Tag: NASS

  • Senate crisis: NASS Clerk faces trial as Police establish forgery

    Senate crisis: NASS Clerk faces trial as Police establish forgery

    *File sent to Ministry of Justice
    *Buhari angry over how Clerk gate crashed into Ramadan dinner
    *Ekweremadu’s fate unknown

    The Police appear to have established a case of forgery of the Senate Standing Orders 2015 which paved the way for the June 9, 2015 emergence of Dr. Bukola Saraki as Senate President and Chief Ike Ekweremadu as Deputy Senate President.

    There were indications yesterday that the police might charge the  Clerk to the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa to  court  for the alleged forgery of the Standing Orders.

    Maikasuwa may be arraigned with some staff of the National Assembly suspected of having played one role or the other in the drafting of the rules.

    But the fate of Ekweremadu who was one of those quizzed by the Police in the course of their investigation into the matter was unknown last night.

    Police sources declined to discuss his fate.

    Already, the case file has been sent to the Federal Ministry of Justice for advice and prosecution.

    Besides the Standing Orders matter, the Clerk is also said to be facing  a fresh crisis on how he was selected to be part of a Ramadan dinner (Iftar) with President Muhammadu Buhari while under investigation by the Police.

    The Presidency is investigating alleged breach of protocol by the Clerk by attending the breaking of fast with the President.

    Investigation in Abuja showed that the Police, acting on a petition by six Senators, believed that the Senate Standing Orders 2015 was forged.

    According to findings, the Police team, led by Deputy Inspector-General Danazumi Job Doma, discovered many anomalies in the said Senate Standing Orders.

    The   Police findings include the followings:

    *The Senate Standing Orders 2007(as amended) was still in force when the 7th Senate wound up.

    *There was no time the 7th Senate amended the Standing Orders or any subsisting motion as shown in the Senate Standing Orders 2015

    * The Senate Standing Orders 2015 was strange and a violation of Paragraph 110 of the Senate Standing Orders 2007(as amended)

    *All the principal officers of the 7th Senate interviewed admitted that the Senate Standing Orders 2007(as amended) was not reviewed before their tenure ended.

    * A clear case of forgery, manipulation, and tampering has been established.

    * Those connected with the forgery should be immediately prosecuted.

    A top police source said: “We have concluded our investigation and recommended the Clerk to the National Assembly and a few others for trial.

    “The Clerk presided over the election of some Principal Officers of the Senate on June 9 with a forged Standing Orders 2015 when he ought to know better.

    “As I am talking to you, we have sent the investigation file to the Federal Ministry of Justice for Legal Advice and prosecution.”

    The police source said the Senate Standing Orders 2015 was not in compliance with Paragraph 110 (1) of the Senate Standing Orders 2007 (as amended).

    The source added: “The National Assembly management claimed that it has the prerogative to set the rules for the election of a new set of Principal Officers since the 8th Senate was yet to be inaugurated.

    “They said since nature abhors vacuum, they did nothing wrong with the Senate Standing Orders 2015.

    “But when we asked them why they refused to use Senate Standing Orders 2007as the case with the 8th Senate, they were not too convincing.”

    Paragraph 110(1) of the Senate Standing Orders 2007 (as amended) says: ” Any Senator desiring to amend any part of the Rules or adding any new clause shall give notice of such amendments in writing to the President of the Senate giving details of the proposed amendments.

    “The President of the Senate shall within seven working days of the receipt of the notice, cause the amendments to be printed and circulated to members. Thereafter, it shall be printed in the Order Paper of the Senate.

    “The Mover or Movers of the amendments shall be allowed to explain in detail the proposed amendments. Thereafter, the Senate shall decide by simple majority votes whether the amendments should be considered or rejected.

    “If the decision is to consider the amendments, then another date shall be set aside by the Rules and Business Committee whereby opportunity would be given to Senators to further propose amendments but must strictly be confined to the original amendments. “Two-third majority shall decide the amendments and such amendments shall form part of the Rules of the Senate.”

    Meanwhile, the Clerk to the National Assembly might be in fresh trouble over how he was included in the list of those who broke Ramadan fast with President Buhari while still being investigated by the police.

    A breach of protocol was being probed as at press time.

    But the President made the Clerk to know that he was an unwanted guest at the Villa when he was introduced at the end of the dinner.

    A source said: “When he was introduced to Buhari for a handshake after the dinner, the President said: ‘You, how did you get here? If I knew I would not have allowed you to enter this place.’ I think some protocol officers committed a slip.

    “We did not know how he got onto the list of the guests of the President. This is why the President is very strict with his schedule and aides.”

     

  • Imo youths want NASS election petition tribunal disbanded

    Imo youths want NASS election petition tribunal disbanded

    Youths and other stakeholders in Imo State, under the aegis of the Network of Imo Youths, have petitioned the National Judiciary Council (NJC) and the President of the Court of Appeal, asking for the disbandment of the Justice S.A Sanya-led National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal (Panel 1).

    The group accused the panel of “reckless use of judicial powers”, and noting that, “the judiciary as the last hope of the common man should occupy a central place in every democracy and a tribunal charged with the adjudication of matters arising from electoral disputes should be fair in delivering justice to the people no matter whose ox is gored”.

    The group, led by Chukwubuikem Amaefula, alleged that members of the panel have compromised their integrity, adding that the “incessant long adjournments, striking out and dismissing election petitions at pre-hearing sessions without due regard to the cost of filing  a preliminary application and  the cost of pursuing appeals in piecemeal, coincides with unconfirmed rumours that the panel members may be biased”.

    According to the group, “the panel, since its inauguration three months ago, has not shown any likelihood of taking any petition before it above pre-trial stage, let alone commencement of full trial.

    “it is obvious from the conduct of the panel since its inauguration that the it was not ready to conclude the petitions before it within the statutory 180 days, owing to its never-ending long adjournments, a development which has further given credence to the general feeling amongst Imo people that the panel was set up to frustrate petitions of the All Progressive Congress (APC) candidates in the state by ensuring that none of the petitions before it reaches the judgment stage within the statutory period of 180 days.’’

    The stakeholders pointed further that “the tribunal had struck out a petition of the Accord party without considering peculiar nature of the election petitions, which is the difference between Accord and Accord party even after the National Chairman of Accord party had insisted that the party authorized its state chapter to file a petition, the uniqueness of each case and facts, as well as recourse to the electoral act section 137(1), which provides that there are two categories of persons who can file an election petition viz: (a) a candidate at an election; (b) a political party which participated at the election.

     ‘’We know that it is only the Justice S.A Sanya led Election Petition Tribunal Panel that can adjourn a petition for inspection of electoral materials for over a period of one month without recourse to limited time provided by the Electoral Act to address election petitions or striking out and dismissing APC member’s petitions using mere technicalities.”

    The angry youths called on the NJC and other relevant authorities, to as a matter of urgency, “ntervene and disband the Justice S.A Sanya’s election petition tribunal panel sitting in Owerri, Imo State, to avert the ugly brewing of  a dangerous precedence that might rubbish the Chief Justice  of Nigeria’s effort to reform  the Nigerian judiciary and weed it of corrupt judges, as well as whittle down the people’s faith and confidence in both the Nigeria judiciary and the electoral process.”

  • Cardinal Okogie, Sagay, others demand cut in NASS members’ remuneration

    Cardinal Okogie, Sagay, others demand cut in NASS members’ remuneration

    •We’ll act based on committee’s report- Alasoadura

    Retired Catholic Archbishop of Lagos State, Anthony Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie, Constitutional lawyer, Prof Itse Sagay and several other prominent Nigerians  want  members of the National Assembly to emulate President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo  by  slashing their salaries.

    The  President and the  Vice President  last week announced that they were slashing their salaries by  half  as part of the effort to  reduce the  cost of governance.

    Cardinal Okogie hailed  Buhari’s initiative  although  he wondered why the President and  the Vice President “ didn’t tell us about their allowances.”

    “Public officers in the country should compare their salaries and allowances with what is obtained in other climes and adjust theirs. We have to do this honestly and frankly, because these are the areas all the monies that should be for the development of the country and the people are going into,” he told The Nation by phone.

    He said : “It is unfortunate that they are collecting big salaries and bogus allowances when many workers are being owed salaries.”

    “A lot of people are being retrenched in their places of work every day because the economy is inclement to both the entrepreneurs and the masses. Is this not the simple reason the challenge of armed robbery, kidnapping, assassination and terrorism is on the rise in the country? “

    For his part, Prof Itse Sagay said any reduction being planned by members of the National Assembly should be rigorous and far-reaching.

    His words: “The slash in the salaries and allowances of members of the National Assembly should be more rigorous and far reaching. They collect about N150 billion per annum.  Somebody said that what each of them gets every month is in the region of N29 million per month, albeit mine showed something above N15 million.

    “There should be a drastic reduction in all their allowances, which include one for hardship. So it is hardship to be working in a offices fitted with air conditioners?  They should not be getting more than one third of what they have been getting and if they refuse, we should make them to be working on part-time so that what they would be getting would be on the basis of the number of times they sit.”

    Former Inspector General of  Police ,Alhaji  Ibrahim   Coomassie, said that the salary cut should affect not only the federal lawmakers but also  state governors   and their deputies “ towards reviving and revamping our ailing economy.”

    Lagos lawyer,Chief Ladi Williams (SAN), said  that as far as he is concerned,salary cut is not enough.

    ”Salary cut may appear palliative, because it doesn’t solve all the nation’s problems. They must forget their wardrobe allowances car allowances and the rest of them,” he said.

    “  We are entering an era where self-sacrifice, and not money, should be the issue in the interest of the nation.  What the National Assembly members are getting is too much. What is allocated as constituency allowance alone is far more than what a large number of the population get in many years if not their lifetime.

    “It appears the downward trend in the price of crude oil is to teach us a lesson as a nation. The National Assembly members should accept 50 percent cut in salaries and crack down on frivolous allowances.”

    Another Senior Advocate,Mr. Niyi Akintola  believes that far-reaching decisions have  to be taken with a view to  solving  the various  problems  facing  the nation.

    To fix the problems, Akintola said  government  should address financial wastes , which he described as too many and too glaring.

    “The problem of the nation is not about salary reduction. So, it does not matter whether the National Assembly slashes its salary or not. After all, how much is the salary? The problems we have are all the wastages in the country. The wastages are too many and they are glaring for everybody to see.

    “Do we need all the ministries that we have? The answer is no. Now, there are about four ministries that have been created out of one that was doing the same job before. Aside from this, you also have many top officers and aides, many of whom have nothing doing .

    “When a governor is going out, have you tried to count the number of vehicles in his entourage? There is no governor that has fewer  than 100 policemen around him, when the masses have nobody to respond to their security needs.”

    Speaking on what to expect from the members of the National Assembly, Senator Tayo Alasoadura, representing Ondo Central said  that the Senate will hinge its decision  on salary cut on the recommendations of the committee it set up to advise it.

    He said: “we are now waiting for the recommendations of that committee. It is what the committee advises that we would do. You know that it is easier for the executive arm to sit down and come up with such  a decision.

    “But for the National Assembly, such decision is not what the president can decide unilaterally on behalf of the 109 senators and 360 House members. I am sure that we would come with a decision on that when the committee submits its report.”

  • NASS crisis: Labour threatens mass action

    NASS crisis: Labour threatens mass action

    •Seeks prudent mgt of N400b

    Organised labour has threatened mass action against the National Assembly (NASS), if it fails to nip in the bud the leadership crisis bedevilling it.

    General-Secretary of the National Union of Textile Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN), Comrade Issa Aremu, who handed down the threat in Lagos, said labour would compel the lawmakers to do the work they elected to do.

    “The crisis seems to be getting out of hand and if the lawmakers fail to address it, labour will take a mass action,” Aremu said.

    Aremu, who is also the factional Deputy President, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), charged President Muhammadu Buhari to deeply look into the crisis, while the lawmakers must also learn to be good leaders.

    He implored the Federal Executive and NASS to set a machinery in motion to review the 2010 minimum wage, adding that devaluation of the naira and inflation have eroded the value of the minimum wage.

    He said: “Indeed, minimum wage has become a starvation wage. In 2010, minimum wage was fixed at $120 per month. Today with devaluation, it is $81. 8, meaning that in real terms the minimum wage has fallen by 31.8 per cent’’.

    He expressed concern over the level of insecurity in the land and advocated the need for organised labour  to partner the Federal Government on ways  to tackle it.

    He advised Buhari to block all leakages and demand accountability from public officials.

    He also urged Buhari to take a second look at his proposed visit to America in the wake of incessant terror attacks in the country.

    He said Buhari should not follow the unhelpful roads of his predecessors who spent more time attending wasteful summits abroad while governance at home suffered.

    He said: “African leaders must definitely think global, but they must act local. They must implement the wish list of the African electorate not the agenda of foreign powers and donors who put us in mess in the first instance.

    “African Union (AU) needs original initiative in Africa not in Washington and Paris. We must act local and think global, not running around the globe instead of staying at home’’.

    Aremu praised Buhari for the intervention funds to states to settle accumulated workers’ salaries, saying that the gesture shows the latter is labour-friendly and sensitive with respect to payment of salaries.

    He, however, warned state governors against mismanaging the N400 billion given by the Federal Government to offset the backlog of salaries owed workers.

    He said the governors should ensure that they use the money judiciously since this was the first time the Federal Government was giving such an intervention fund.

    He said: “The governors should ensure that the money is used for what it is meant for. They should be prudent and live as debtors. They should live within their means. It is unacceptable that governors live on bail out, yet fly around with chartered aircraft, behaving like kings. “The state governors must partner the Federal Government to re-industrialise their states. Governors must depend on companies and personal income taxes not oil money bail out. The Governors Forum must declare state of emergency on industrial revival’’.

    NLC’s General Secretary, Comrade Peter Ozo-Eson, said appropriate measure should be taken for the pay back of the bailout, adding that the intervention, no doubt, was a gesture that will go a long way in enabling the states to discharge their obligations to the citizenry.

    Also, President, Trade Union Congress (TUC), Comrade Bobboi Bala Kaigama, expressed strong reservations about the total liquidation of the excess crude account, stressing that it would have kicked against the bailout but for its mindfulness of the pains of millions of workers and their families who would benefit from it.

    “The move is tantamount to eroding and eating up the future of unborn generations. But we shall allow it because of the innocent workers and their dependants and on the condition that sufficient arrangements are made to guarantee early repayment of the money by the states,” he said, asking, “How can a governor who is also head of a family owe workers up to 10 months salary in a country where there is no price control?’’

    He insisted that such laxity is totally unacceptable, and a typical example of man’s inhumanity to man.

    Kaigama warned that the Buhari administration must guard against the presence of fifth columnists in its midst so as not to give Nigerians any reason to regret voting it into power.

    “It appears some people in the administration are only there for themselves, their families and cronies instead of working for the improvement of the lot of the people. The increasing spate of bomb explosions that have claimed hundreds of lives and destroyed property in the once peaceful North-Eastern part of the country, financial waywardness, profligacy, impunity and the awkward belief in business as usual must come to an end,” he said.

  • Senate: Police, NASS Clerk, meet over petition

    Senate: Police, NASS Clerk, meet over petition

    The Police have met with the Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa, and some principal officers over a petition that the Senate standing rules was substituted.

    The Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, CSP Abayomi Shogunle, confirmed to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the meeting took place in the office of the clerk on Monday.

    Shogunle said that a senator had petitioned that the standing rule was substituted without the authorisation of the Senate.

    He said that the meeting followed a request by the police to the clerk.

    He also confirmed that the petitioner (senator) had made a statement to the police over the allegation.

    Asked whether the petition was specifically targeted at the Deputy President of the Senate, Sen. Ike Ekweremadu, the deputy force spokesman said it was not but “against procedure’’.

    Shogunle said contrary to reports, the deputy senate president was not invited by the police and declined further comments, adding that the matter was under investigation.

  • Bamidele hails Buhari’s intervention  in NASS leadership crisis

    Bamidele hails Buhari’s intervention in NASS leadership crisis

    A former member of the House of Representatives, Mr. Opeyemi Bamidele, has hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for his intervention in the leadership crisis rocking the National Assembly among the All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers.

    Bamidele also praised Buhari for emphasising the need for all members of the APC to align with the doctrine of party supremacy.

    The former Chairman, House Committee on Legislative Budget and Research, said the President by placing himself under the authority of the APC, has automatically resolved the leadership crisis rocking the two chambers of the National Assembly.

    In a statement issued in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital on Saturday by his media aide, Ahmed Salami, Bamidele urged the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, to embrace what the leader of the party had demonstrated, in order to restore lasting peace to the party.

    He urged the duo to reciprocate the party’s gesture as communicated by its National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, that their elections stand recognised, even in the face of breaching the party’s directive to actualise their aspirations.

    Bamidele said, “What President Buhari demonstrated was a paradigm from the old order where a party was often being treated as an appendage of its powerful members. With this clear position, I believe the crisis in APC is over.

    “President Buhari promised Nigerians change and he has started demonstrating this by showing how a good party structure must be under an ideal democratic situation. The party supremacy is a global convention and Nigeria cannot be an exemption no matter how we perceive our style of politics.

    “I see no reason why members would continue to feud when the national leader of the party had made it clear that the positions of the party is incontestable and must be respected at all times.

    “The two factions must concede to each other. They must shift positions and concede where necessary in order not to blow away the party’s goodwill with Nigerians.”

  • NASS members should collect N5, 000 monthly

    If, indeed, the members of the National Assembly represent the people who voted them to power, they should reject the jumbo allowances that the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Revenue Commission, RMFRC, is allocating to them. Governors have not paid the salaries of workers in several states while oil prices are unpredictable and Mr. Vice President has said that most Nigerians are living on less than a dollar daily.

     A governor has cut down the size of his cabinet from 19 to 13, and has cut his salary as well.  If that is the case, why should members of the National Assembly collect furniture, wardrobe allowances when the people who voted them there are hungry, homeless and unemployed?

    The statement credited to one Chief Joe Edionwele, a member of the House of Representatives representing the PDP Esan West, Esan Central and Igueben Federal Constituency of Edo State that bankers and oil workers earn more than NASS members, is irresponsible and downrightly immature. The NASS is not a place you go to, to earn a living: people go there to serve their people. Even though while they should earn a living, this member should not be making a fuss out of agitations being made to cut allowances of NASS members.

    In the spirit of the change being canvassed here and there, I would suggest that members of the NASS be paid the monthly N5, 000 that is being arranged for Nigerians who are ‘poor’ and unemployed.

    •Bob Majiri Oghene Etemiku

    Benin City.

  • NASS crisis will soon be over- APC chieftains

    NASS crisis will soon be over- APC chieftains

    The President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun and the Governor of Imo State, Owelle Rochas Okorocha Friday gave a ray of hope that the crisis in the National Assembly will soon be over.

    The three leaders expressed the confidence while speaking with newsmen in Abuja after the maiden meeting of the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the APC.

    Saraki said: “Be rest assured that the leadership crisis in the National Assembly is over and as the chairman said we just have to dot the i’s and cross the t’s. And we are very pleased and this will be put behind us very soon.

    “You can see the smiles from the faces of everybody coming out. It is a good meeting.”

    Oyegun said: “It has been underlined, it has been underscored. And it has been emphasized by all levels of the leadership; Mr. President, members of the National Assembly, and our governors. That has today been thoroughly underscored.

    When pressed to be categorical on whether the crisis in the party had been put to rest or not, the APC National Chairman said: “This is the beginning of the end of that crisis. We are still going to sit down and dot the i’s and cross the t’s.  By the way, there was a resounding vote of confidence from the entire meeting.

    On his part, Governor Rochas Okorocha said: “The President gave a very highly resounding speech that has motivated the party again once more.

    “The party is in a high spirit. But of importance is that the entire NEC passed a vote of confidence on the leadership of this party; Mr. President and on the chairman of the party and members of the NEC.

    “And that is something we are going home with and we are happy that our party is coming back again strong.  And we assure Nigerians that this party will not fail.”

    Some of those at the session were the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara; Governors Adams Oshiomhole, Ibikunle Amosun, Akinwunmi Ambode, Abdulfatai Ahmed, Simon Lalong, Ibrahim Gaidam, Aminu Tambuwal, Atiku Bagudu, Abdulazeez Yari, among others.

    Also at the session were party leaders like Chief Ogbonnaya Onu, Otunba Niyi Adebayo, Alh. Kawu Baraje, Chief Segun Oni (Deputy National Chairman, South), Senators Ahmed Lawan, Aliyu Wammako, Adamu Aliero, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Abdullahi Adamu, Dino Melaye, Chris Ngige, Kabiru Gaya, Osita Izunaso, Representative  Femi Gbajabiamila  and Alh. Lai Mohammed.

  • NASS: House divided against itself

    SIR: There’s an idiom, “a house divided against itself cannot stand”. As it stands, the All Progressive Congress (APC), the party Nigerians entrusted with power to rescue this nation from bad leadership has been thrown into pandemonium. The divisiveness rocking the camp of APC is appalling and Nigerians are dismayed at the inevitable choice they made during the last general elections.

    There seems to be no end in sight to the house leadership tussle bedeveiling the camp of APC at both chambers of the National Assembly following the controversial elections that produced its principal officers on June 9.

    It is an irony that the two legislative chambers of the national Assembly have been turned to theatres of internecine wars and its paraphernalia used as weapons in the legislative blitzkrieg.

    This is not the best of times for our democracy and certainly not for the ruling party (APC) as there is no end in sight to the horse trading and permutations going on at both chambers of the National Assembly.

    One won’t be wrong to say the legislative rascality exhibited is an indication the merger that led to the formation of APC before the general is an unholy wedlock between and amongst strange bedfellows.

    So far, President Muhammadu Buhari has remained silent over the lingering issues. The president’s indifference is not helping matters but rather worsening the crisis. President Buhari maybe keeping to his inaugural promise of not interfering in the affairs of the National Assembly but there’s a great difference between interference and intervention. Without the president’s intervention, the executive arm of government may never get it right in the act of governance. The best our president could do is to intervene and rescue the APC from the ongoing legislative embarrassment.

    Let’s not forget; Nigerians didn’t just vote for APC as an alternative choice, we voted for APC as a credible choice. APC is the ruling party with majority members at both chambers and shouldn’t be dictated on what to do. If this government fails, APC will be held responsible so party directives should be respected and adhered to in the choice of candidates for the remaining principal positions at both chambers.

     

    • Joe Onwukeme

    unjoeratedjoe@gmail.com

  • NASS: Between legacy and careerists

    NASS: Between legacy and careerists

    In “Between APC and SDP” (June 16), Ripples noted the tactical error of trying to keep at bay, the New-Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) bloc of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    That sparked the Bukola Saraki-led parliamentary coup of June 9.

    But with the turn of events, and the nPDP elements now attempting to impose their own image on the National Assembly, has it transformed into a strategic blunder that could, in due course, nullify the Change Nigerians voted for on March 28?

    That chilling question is imperative because two grim dramas are unfolding from the APC crisis: the fierce struggle for the party’s soul (the subject of “Between APC and SDP”); and the emergence, from inside the ruling party, of two different blocs: the Legacy bloc (most likely to drive Change) and the Careerists (most likely to, all-movement-no-motion wise, leave things as they are).

    Gunning for the soul of APC, that boasts at best an ideological bric-a-brac, is neither unexpected nor illegitimate; and one dare says, the internal business of the varied tendencies in the party.

    But whichever faction ascends is the business of the polity; for Nigeria would rise or sink by it.

    If the pro-Change bloc wins, and radically pushes policies that would deliver a legacy of change for the better, Nigerians would have won with their March 28 heroics, that powered Muhammadu Buhari to the presidency.

    But if the Careerists win — careerists that jostle for self-political offices, without a corresponding improvement in the collective welfare — it would be much of the old same.  The March 28 mandate would then have been in vain; and millions of longsuffering Nigerians would, yet again, have lost.

    Given the vengeance and passion, with which Nigerians voted in March and April for change, that would be highly risky, if not outright fatal, for Nigeria — both for the entrenched establishment, and the  distraught rabble.

    Because Nigeria perches at a delicate historical juncture, that is the correct prism to view the high-voltage drama from the APC front — and not necessarily from the relative loss or win of the individuals involved in the combat.

    That, of course, throws the discourse right back to the dramatis personae.

    By rebelling against his party, and having bulk PDP votes with a smattering of his own APC’s elect him as senate president, what was Saraki guilty of?

    Realpolitik, his friends would coo: whatever lobby for influence that availed Ahmad Lawan his party’s backing also availed Saraki the push for support, inside and outside his own party.

    Treachery and perfidy, his foes would roar: even the best of individual intents should be subjugated to the collective good; and party discipline.

    That thrust-and-fence would perhaps do, particularly in a value-neuter milieu, where the vilest of conducts and the noblest of behaviours, on a single cause, are just two sides of a bloody controversy.  If in doubt, recall how the clear crime of annulling the free election of 12 June 1993 became the holy banner of anti-June 12 elements.

    With the media itself ever ready and willing (for whatever motive) to spin even the most abhorrent of conducts, the society’s value-blindness and deafness become even more alarming.

    Still, beyond contrived controversies, Saraki’s emergence as senate president; and his bloc’s spurning of rapprochement in the filling of other principal officers — winner-takes-all fashion — throw up troubling questions.

    Needless to say, the attempt by Saraki’s confederates in the House of Representatives, which Speaker Yakubu Dogara leads, to replicate a similar ploy, led to the June 25 uproar in the lower house.

    If APC’s nPDP bloc pressed their legitimate right to land vital positions in the new government (as reward for their electoral labour), why might they block the party’s bid for legitimate balancing, particularly after a sharp dispute, for the sake of peace founded on equity and fairness?

    That has exposed them to a not altogether illegitimate web of conspiracy theories, which clearly conflicts with President Buhari’s clear mandate for change.

    For starters, Saraki’s real blunder in the June 9 parliamentary coup was less in rebelling against his own party (as dire as that was for party discipline; in a new party elected on the mandate of urgent change in awful times); but more in selling out his party to PDP elements — PDP, with clear motives to block that change; and ensure APC’s utter failure.

    A fall-out of that sell-out was the emergence, as senate deputy president, of PDP’s Ike Ekweremadu.  Though an embattled Saraki has denied Ekweremadu’s election was a logical quip-pro-quo (which sounds disingenuous, to say the truth), the charge of treachery and perfidy is not helped by the grim prospect that when Saraki is not around, Ekweremadu bosses proceedings.

    Ekweremadu can be counted upon to stall the APC agenda.  Besides, by further defying their party and rejecting its preferred candidates for other APC National Assembly principal officers, outside senate president and deputy, the Saraki bloc would further split the party.

    Saraki would, therefore, find it hard to throw off the charge of playing an alleged Judas out to halt the APC momentum of change; and haul Nigerians’ future right into the dark past of careerists and soulless power adventurists.

    That, in Nigeria’s troubled political history, would dovetail into the decision of the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua faction of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) to trade off the late MKO Abiola’s presidential mandate of 12 June 1993, for a sterile Interim National Government (ING) — with disastrous consequences, which the birthing of the current 4th Republic was programmed to correct.

    Other conspiracy theorists have even claimed Senator Saraki is only the visible face of an alleged northern irredentist bloc, trying to push yet again an alleged “born-to-rule” project.

    Ripples would find this claim rather implausible though, given the trouble June 12 (which tried to push this calamitous doctrine) caused the country; and the historic North-South West political entente that delivered the famous March 28 APC presidential win, to save the country from ruin.

    But whatever the facts or fiction, Senator Saraki, by his somewhat legal but hardly legitimate emergence as senate president, finds himself at the cusp of a cruel historical pigeon-hole — the man that arrested change, when change was imperative for a sinking Nigeria!

    That is why he must accommodate efforts at fair balancing by his party, in filling the remaining Senate principal offices.  On this score, the claim about stalling to avoid cohabiting with his “enemies” is balderdash.  Balancing senate principal offices is no ancestral feud.

    But history and judgements are in the long, long run.  Right now, there is a government to run; and our people to bail out.

    That is why President Buhari must step out and resolve this logjam — not necessarily for his feuding party, but for Nigerians who gave him a clear mandate for change.

    After due diligence, the president should weigh in on the side of the forces of legacy, against the careerists. That is his covenant with Nigerians; and that is what he should do.

    To do that, however, he might have to take the case directly to Nigerians, away from the feuding parliamentarians.

    ‘The president should weigh in on the side of the forces of legacy, against the careerists. That is his covenant with Nigerians’