawyers Forum.

    He said: “We have seen and read about three or four judgments in the last few weeks, saying the legislature does not have the powers to exercise most of the powers it has been exercising.

    “For instance, indicting someone or asking someone to answer to criminal charges before them, are the things the executive keeps resisting because they are contrary to the law.

    “These are the actions that some people misinterpret to mean that the executive is either not cooperating or it is muzzling the legislature.

    “The executive is only asking the legislature to act within its powers and allow the judiciary to be the judge between them.”

    Enang said Buhari remains very transparent, and urged Nigerians to feel free to approach government functionaries on activities of government they are not clear about, rather than forming wrong opinions about government’s intentions.

    The president’s aide said that as an important part of the society with ability to shape public opinion, the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) should avoid the temptation of acting on unfounded information.

    He advised NBA, lawyers and other Nigerians to always seek clarifications about government activities, saying the present administration was open to giving clarifications on its policies and activities.

    “President Buhari’s government is the most transparent in Nigeria and he has put in all he can to serve the nation,” he said.

    “The president and all of us working with him are the servants of the people and we are always ready to attend to concerns by Nigerians about the running of government.

    “Nigerians should feel free to ask questions on what they do not understand rather than assuming and forming wrong opinions about workings of government,” he said.

    On Buhari’s ambition to run for a second term in office, Enang said his good records are speaking for him.

    According to him, the president’s record of achievement, integrity and love for country are bare for Nigerians to assess and do the needful in 2019.

    Earlier, a leader of the group, Mr Paul Usoro, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), had said that efforts were being made to reposition the NBA to enable it regain its lost glory.

    Usoro, who disclosed that he was running for the position of the president in the forthcoming NBA election, said the Bar was currently facing challenges.

    “There is a need for strategic plans to strengthen the Bar as an institution. The accounting system for instance, is weak and needs to be fixed.

    “When we are able to fix the problems bedevilling the association, we will win the confidence of lawyers and when we speak on governance, we will be listened to.

    “As a body with over 40 lawyers, we should be able to make an impact.”

    He noted that unless the NBA was repositioned, it would not be able to ensure the protection of rule of law, which was one of its primary roles.

  • ‘Nigerians must prevail on legislature to override Buhari on Electoral Act’

    RIVERS State Governor Nyesom Wike has called on Nigerians to prevail on the National Assembly to override the President’s veto of the 2010 Electoral Act Amendment Bill to guarantee free, fair and credible electoral system.

    Addressing the 2018 Annual Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) Section on Legal Practice Conference in Port Harcourt yesterday,  Wike urged lawyers to rise up and insist on the relevance of the amended Electoral Act 2010.

    He said: “We must all stand up against the devilish efforts by some anti-democratic forces to kill the ongoing process to amend the 2010 Electoral Act on the whimsical excuse that the order of elections proposed in the Amendment Bill contravenes the discretionary powers of INEC, which, in any case, has not complained of any mischief occasioned by the new order.

    “Let me remind us that a defining feature of the legal profession is the commitment to promote both the substantive rules and the processes of the law, as well as, to defend the democratic values of our society.”

    Wike said though the 2010 Electoral Act was enacted to promote credible elections, the All Progressives Congress (APC) working with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Police manipulated  the Act to rig the rerun elections in Rivers.

    He said following fraudulent  activities by INEC, APC  and the Police, the tribunal and Court of Appeal upheld results concocted by the Police for Rivers Rerun

    “We all saw how results sheets were duplicated with identical serial numbers and handed over to the police to entre fake results and returns in favour of the candidates of the APC in the said elections.

    “In spite of this law, we all saw how both the tribunal and the Court of Appeal anchored their verdicts on results that were generated and certified from the custody of the Nigerian Police, while the results from INEC, which conducted the elections, were branded irrelevant and accordingly rejected.

    “What all these mean is that a thousand Electoral Laws may amount to nothing for as long as the Federal Government, the INEC, the Police and other government agencies that may legally or illegally be brought into the election process, continue to disrespect the law and trample on our democratic rights to free and fair elections with impunity and without suffering any legal pains or punishment for their criminal conduct.”

    Wike urged the NBA  to reinvent and reposition itself in response to challenges in the theory and practice of law.

    The governor also said lawyers must rethink the way they practice to remain relevant and meet the needs of their clients and society.

    Opening the conference, Chief Justice Justice Walter Onoghen, represented by Justice AB Gumel, noted that the timing is right as it will allow the bench and bar to appraise issues of justice delivery.

    He urged judges to adhere to tenets of the law in their  judgments.

    President of Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) said the association’s Section on Law Practice is a vehicle for deepening professional practice.

    Chairman of NBA Section on Legal Practice Mainnaya Essien (SAN) said recent ethical issues require an appraisal of practice and challenges.

     

    Highpoint of the conference was the presentation of a recognition plaque to Governor Wike by the NBA President for the outstanding contributions of the Rivers State Governor to the legal profession.

     

     

     

  • Cost of unending executive, legislature stand-off

    Cost of unending executive, legislature stand-off

    The relationship between the executive and the legislature is everything but smooth. Assistant Editor ONYEDI OJIABOR writes that the cat and mouse game between the two arms has neither been beneficial to the parties nor to the electorate who voted for change.

    RATHER than be to its advantage, the domination of the National Assembly by the All Progressives Congress (APC) is not in any way helping the ruling party.

    The admission of the frosty relationship between the executive and the legislature by President Muhammadu Buhari at the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) underscores his frustrations.

    He told the party’s apex organ that the frequent friction between the Presidency and the lawmakers has slowed down the delivery of his campaign promises to Nigerians.

    The President’s confession, which confirmed the existence of the gulf between the two arms of government, has triggered more altercations in the past one week.

    Firing back in a veiled response, the National Assembly told Nigerians to blame the delayed passage of the 2018 Appropriation Bill on the refusal of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to furnish its committees with relevant information on their votes.

    But the Director-General of the Budget Office, Ben Akabueze, said the details of votes allocated to each MDA were clearly spelt out in the budget proposal presented to the joint session of the National Assembly on November 17, last year.

    Akabueze said: “Given the seriousness the presidency attaches to getting the 2018 budget passed so it could earnestly focus on achieving the goals set out in the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan 2017-20 (ERGP), which formed the basis of the budget, it had directed heads of ministries and extra-ministerial agencies to attend to any requests for meetings/information by the national assembly (NASS) with dispatch.

    “To the best of our knowledge, this directive has been complied with.”

    Many have warned that the festering executive/legislative feud, blowing open barely one year to the next general elections, could have dire consequences for the Buhari administration.

    Although they said that such friction is not alien to Nigeria’s political landscape, especially, when the ruling party has no comfortable majority in the National Assembly, “this is perhaps the first time it is being admitted that frequent clashes between the two arms of government have grown so large to slow down governance.”

    They urged the dramatis personae to smoothen all the rough edges to enable the electorate read the dividends of democracy.

    It is an open secret that since the inauguration of the Eight National Assembly on June 9, 2015, the arms of government have been locked in a cat and mouse game. The presidency and the lawmakers are rarely on the same page on issues of national importance.

    The crisis of trust stemmed from the contentious emergence of the leadership of the upper and lower chambers of the National Assembly. Contrary to the wish of the ruling party’s leadership, Dr. Bukola Saraki emerged Senate President and Ike Ekweremadu, a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lawmaker was elected Deputy Senate President.

    At the Green Chamber, Yakubu Dogara and Lasun Yusuff were elected as Speaker and Deputy Speaker.

     

    Budget impasse

     

    The non-passage of this year’s budget, three clear months after its presentation, has become worrisome to the government and the people.

    When the budget was presented in November last year, the assurance from the National Assembly leadership was that the proposal would be speedily passed so that its implementation could begin on January 1, 2018.

    That has not come to past. Three months into the year, the buck-passing and blame games continue.

    As the National Assembly accuses heads of MDAs of refusing to its committee’s invitations for budget defence, the agencies complain of frivolous invitations by the lawmakers.

    According to the lawmakers, the heads of the MDAs would rather prefer engagement outside the country than to honour the annual budget defence invitation. Some of the MDAs’ heads describe as frustrating the call for”unending budget defence sessions”.

    About 63 MDAs are yet to appear before relevant committees in the Seante.

    The Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Sunny Ogbuoji, alleged that the heads of the MDAs would rather  travel overseas than honour the lawmakers invitations to make clarifications.

    Ogbuoji said: “Since January, the Appropriations Committee’s doors have been opened to receiving reports from the sub-committees.

    “However, most of the sub-committees have a huge challenge with the MDAS because majority of the MDAS are not coming forward to interface with them.

    “Some of the ministers will tell you that they are travelling out of the country; because of that, the MDAs are not fully ready. So, we don’t have the reports yet.”

    A frustrated minister lamented that “budget defence sessions have been turned into more or less sessions of witch hunt.”

    Asked how MDAs are being witch-hunted, the minister declined to go into details “to avoid controversy.”

    It is difficult to say when the budget will be passed as the Senate has vowed never to pass the document without input from “recalcitrant” MDAs.

    Last year, the allegation of missing budget and budget padding almost ruined the implementation of the fiscal estimate. When the dust raised by the weighty allegations subsided, the budget was passed in May and signed into law in June. The implementation of last year’s budget was not more than 15 per cent in most MDAs. Governance was the worse for it.

    Will the 2018 Budget fare any better? Only time will tell, some observers said.

     

    The EFCC logjam

     

    The controversy trailing the nomination and confirmation of the Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu, has become intractable.

    President Buhari nominated and forwarded Magu’s name to the Senate for confirmation twice. The senators rejected the request on both instances, latching on to a negative report submitted to it by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    For more than two years, Magu has been working on an acting capacity, following the insistence of the presidency that Magu remained its best man for the anti-graft job, contrary to the Senate’s recommendation for his sack and request for a fresh nomination.

    Perhaps, compounding the standoff was the presidency’s claim that it discovered that it was an error on its part to have forwarded Magu’s nomination to the Red Chamber for confirmation ab initio.

    The Senate demanded clarification from Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who was credited to have said that Magu’s nomination did not need it confirmation.

    The Senate went further to pass another resolution not consider any presidential nomination that is not expressly listed in the constitution if the vice president failed to recant the statement credited to him.

    The upper chamber promptly suspended the screening, consideration and approval of a number of nominations for appointment already before it.

     

    Endless wait by boards’ appointees

     

    The faceoff is putting on hold the inauguration of not a few nominees into boards of federal agencies. Those that attempted to resume without confirmation were reprimanded and threatened with severe sanctions.

    Some of the nominations pending in the senate include that of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Deputy Governor Aisha Ahmad.

    The four members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the CBN Prof Adeola Festus Adenikinju, Dr. Aliyu Rafindadi Sanusi, Dr. Robert Chikwendu Asogwa and Dr. Asheikh A. Maidugu have also not been cleared by the Senate.

    There must be quorum before the MPC can meet.

    Among the nominees who have been on the Senate’s waiting list for approval are: the Chairman of Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), Mohammed Isa and nine members of the CCB board.

    The members include: Murtala Kankia (Katsina, Northwest); Emmanuel Attah (Cross River, Southsouth); Danjuma Sado (Edo, Southsouth); Obolo Opanachi (Kogi, Northcentral); Ken Madaki Alkali (Nasarawa, Northcentral); S.F. Ogundare (Oyo, Southwest), Ganiyu Hamzat (Ogun Southwest), Sahad Abubakar (Gombe, Northeast) and Vincent Nwanne (Ebonyi Southeast).

    The Director-General, National Pension Commission (NPC), Alhaji Ali Usman, the Chairman, Independent Corrupt Practices and other Offences Commission (ICPC) Prof Bolaji Owasanoye, are also awaiting Senate clearance and confirmation.

     

    Open bickering

     

    To show the depth of the mistrust between the two arms of government, the House of Representatives on March 1 took on the Minister of Solid Minerals & Steel Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, when it adopted a no confidence vote against him. What was at stake was a matter that should have been resolved without the show of strength.

    Many wonder why a Federal Government with comfortable control of the two chambers of the National Assembly cannot get anything done without muzzle-flexing.

     

    Elections timetable

     

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed presidential and National Assembly elections for Saturday, February 16, 2019 and governorship and State Assembly elections for Saturday, March 2, 2019.

    But, the National Assembly changed the arrangement, demanding that the National Assembly elections come first and the presidential poll last.

    Adopting the reordered sequence as contained in the House of Representatives version of the amended Electoral Act, the Chairman of the joint committee, Senator Suleiman Nazif (Bauchi North), put it to a voice vote.

    The 12-member committee unanimously answered in the affirmative to pave the way for the report to be presented to the two chambers for final ratification.

    Envisaging that the President may refuse to sign the amendment into law, the National Assembly is weighing the option of veto.

    The electoral umpired has vowed to apply its own timetable in its preparation for the forthcoming general elections, even as controversy continued to trail the reordering of the timetable by the National Assembly.

    Every previous step taken to patch the fractured relationship ended up creating more cracks, raising fears that creating a seamless relationship between the two arms may be a mission impossible.

    But, for how long will the executive and the legislature work at cross purposes? The unwholesome bickering between the two arms has benefitted neither of the arms, and those who voted for change, are collateral victims. There should be a limit to political fight.

     

  • Executive, legislature, judiciary join forces against graft

    Executive, legislature, judiciary join forces against graft

    The executive, the legislature and the judiciary held a dialogue in Abuja last week on the justice sector’s reform and the anti-corruption campaign. The event, which had three sessions, featured no fewer than 22 speakers, including lawmakers, academics, judges, legal experts, technocrats and journalists. JOSEPH JIBUEZE highlights the key recommendations at the one-day event at the State House Abuja.

    The plan of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration when it took the saddle about three years ago was to use the instrumentality of government to fight corruption. But the battle is far from being won.

    Reason! The three arms of government, expected to unite against graft have not flown in the same direction

    Making the battle more herculean is the fact that the organs of government are not only undermining themselves but working at cross purposes and the trend has become worrisome to the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), which last week, organised a one-day “dialogue of organs of government on reform of justice sector and campaign against corruption.”

    The dialogue, organised in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Justice, was staged at the State House Banquet Hall in Abuja and was. It drew

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki, House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnoghen and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami, SAN.

    Represented by the Deputy Chief of Staff to the President, Mr. Ade Ipaye, Osinbajo, called for a harmonious relationship between the legislative, judiciary and executive arms of government, without which he foreclosed development.

    The vice president said: “Conflicts could arise from misunderstanding of constitutional responsibilities; inordinate foray or venture by one organ into the territory of another organ, inordinate ambition or domineering attitude by one over others, power struggle, greed or self-interest, hypocrisy; lack of patriotism and corruption.”

    According to him, unresolved conflicts slows down the pace of governance, creates suspicion and hostility, encourages bad governance, creates distraction and tension, encourages the culture of impunity and disregard for the rule of law among the political class, with attendant political instability that divides the populace.

    “In order to avoid these consequences and for a government to deliver development to the people, it is imperative for the three arms of government to constantly bury the hatchet and focus on collaborative efforts within their constitutional responsibilities to formulate and implement effective governance laws and policies,” he said.

    Dr. Saraki, who was represented by Senator David Omoru, spoke of the need to strengthen institutions and processes “so that we can fight the good fight without let or hindrance, and without any bias whatsoever.”

    Pledging the lawmakers’ commitment to the anti-graft war, the Senate President said: “Let me assure you that we as lawmakers in the Eighth National Assembly take very seriously the fight against corruption to sanitise our polity and instill greater probity, openness and accountability in the system.

    “That way, we would be better able to power the economic development of this country, rather than having up to 25 per cent of our annual GDP (Gross Domestic Product) disappear into private pockets,” he said.

    The AGF said the campaign against corruption can only succeed if it actively involves all stakeholders and enjoys ownership by all the arms of government.

    Malami said: “It is also significant to posit that the efficiency of the justice sector is critical to the speed at which the results of our collective efforts can become available to the public.

    “No matter our best intentions, no matter the urgency in our methods as an executive branch, the application of the rule of law by the judiciary and the expeditious consideration of supporting laws by the legislature are equally critical to the overall success we hope to achieve in order to promote greater prosperity and stability in our country.”

    Dogara, represented by Jide Akinloye, said the House would “go the whole hog to support any attempt to fight corruption”.

     

    Sagay: Corrupt judges rubbishing judiciary

    The PACAC Chairman, Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) said it was corrupt judges have been doing more damage to the judiciary, not those who point out its failing.

    According to him, judges must not be afraid to bring the full weight of the law on their corrupt colleagues.

    To the constitutional lawyer, all organs of government must be harsher in dealing with corrupt persons within their fold.

    He said judges must have zero tolerance for lawyers who try to compromise them, but should expose such lawyers and have them struck off the rolls.

    Sagay said: “Judges must be prepared to bring to justice any of their colleagues who accept or demand bribes.

    “These are the ones who rubbish the image of the judiciary, not the legitimate critics of such gross misconduct.

    “It takes only one apple to contaminate and make all the other apples in the barrel rotten also. So, self-criticism and firm punishment for culprits within a sector by colleagues is mandatory in order to establish zero tolerance for corruption in that sector.”

    He urged judges to strictly apply provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 in order to enhance speedy and fair justice.

    “Some judges are currently carrying on as if the ACJA does not exist,” he noted.

    According to him, there must be no espiri de corp between a clean member and a corrupt member in any arm of government.

    Sagay said those who are known to be corrupt have no moral right to pontificate on the fight.

    The PACAC chief said: “There is a lot of lip service by various high profile public servants in the anti-corruption war.

    “When a person who is known by the Nigerian public as an irredeemably corrupt person begins to wax lyrical about the devastating effects of corruption, it sounds very ill in his mouth and it ridicules and belittles the fight against corruption.

    “Public figures that are already notorious for their penchant for corruption are doing disservice to the anti-corruption struggle by pretending to hate corruption. Let such people remain silent rather than ridiculing the war against corruption.”

    Urging lawmakers to fight budget padding and unjust remuneration and to pass pending anti-corruption bills, Sagay advised agencies of the executive, such as Customs, not to demand bribes to do their jobs.

    He said: “If they deserve higher remuneration, they should demand it. In fact, we should allow Customs, Inland Revenue Department, EFCC and ICPC to retain a small portion of the assets recovered or collected by them in order to promote internal integrity in those services.

    “We must tackle the following matters with all seriousness: prevention of corruption; speedy, effective and efficient trials; recovery of looted assets, and discouragement and deterrence of bribery, corruption and economic financial crimes in the public and private sectors.”

     

    Falana, others speak

    The event had three sessions, with the sub-themes: Campaign against corruption and justice sector reform: Journey so far; strengthening justice sector institutions/law enforcement agencies for improved sanctions and enforcement; and preventing corruption and sustaining justice sector reforms.

    Speakers and contributors include: Justice A. D. Yahaya of the Court of Appeal, Senator Chukwuka Utazi, Prof Larry Chukwu, a lawmaker Jimi Benson, Justice T. Akomolafe Benson, Justice E. Agim, Justice Chinyere Ani, activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN), a professor of law Ayo Atsenuwa, a journalist Mr. Lanre Arogundade, former Nigerian Law School Director-General Lanre Onadeko (SAN), The Nation’s Managing Editor, Northern Operations Yusuf Alli, Executive Director at the Access to Justice (A2J) Mr. Joseph Otteh and Dr. Fatima Waziri-Azi of PACAC, among others.

    Falana urged Attorneys-General to do more in the fight against corruption under their jurisdiction. The activist-lawyer noted that impunity has continued because some of them abuse the power of nolle-prosequi.

    “The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) cannot go to a state to prosecute without the fiat of the Attorney-General in many of the cases. What are they doing in pursuing cases of corruption in their state?” he asked.

    On sentencing, Falana wondered why someone who stole billions of naira would be jailed for a mere 10 years or less. To him, it was a class issue that must be addressed.

    He said an armed robbery suspect who robbed only one person may be sentenced to death, and no one would raise an eyebrow.

    Falana said: “But, the man who has stolen money meant for building a road – and because that road is not built, people are dying, or the one who diverted money meant for building a hospital – are only asked to plea bargain.

    “The worst case of fraud that has been recorded was that of a bank executive who was alleged to have returned through plea bargain N191.4 billion in money and other assets. He was sentenced for six months in a highbrow hospital in Lagos. Whereas, in Osun State, a young man was sentenced to 50 years for stealing a handset worth N7, 000.

    “For us not to expose the law to ridicule, there would be the need on the part of PACAC perhaps to organise a seminar on sentencing, because people out there are laughing.”

    Falana accused anti-corruption agencies of not applying Section 10 of the Recovery of Public Property Special Provisions Act.

    The section, the lawyer noted, provides that if a person fails to declare assets worth over N1 million, the person is liable to life imprisonment.

    “That law is there, but nobody applies it,” Falana said.

    The SAN said workers emoluments, health insurance and other benefits are given high priority in countries where corruption is genuinely fought.

    According to him, people are likely to be tempted to steal if they know they would retire into penury.

    “How do we create an enabling environment for us to live good lives so that we’ll not be tempted to want to loot the treasury?” Falana wondered.

    Justice Ani said corruption results in poverty, high level of unemployment, infrastructural deficit and lack of foreign investments, among other ills.

    She regretted that some high profile cases were badly investigated, which makes it difficult to prove the essential ingredients of a crime.

    On the part of judges, she said there was “entrenched” lack of know-how by some of them, adding that lack of enough budgetary provisions also hampers the anti-graft war.

    Justice Ani recommended the equipment of courts for efficiency, as most of the court use manual recording systems; improvement in inter-agency collaboration, as well as an amendment of the section of the ACJA on video recording of suspects during interrogation to replace the word “May” with “Shall.’

    Alli said there was too much political interference in the anti-graft war, even as there was lack of manpower among anti-graft agencies.

    According to him, investigators must have insurance policy and very good welfare package to keep them motivated.

    On the way forward, Alli said there should be less politics in the anti-graft war, adding that it should not been seen as a political tool.

    To him, the office of the AGF should be separated from the Minister of Justice, while anti-graft agencies need to be sanitised.

    Alli said: “Anti-graft agencies must operate within the ambit of the law, and merit should take preeminence over any other thing,” he said.

    On the issue of media trial, Alli said the press does not go beyond filtered information given to them by anti-graft agencies.

    EFCC’s Head of Legal Department Gbolahan Latona said it was a miracle that anti-graft agencies were doing the much they do considering the low budget they operate with compared to their counterparts abroad.

    Onadeko decried the fact that corruption cases were lasting too long in courts. To him, corruption cannot be fought conventionally. New approaches must be adopted, he said.

    Prof Atsenuwa said the ACJA would not work unless it was properly funded.

    “I’m not aware of who has mapped the budgetary implication of ACJA’s implementation. There has to be an implementation framework for the ACJA,” she said.

    She added that in the investigation of cases, lawyers need to guide investigators on what to look out for.

    Justice Yahaya, who chaired one of the sessions, said there were enough laws; the problem was with their implementation.

    “The problem is the indiscipline that is in us. Without a committed and disciplined people, I don’t see us succeeding. Something is going to collapse unless we all address the challenges and face them,” he said.

    Otteh called for the introduction of a Financial Disclosures Rule which would limit the amount of physical cash that judicial officers can hold at any time.

    He said the rule that “he who alleges must prove” should be revised so that those founds with suspicious amounts of money could be called upon to explain how they came about them.

    Besides, he said the war against corruption would not be won when the courts are shut down on flimsy excuses, such as when all judges of a court are attending a burial or seminar.

    PACAC member Prof Femi Odekunle cited the example of South Korea where the elite got together and fought corruption to save the country. He said the elite must agree to kill corruption if the fight must be won.

    “Like the President said, if we don’t kill corruption, it will kill us. He appears to be the only one saying so. It has not been bought by the elite collectively. If the elite in the three major organs of government get together and fight corruption, it will filter down the other agencies,” he said.

    Prof Odekunle said the three arms of government have more to do. For instance, he said the National Assembly had punished its members who tried to expose corruption by suspending them, and has not been transparent about lawmakers’ allowances. According to him, “any of them who breaks out of the code of silence” gets punished.

    He faulted the executive for recalling a man who was suspended over allegations of corruption, adding that the judiciary appears to condone corruption among its members.

    Odekunle said: “I said about two years ago that you have to sacrifice the blood of two judges and two SANs to cleanse and do libation to be able to liberate the legal profession from corruption.

    “If the executive had gone along, there’d be no Maina case, no Babachir case and the NIA case.

    “I agree there should be separation of powers, but there should be no separation of the core values, the ethos, the philosophy of social organisation.

    “I think the elite must get together and say: ‘Corruption will kill us if we don’t kill it’. They must lead the way.

    “To me, it’s a matter of a visionary leadership, but all the elites must agree; otherwise I don’t think we’ll make progress.”

  • Oyo legislature and LG autonomy

    SIR: I call on Oyo State House of Assembly to come out with a definite position on the issue of local government autonomy, which according to media reports, it stood down. It is certain that Oyo State House of Assembly would not support autonomy for local government, hence, the jargon – stand down.

    From the body language of Oyo State government which the House of Assembly is an appendage, it is in support of a lame duck local government system. This is why it has not conducted local government election almost seven years after its inauguration. Our House of Assembly members are collaborators in crippling our local government as their assent is sought each time the three months tenure of local government caretaker committee chairman is to be renewed.

    Expecting Oyo legislature to stand on the side of history by supporting local government autonomy is as futile as hunting for a snow in a blast furnace. The pretext that they will listen to public opinion before taking a decision on autonomy is to buy time and suspect.  Or are they not part of the people whose opinion they are to listen to? Or why did they not seek people’s opinion before they passed the bill on financial autonomy for the House of Assembly?

    The fact is that the House of Assembly as constituted does not represent Oyo people who are bearing the brunt of destruction of hitherto flourishing local government system. In actual fact, majority of them are sponsored by the political elite in the state and not by popular choice, so they should not be expected to be on the side of the people. Many of them hardly visit their constituencies any longer, or if they visit at all, go to distribute poverty escalation items for few party members. They are so alienated from the grassroots to know the effect of a stifled local government on the grassroots.

    In my part of Ogbomoso today, drainages, rivers, abandoned sites and road sides have become dumping sites. Not only that, many roads constructed by the local government in her glorious era are dilapidated because of lack of maintenance; neighbourhood markets being maintained by the local government are comatose. Caretaker chairmen imposed on local governments instead of duly elected chairmen are not known by the people. They are only seen in a convoy of tinted cars. There is no doubt that those who make fortune from the local government misfortune would not allow the autonomy to scale through. However, those who know that democracy may not grow without grassroots participation will continue to fight on.

    One expects Oyo people who witnessed the glorious day of local government to speak out against the rape on democracy by Oyo House of Assembly. However, the fact is that the people are disillusioned and have accepted their fate. Nonetheless, few who are still conscious of their rights should not shirk the responsibility of speaking out because according to Edmund Burke “the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is that good men do nothing.

     

    • Adewuyi Adegbite

    ayekooto05@gmail.com

  • ‘Greed, self-interest behind executive/legislature conflict’

    ‘Greed, self-interest behind executive/legislature conflict’

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday attributed the disagreements between the executive and the legislature to greed, self-interest and hypocrisy.

    He said despite the principles of separation of powers, there were still tensions and conflicts among the arms of government, especially between the executive and the National Assembly.

    Osinbajo said: “Various factors can be identified as the causes of conflicts between organs of government, especially between the legislature and executive, who have to constantly interact in the course of discharging their respective constitutional duties.

    “Conflicts could arise from misunderstanding of constitutional responsibilities; inordinate foray or venture by one organ into the territory of another organ, inordinate ambition or domineering attitude by one over others, power struggle, greed or self-interest, hypocrisy, lack of patriotism and corruption.”

    Osinbajo spoke in Abuja at a “Dialogue of organs of government on reform of justice sector and campaign against corruption” involving the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary.

    It was organised by the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Justice and held at the State House Banquet Hall.

    The vice president, represented by the Deputy Chief of Staff to the President, Mr. Ade Ipaye, said while absolute separation of powers might be unattainable, the three arms of government must cooperate to maintain a workable government.

    “When this cooperation happens, it strengthens the democratic process, promotes good governance and responsible leadership, promotes transparency and accountability in governance, assists the executive to be focused and committed to delivering good governance to the citizens and helps the legislature to make efficient laws that will promote good governance and curb corruption,” he said.

    Osinbajo said for there to be harmony, each arm must carry out the functions assigned to it by the constitution effectively and within the limits of its power. Usurpation of the others’ power, he said, would lead to friction.

    According to him, unresolved conflicts slows down the pace of governance, creates suspicion and hostility, encourages bad governance, creates distraction and tension, and encourages the culture of impunity and disregard for the rule of law among the political class, with attendant political instability that divides the populace.

    “In order to avoid these consequences and for a government to deliver development to the people, it is imperative for the three arms of government to constantly bury the hatchet and focus on collaborative efforts within their constitutional responsibilities to formulate and implement effective governance laws and policies.

    “All three arms must be development focused in fulfillment of their roles and be ready to subsume personal interests to the overriding public good,” Osinbajo said.

    The vice president said despite the Transparency International report, suggesting that Nigeria declined in the corruption perception index, the government was focused on the war against corruption.

    “We are firmly of the view that real progress is being achieved in the fight against corruption, and perception may indeed lag behind reality.

    “But, as the saying goes, perception is sometimes stronger than reality, so we have to keep up the fight, until the full effect of our efforts can be clearly seen and perceived,” he said.

    According to him, Nigeria’s ranking should not be seen as a setback, “but rather as an opportunity to continue building on the many successes that have already been recorded by this government in all key sectors.”

    Senate President Bukola Saraki, represented by Senator David Omoru, said TI’s report was an opportunity to redouble efforts in fighting corruption.

    According to him, there was need to further strengthen anti-corruption institutions and processes, adding that graft must be fought without bias.

    Saraki highlighted the Senate’s efforts to complement the fight against corruption, such as passage of the Mutual Assistance on Criminal Matters Bill, the Secured Transactions in Movable Asset Bill and the Whistle-blowers Bill.

    “Let me reiterate that we are committed to the fight against corruption, and we welcome opportunities for greater collaboration between the arms of government,” Saraki added.

    Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnoghen, represented by the Court of Appeal President Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa, said corruption and other forms of injustice thrive in a culture of impunity.

    According to him, the culture of impunity, which he said was an “attitudinal phenomenon”, must be fought if there is to be a successful campaign against corruption.

    “If we allow the rule of law to reign, then there will be a dramatic reduction in corruption and injustice,” the CJN said.

    PACAC Chairman Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) said corruption can be successfully tackled if no arm of government condones it, adding that no arm can indict others for corruption, when it does not tackle it from within.

    “If you do not remove the log in your eye, you cannot remove the spec in another person’s eye. Specifically, anyone guilty of corruption in any arm of government should be dealt with harshly by colleagues in that arm; otherwise that sector will lose credibility,” he said.