Tag: MACE

  • Senate back in session with Mace

    The Senate has resumed plenary after coming out of an executive closed door session where the  forceful removal of the mace was discussed.

    The session according to a statement by Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi ,Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs is holding with the mace, the official symbol of authority firmly in place, and Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, presiding.

    “The Senate also decided that it will get to the roots of this sad assault on democracy and an obvious act of treason which the seizure of the mace by some armed hodlums represents. The hoodlums severely attacked some members of staff of the National Assembly, particularly the Sergeant-at-Arms on Chamber duties.

    “The Senate has mandated the Inspector General of Police, Mr. Idris Kpotum Ibrahim and Director General of the State Security Services (SSS), Mallam Lawan Daura, to retrieve the mace stolen by the hoodlums within 24 hours.

    “At the moment, some House of Representives members led by Deputy Speaker. Hon. Yusuf Lasun, are in the Senate chambers in solidarity visits. The session is presently live on NTA Channel 10.

    “We are determined to conclude all matters slated on the Order Paper for today, even if it means us sitting until 6pm”, the Senate spokesman stated.

  • Mace’s seizure is treason, says Senate

    The Senate has described the taking away of the Mace by hoodlums on Wednesday as treason and urged security agents to retrieved the symbol of authority of the chambers.

    Spokesman of the Senate, Aliyu Sabi Abdulahi in a statement said the  action “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 mobilize their personnel to retrieve the mace and apprehend the mastermind and the perpetrators of this act.

    “This action is also an affront on the legislature, and the Leadership of the House has come to express their support against this action,” Abdulahi stated.

    Read Also: Hoodlums invade Senate, take Mace away

    According to him,  “some armed hoodlums led by suspended Senator, Ovie Omo-Agege, walked into the Senate plenary and seized the symbol of authority of the Upper Legislative Chamber, the mace.”

    He said the Senate is now in an Executive session and an  updated statement will be released immediately after the closed door session.

     

    Photo Credit: @Davosh Media

     

  • Breaking: Hoodlums invade Senate, take Mace away

    Some hoodlums on Wednesday stormed the Senate chamber and took away the Mace.

    The Mace is the symbol of authority in the National Assembly.

    There was confusion in the chamber as Senators scampered for safety.

    The Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, who presided over the day’s plenary, confirmed the incident.

    He said the invaders would be punished for disrupting the plenary.

    The incident reportedly happened after suspended Senator Ovie Omo-Agege entered the chambers.

    Details later…

     

  • Mace missing as students, cadet corps clash  in RUGIPO

    Mace missing as students, cadet corps clash in RUGIPO

    WHERE is the mace, the symbol of legislative authority of the Students Representative Council (SRC) of the Rufus Giwa Polytechnic, Owo (RUGIPO) in Ondo State?

    The mace was said  to have been seized by the school’s corps leader, Tunde Aje, during the first parliament any sitting of the SRC for the 2016/2017 session. It was presided over by speaker Ayomide Adeniyi.

    The corps is demanding an 100 per cent increase in their allowance.  They used to earn N10,000.  But the Council approved N15,000 for them.

    The major task before the parliament at the session was to move the budget  of the Students’ Union Government past its first reading before setting up Ad-hoc committee to scrutiny use it.

    The passage of the  N10, 750, 750, was delayed following questions raised by the representatives over the increment of the union’s annual due by 100 percent (from N500 to N1,000).

    Campuslife gathered that the cadet corps  request for allowance like earlier rented commotion in the Assembly Room.

    Amid the melee, commanding officer of the  corps leader reportedly stole into the chamber and took away the mace.

    The mace was reportedly taken  to the cadet corps barracks.

    Meanwhile, an executive of the Students’ Union Government, who asked not to be named, described the act as barbaric and unconstitutional.

    He said the allowance of the cadet and other paramilitaries on campus had been increased by 50 percent in the budget.

    “The present administration has done a lot in ensuring this budget is at everybody’s favour. The past administrations were actually paying them N10, 000 but we have proposed N15, 000 for each paramilitary group on campus. Isn’t that enough?” he said.

    To restore normalcy, the Students’ Affairs unit of the institution ordered the parties to resolve the issue without any hostilities within and outside the campus.

  • Mace of shame in Ogun Assembly

    Mace of shame in Ogun Assembly

    The Mace, the symbol of legislative authority in a democracy, has suffered so much humiliation in the Ogun State House of Assembly. ERNEST Nwokolo reports that the instrument damaged during a rowdy session earlier in the year is yet to be replaced.

     

    Nine months after the gold- plated Mace of the Ogun State House of Assembly was smashed against a wooden object inside the hallowed chambers of the legislature during a rowdy session early this year, this symbol of authority and legality of every plenary is yet to be either repaired or replaced.

    House plenary sessions under the leadership of Speaker Suraj Adekunbi are still being conducted with the damaged instrument to the consternation and embarrassment of not a few Ogun people. This is because of the ugly spectacle it constitutes as well as the memory it evokes in people’s minds.

    In the past four years, particularly during the last two or three years of former Governor Gbenga Daniel’s tenure, the sixth session of the Assembly was buffeted by unabated crises as the then Speaker, Samson Tunji Egbetokun and a group of 14 lawmakers found themselves pitched in battles with Governor Daniel after the former governor’s loyalist Mrs Titi Oseni was impeached as Speaker.

    While the legislative and executive feud lasted, 11 other members of the then sixth legislature-a faction sympathetic to Daniel and headed by Mr Yemi Coker, in a pre- dawn operation, allegedly broke into the Assembly Chamber, sat illegally and took many unpopular decisions. Such decisions included suspending Egbetokun and his group, using a Mace believed to belong to the Councillors of the Abeokuta South Local Government Area as a symbol of authority since the House’s Mace was in the custody of Egbetokun.

    The illegal sitting of Coker and his group led to the forcible closure of the Assembly Complex with armed policemen taking over the premises for over six months. The House was to reconvene later under the leadership of Egbetokun shortly after the swearing-in of Governor Ibikunle Amosun. The Assembly held a valedictory sitting where all the decisions earlier taken by Coker and his group were reversed.

    But the seventh legislative Assembly headed by Speaker Suraj Adekunbi which began on peaceful note in May 2011, was jolted on March 5 2013 when a simmering crisis among the 26 legislators that comprises people from the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), engaged in violence. Fourteen lawmakers led by Hon. Remmy Hassan suspended indefinitely the Speaker, Prince Suraj Adekunbi, his Deputy, Mr Tola Banjo, the House Majority Leader, Mr Israel Jolaoso and Mr Kunle Oluomo representing Ifo 1 State Constituency.

    The 14 lawmakers who were reacting to the suspension of Hassan and three others by the House, also appointed Hassan as the Pro tempore Speaker and then adjourned sitting sine die. The Ogun State Police Command was mandated to lock the Assembly Chamber until there is an assurance of safety around the area.

    The state legislators had commenced plenary on that fateful morning few minutes after 10 in the morning for its legislative function when Suraj Adekunbi called on the Majority Leader, Hon. Israel Jolaoso, to move  a motion for the suspension of Remmy Hassan, Job Akintan, Motunrayo Adijat Adeleye and John Obafemi for what the Speaker called behaviours unbecoming of parliamentarians.

    The motion was said to have been passed by the Speaker hastily by  hitting the gavel on the table when nobody had seconded it.

    The action infuriated some of the lawmakers in the polarised House. In the ensuing confusion and anger, they made for the Mace and smashed it on the wooden object, even as the Sergeant-at-Arms and security guards around laboured in vain to save it.

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun, who at the time, had joined other dignitaries at the nearby Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), to felicitate with Chief Olusegun Obasanjo on his 76th birthday celebration, had to hurriedly leave the event by 12: 19 p.m. to curtail the simmering crisis and prevent a throwback to the Daniel era of parliamentary anomie.

    When the dust finally settled, the Mace lost both its elegance, shape as well as its symmetry. Today, its head bearing the Coat of Arms is bent while the inscriptions ‘Unity and Faith’ and ‘Ogun State House of Assembly’ were written in longhand on a masking tape and pasted on it with transparent cello tape.

    In other places, the Mace caved in to almost a breaking point following impact from the smashing, thus exposing the rusting metal or silver material it is made of. The butt is equally mangled.

    According to analysts, the Mace of Ogun Assembly is the symbol not only of the House but also of the authority of the Speaker.

    While it is generally agreed that the House is not properly constituted unless the Mace is present on the table in the Chamber, the presence of a damaged or defaced Mace on the floor of the House called for concern.

    Last Tuesday when the lawmakers met in respect of the presentation of the 2014 budget proposal by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, the Sergeant-At-Arms,Mr Okanlanwon Alani, who  is the custodian of the instrument, bore it upon his right shoulder with caution; moving in methodic footsteps as he led the Speaker into the Chamber lest the weak Mace fall apart.

    When the Speaker took his  chair, Okanlanwon placed the Mace on the table, with the butt pointing to the Governor’s Office in Oke- Mosan while the head pointed to the Speaker’s right.

    Many who saw the dented Mace would have concluded that a replacement was necessary, but the Assembly, it does seem, is not in a hurry to do so.

    Hon. Yinka Mafe, representing Sagamu State Constituency, told our correspondent that the fact that the House’s Mace was defaced does not demean the Ogun Assembly or rob it of its authority, adding that the reason it has not been replaced was that the cost was not accommodated in the Assembly’s 2013 budget.

    Mafe said the 2014 budget proposal of the House would accommodate the replacement of the mace, stressing that as soon as that was done, it would be replaced.

    “First of all, I would say that the Mace was not incorporated into the budget proposal of 2013 and I’m sure it is going to be proposed in the 2014 budget and as soon as that is done, it would be replaced.

    “The fact that it is badly damaged does not mean it cannot be used or the authority of the House is being demeaned. The House of Assembly has a budget. The matter of the Mace would reflect in the 2014 Assembly budget,” Mafe said.

    Speaker Adekunbi admitted that a replacement would be made at the appropriate time, even as he said that its sight with all its dent would help to put the lawmakers in check against slipping again into conducts that led to the damaging of the Mace.

    Adekunbi  said: “Let me tell you this. As members of the state House of Assembly, we believe that we have our standing order and that at any given time, we can call for a replacement. This is an institution. We cannot just say that because we had an issue that resulted in the smashing of the Mace we should just call for a replacement.

    “I just want you to be reminded of the fact that any day we see the damaged Mace, something strikes our minds to see what we have done to the very good and well-branded Mace. That would sort of check us. I want to believe everybody would be conscious of the fact that we cannot just continue to act in a way that brought about the damage. Definitelym, by God’s grace, it will be replaced very soon.”