Tag: MACE

  • Police recover Gombe assembly’s mace

    The Police in Gombe State announced, on Friday, the recovery of the mace of the state’s House of Assembly, forcefully taken away a scuffle by some members during plenary on Thursday.

    Police Commissioner Shina Olukolu, told newsmen in Gombe that the mace was found around National Industrial Court in the state capital early yesterday.

    The mace, the symbol of authority of the legislature, was whisked away by some aggrieved members of the assembly after a failed attempt to change their leadership.

    Olukolu said:“you will recall that yesterday, May 24, at about 1.30 p.m. the mace, the symbol of authority of Gombe state House of Assembly, was taken away by an honourable member of the house in the company of others.

    “The incident was allegedly occasioned by the dispute over leadership change of minority principal officers of the house.

    “On receipt of the information, the Commissioner of Police visited the scene and heightened the security architecture already in place in the command based on the directives of the Inspector-General of Police.

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    “The pressure made them consequently to abandon the mace by the National Industrial Court in the state and it was recovered early on Friday.

    “The mace is, therefore, today being handed over to the Speaker for his retention and use,’’ he said.

    Receiving the mace from the police, Speaker Nasiru Nono commended the police and other security agencies in the state for the proactive steps they took, which led to the recovery of the mace.

  • What’s in a mace?

    It was one test of endurance for the Nigerian democracy when hoodlums, last week, stormed the Senate chamber and took away the parliamentary mace. The mace was later recovered though.

    Proceedings in the legislative house were momentarily grounded as thugs storm-raided the red chamber at plenary and seized the parliamentary symbol of authority. The invaders had allegedly aided suspended Senator Ovie Omo-Agege (Delta Central) to gain forced entry into the legislative chamber before going for the mace, advising many of the lawmakers present to vote with their feet for safety. They thereafter bullied their way out of the Senate complex, fighting off a challenge mounted by security officials of the National Assembly (NASS) to deliver the seized mace into a waiting vehicle with which they made their get-away. In the ensuing melee, NASS security officials were reported injured, with a female agent said to have fainted when the hoodlums struck her on their way out of the complex. At least one senator, Olamilekan Adeola (Lagos West), fell into the hands of the hoodlums as a collateral hostage until he jumped to freedom as they made their hasty exit.

    After the hoodlums had made away with the mace, the Senate determinedly got back in session with a spare mace, issuing concerned security agencies a 24-hour ultimatum to recover the stolen mace. Meanwhile, fury raged in both chambers of the NASS over the brazen assault on that arm of government.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who was presiding when the bandits struck in the red chamber, said members would not be intimidated by the attack. “We will stand by our democracy, we will defend our democracy. It is an affront on the Senate, it is an affront on democracy, it is an affront on the National Assembly, and it is an affront on the parliament. But we are going to stand together to ensure that we continue with the assignment Nigerians gave us to represent them,” he told a delegation from the House of Representatives on solidarity visit.

    Earlier, the chamber’s spokesman, Senator Abdullahi Sabi, issued a statement in which he qualified the assault by thugs as treason. “This is an act of treason as it is an attempt to overthrow a branch of the Federal Government of Nigeria by force, and it must be treated as such. All security agencies must stand on the side of due process and immediately mobilise their personnel to retrieve the mace and apprehend the mastermind and perpetrators of this act,” he said.

    Legislators in the House of Representatives were no less galled, with members during a debate in the green chamber describing the incident as a terrorist attack. “This arm (of government) remains very vital. Thugs came into the Senate chamber while senators were sitting and they took away the mace in a waiting vehicle… That’s sacrilegious,” House Leader Femi Gbajabiamila said while raising a motion on the incident. Later, Deputy Speaker Yusuf Lasun, who led a House delegation on solidarity visit to the Senate, said: “Let the pretenders know that it is the Assembly that defines democracy. We are in solidarity with (the Senate), and we will make a Resolution to ensure that the mace is recovered within 24 hours. You can rest assured that whatever touches you (Senate) touches the House of Representatives.”

    But the outrage was by no means restricted to legislators. Every Nigerian with a sense of decency and regard for the country’s democracy – imperfect as it is – must have felt violated. Among others, the Executive arm of government expressed shock at the invasion of NASS and seizure of the Senate mace by thugs, saying security agencies had been ordered to swiftly unravel the circumstance of the security breach. Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed added in a statement that security around the Assembly complex was being reinforced to prevent a reoccurrence. And for once, the views of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) nearly coincided, with both condemning the incident and canvassing that the masterminds and perpetrators be speedily brought to justice. Only that the PDP also saw an opportunity to appropriate some partisan capital by taking potshots at the security records of the party in power.

    The police subsequently reported the mace recovered from where it was dumped by the hoodlums, following a security lockdown of Abuja highways. According Force Deputy Public Relations Officer Aremu Adeniran, the parliamentary symbol was abandoned at a point close to the Abuja city gate, where a passer-by saw it and alerted the agency.

    “Police teams engaged in massive raids of identified criminal spots/flashpoints, stop-and-search operations, visibility and confidence building patrols (and) intelligence gathering, which forced the suspected miscreants to abandon the mace at a point under the flyover before the city gate where a patriotic passer-by saw it and alerted the police,” Adeniran said in a statement. He added that “discreet investigation” was ongoing to bring perpetrators of the Senate assault to justice.

    Whereas last week’s incident was the first time an assault was unleashed on the NASS from without, leading to momentary loss of the Senate mace, it wasn’t the first time the parliamentary symbol went missing in controversial circumstances. Former Senate President, the late Dr. Chuba Okadigbo, in 2000 hid away the mace (some people alleged: in his native community of Ogbunike) to frustrate rebel senators who were bent on convening a meeting to impeach him at the suspected instigation of then President Olusegun Obasanjo. But the determined senators got around that hurdle to effectively kick out Okadigbo and name Pius Anyim his replacement.

    Let me be clear that I am as outraged as anyone else by the sheer banditry inflicted on the hallowed chambers of the Legislature last week. Because, by all means, it was a brazen affront on Nigerian democracy and an existential threat to a core component of our governance system But if the fury was just all about the seized mace, meaning there may be some appeasement now that it has been recovered, we could ask: what really is in the mace?

    It is routinely said that the mace is the symbol of the parliament’s authority. And that is the point: it is a mere symbol. The parliament could as well stock many spare maces that would make any emergent threat to a single unit utterly inconsequential to the legality of its operations. Actually, that obviously is the case already with the Senate, and most likely all other parliamentary chambers in the country. It was the apparent reason senators were able to swiftly reconvene after the hoodlums made away with the official mace last week.

    The point here is that the mace being only a symbol, the authority of a parliament, just as well as every other locus of power, derives from its connectedness with the public that voted the representatives into those positions of power. In effect, while the fury over the mace stolen last week was fully warranted, a worthwhile objective for the ‘honourable’ and ‘distinguished’ members of the NASS to pursue is winning over the electorate by their activities and comportments. And there is much to be desired at the moment in that regard, isn’t there?

    By extension, this is also the reason why the police recovering the stolen mace isn’t at all sufficient to redress last week’s assault on the Nigerian democracy. The sponsors and perpetrators of that assault must unpacifiably and unfailingly be brought to account.

     

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  • Falana: Mace not required for parliamentary proceedings

    LAGOS lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has said that a mace is not a prerequisite for the sitting of legislative houses.

    Last Wednesday, the Senate was invaded by five young men in a commando-like operation.

    During the raid, the mace on the central table in the Senate was snatched and taken away.

    The business of the day could not continue until a replacement was found by the senators.

    Even though the stolen mace has since been found by the Police and handed over to the Senate leadership, there have been strident calls for the prosecution of the invaders. Some have even suggested that the suspects be tried for treason.

    But reacting to the development, Falana, in a statement issued in Lagos yesterday, said there was nowhere in the constitution where it  was expressly or impliedly provided that a Mace shall be provided before the Senate or House of Representatives or any other legislative house can sit and conduct legislative business.

    According to him, “by virtue of Section 54 of the Constitution, either of two houses of the National Assembly is competent to sit and conduct proceedings once the quorum of the members is formed. The said quorum is one-third of all the members of the legislative House concerned.

    “In all the cases in which the impeachment of state governors has been annulled and set aside by the Supreme Court and other courts, it was due to the failure of the Houses of Assembly concerned to comply with the provision for quorum, which is two-thirds of all the members in line with section 188 of the Constitution.”

    He described the mace as a colonial legacy, which the country ought to have abandoned.

    He said: “As a colonial legacy, the Mace was part of the Nigerian parliament in 1960 when the Queen of England was our Head of State. Even when the nation became a Republic in 1963 under an indigenous President, the paraphernalia of office and title of the Speaker of the British Parliament were fully retained. That was how the Mace, which is a symbolic authority of the parliament under a monarchical government, was adopted by our Republican parliament.”

    He, however, urged legislators to stop attaching undue importance to the conventions of the British Parliament.

    “Even though Nigeria adopted the presidential system of government since 1979, our legislators have continued to retain the vestiges of the Westminster parliamentary system. For instance, the leader of a legislative house in Nigeria is addressed as “Right Honourable Speaker” while he/she wears the wig and gown on ceremonial occasions like the head of the British parliament. But with time, the mace, wig and gown, which are not provided in our statutes, will disappear from our legislative houses,” he stated.

    Falana said he found it curious that the National Assembly has not deemed it fit to enact a law to protect the mace, which is so regularly snatched or stolen by legislators.

    However, he said the suspects may be charged under the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act.

    “However, while the investigation into the embarrassing invasion of the Senate by the Police is in progress, it is pertinent to point out that the Mace is not a prerequisite for parliamentary business in Nigeria. In other words, the proceedings of a legislative house cannot be invalidated because of the absence of a Mace,” he said.

  • Mace Saga: PDP calls for urgent inquest

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has called for urgent inquest into the security breach that characterised Wednesday’s invasion of the Senate and forceful removal of its mace.

    The party made the call in a resolution at its emergency National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting in Abuja.

    In the resolution released on Friday, it said that security at the National Assembly complex was compromised during the incident, and that it should be expeditiously addressed.

    The party described the invasion as treasonable and direct attack on the sovereignty of Nigeria and her integrity, which must be jointly condemned by all Nigerians.

    It charged security agencies to arrest and prosecute all persons involved in the embarrassing incident “notwithstanding status’’.

    The party also resolved that the PDP leads a strong conversation and discussion towards a formal coalition of democratic forces to guarantee Nigerians the much-desired all-inclusive platform ahead of 2019 general elections.

    It directed the NEC to commence action towards the establishment of a shadow cabinet to pilot its roadmap towards national economic recovery and good governance.

    According to the resolution this should be done in line with the wishes and aspirations of Nigerians, ahead of 2019 elections.

    “In the same vein, the NEC also strongly condemns the branding of Nigerian youths as lazy by President Muhammadu Buhari. It is a direct injury on the sensibility of the youths.

    “Nigerian youths are known worldwide to as hardworking.

    “The PDP reaffirms its belief and confidence in Nigerian youths and boldly announces to the world that our youths are resourceful and agile.

    “Our nation is blessed with hardworking young men and women,’’ it said.

    NAN

  • Senate Invasion: Lesson on our security structure – Ekweremadu

    Deputy President of the Senate, Mr Ike Ekweremadu, says Wednesday’s invasion on the Senate is another lesson on the need for Nigeria to re-assess its security structure.

    Ekweremadu, according to a statement by his Special Adviser (Media), Mr Uche Anichukwu, stated this when he received the leadership of Nigerian Political Science Association (NPSA), which visited him at the National Assembly on Friday.

    He said: “It is an embarrassment to Nigeria before the international community for someone to drive all the way into the National Assembly Complex, enter the hallowed chamber, and cart away its symbol of authority.

    “It shows a breakdown of security and it is a setback to Nigeria’s drive for foreign investment because no one would be ready to invest money in such a system.

    “So, it is a lesson that we cannot keep doing the same thing with our security system and expect a different result.

    “It is also an irony that the people involved would organise armed bandits to rob the senate of its mace since they understand the implication of what they have done.

    “As a parliament, we will ensure that this does not happen again and insist that all the actors behind the drama are brought to book’’.

    Ekweremadu urged the association to help the nation to rethink its governance and security structures in line with other federal systems.

    Earlier, President of the association, Prof. Aloysius-Michaels Okolie, had said that the delegation was at the National Assembly to show solidarity with the senate and condemn what happened.

    “Our association is non-partisan, but we must speak the truth, stand by the truth and protect the truth.

    “Any group or person that perpetrated what we saw live on national television needed to have his head examined.

    “A normal person cannot come here and desecrate the National Assembly, let alone infringe on the Mace.

    “It was not really an assault on the National Assembly, but the entire people you have been mandated to represent.

    “The desecration of this hallowed chamber is so grave an event that it calls for an immediate national action to avert a re-occurrence and to bring the culprits, whom we regard as bandits, to book,” he said.

    NAN

  • Senate: mace theft a positive development

    Sen. Abu Ibrahim (APC-Katsina South) has described the Wednesday’s invasion of the Senate Chamber by hoodlums as a “positive development’’.

    He stated this on Friday while he fielded questions from State House correspondents in Abuja.

    Some hoodlums had on Wednesday entered the Senate chamber during plenary, attacked some persons and made away with the mace.

    The legislator, however, observed that the attack was a blessing in disguise as the incident had revealed the security lapse at the assembly.

    “Obviously, what has happened is a concern to every Nigerian politician. But, at the same time, we have to accept in Nigeria or all over the world politics sometimes can create a situation of this kind of what happened.

    “But this has given us two opportunities; one, to look at the security of the National Assembly itself whereby I think Nigerian National Assembly is the most insecure assembly I have seen in my life.

    “Wherever I went to there was good security, you can’t just go in, you cannot access, you cannot go to officers.

    “But now if you go to our offices, like my office yesterday there were over 50 people waiting for me and I didn’t give anybody appointment.

    “So, this has probably influenced us in the leadership to sit down and critically examine the security of the National Assembly itself. So, it is a positive development.’’

    He said the second `benefit’ of the Mace saga was that members of the senate became more united, and they renewed their pledge to abide by the constitution and rules of the national assembly.

    According to the senator, the incident has also afforded the senators opportunity to ask themselves questions on what happened and why it happened.

    He said: “Secondly we sat at executive session as senators, we asked ourselves what happened and why. And we told ourselves the truth.

    “We even pin-pointed culprits in what led to this and we came out with a promise that everyone of us will support and abide by the provision of the constitution.

    “Our rules in the national assembly in the senate and obviously we accepted that we are all senators, the same rank, elected by our people and we have the same right and privileges.

    “Therefore, this is the second benefit if we can call it benefit of what has happened what we saw two days ago.’’

    On the activities of the Buhari Support Group, Ibrahim disclosed that the group would be inaugurating its offices in Edo, Akwa Ibom and Cross River States on Monday.

    He added that the group’s campaign buses would also be inaugurated at the same time.

    NAN

     

  • Police recover mace

    The mace of the Senate, which was snatched on Wednesday by thugs, who invaded its chamber has been recovered.

    It was returned to the Senate yesterday by the police.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu confirmed the return of the mace to his colleagues at a closed door session yesterday.

    In a statement yesterday, Deputy Force spokesman Aremu Adeniran, a Superintendent of Police (SP), said the mace was abandoned at a point under the flyover before the City Gate in Abuja.

    Adeniran said the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris, has directed the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Commissioner of Police to beef up security at the National Assembly.

    The statement reads: “Sequel to the invasion of the Senate chamber of the National Assembly, Federal Republic of Nigeria on the 18th April, 2018 by some suspected thugs who disrupted the Senate plenary session and carted away the mace of the red chambers, the IGP, Ibrahim Idris, immediately instituted a high-powered Police Investigation and Intelligence Team coordinated by the IGP Monitoring Unit of the Force and further directed a total lock-down of the FCT with intense surveillance patrol and thorough stop-and-search operations at various police check-points with a view to arresting perpetrators and possible recovery of the stolen mace”.

    On how the mace was recovered, Adeniran said: “The police teams engaged in massive raids of identified criminal spots/flashpoints, stop-and-search operations, visibility and confidence building patrols, intelligence gathering which forced the suspected miscreants to abandon the mace at a point under the flyover before the City Gate, where a patriotic passer-by saw it and alerted the police.

    The police said discreet investigation was ongoing so as to bring the perpetrators to justice.

  • Police recover stolen Senate Mace in Abuja

    The mace of the Senate forcefully taken away by some hoodlum at the Senate Chamber of the National Assembly has been recovered by the Police.

    The Mace was carted away by some suspected thugs during a plenary session on Wednesday.

    The action led the Senate to direct the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris and the Director General of the State Security Services (SSS), Lawan Daura, to retrieve the mace within 24 hours.

    The Police in a statement in the early hours of Thursday by the Deputy Force Spokesman, SP Aremu Adeniran said the mace was abandoned at a point under the flyover before the City Gate.

    Adeniran also said the IG has directed the Commissioner of Police, FCT to beef up security at the National Assembly.

    The statement reads: “Sequel to the invasion of the Senate Chambers of the National Assembly, Federal Republic of Nigeria on the 18th April, 2018 by some suspected thugs who disrupted the Senate Plenary Session and carted away the Mace of the Red Chambers, the Inspector General of Police, IGP Ibrahim Idris, immediately instituted a high-powered Police Investigation and Intelligence Team coordinated by the IGP Monitoring Unit of the Force and further directed a total lock-down of the Federal Capital Territory with intense surveillance patrol and thorough Stop and Search operations at various Police check-points with a view to arresting perpetrators and possible recovery of the stolen mace.”

    On how the mace was recovered, Adeniran said: “The Police teams engaged in massive raids of identified criminal spots/flashpoints, stop and search operations, visibility and confidence building patrols, intelligence gathering which forced the suspected miscreants to abandon the Mace at a point under the flyover before the City Gate, where a patriotic passer-by saw it and alerted the Police.”

    The Police while commending motorists within Abuja Metropolis for their support and timely information during the rigorous stop and search operations for the recovery of the Mace added that discreet investigation into the incident was ongoing so as to arrest and bring the perpetrators to justice.

     

    
    
  • Reps: Senate mace seizure, a mockery of democracy

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday described the “seizure” of Senate mace by some hoodlums as mockery of the country’s democracy.

    The Deputy Speaker of the House, Yusuff Lasun, said this when the lower chamber briefly suspended plenary to pay solidarity visit to the Senate over the forceful removal of the mace by the hoodlums.

    According to him, the 8th Assembly will make sure that democracy works in the country.

    He said “I read a lot of books about representative democracy, what baffles me most is that those who are trying to undermine the institution of National Assembly are pretenders to the institution of democracy.

    “That means once the assembly seizes to function or you want to muscle it, then it shows that we are no longer practicing democracy.

    “So, we need to tell these people who are pretenders that they are not practicing democracy because it is the assembly that defines democracy.

    “This is because of the way some of us grew up and started practicing democracy; a lot of Nigerians do not agree that the institution of the legislature must be protected.”

    He expressed the support of the House to Senate’s resolution that the Nigerian police should recover the mace within 24 hours.

    He said members decided that they must visit the Senate in solidarity with Senators and to tell Nigerians that the 8th assembly was determined to make democracy work in Nigeria.

    The Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, commended the lawmakers for the visit, saying “I
    am proud of you and I look forward to having some of you joining us here after the 2019 general elections.”

    NAN

     

  • Video: I’m not under arrest – Senator Omo-Agege

    Suspended Senator Ovie Omo -Agege who reportedly led some hoodlums who hijacked the Mace of the Senate on Wednesday has been arrested by the Police.

    The Senator when responding to questions from reporters when being led away by Policemen said he was not under arrest.

     

    Details Later…