Tag: Natasha

  • Natasha: ‘Why journalists should educate Nigerians on Senate rules’

    Natasha: ‘Why journalists should educate Nigerians on Senate rules’

    The Senate yesterday restated the need for journalists to educate Nigerians on its Standing Rules.

    The Red Chamber said doing so would prevent the misinterpretation of any action it might take against an erring member during plenary.

    The Chairman of its Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Yemi Adaramodu (Ekiti South), stated this in his presentation at a one-day capacity-building workshop organised by the Senate Press Corps for its members in Abuja.

    “One of the rules Nigerians need to be educated on,” Adaramodu said, “is Section 6(1) of the Senate Standing Rules, which empowers the President of the Senate to allocate and re-allocate seats to Senators at any time.”

    In apparent reference to what caused the crisis between suspended Kogi Central Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan and the Senate in February, Adaramodu said the refusal of any senator to obey the rules would always lead to an avoidable crisis.

    Read Also: Police arrest self-proclaimed “Obi of Lagos,” foil installation ceremony

    The ongoing legal tussle between the Senate and Akpoti-Uduaghan emanated from the refusal of the Kogi Central senator to accept a new seat allocated to her by Senate President Godswill Akpabio.

    Adaramodu said: “Journalists, like lawmakers, are supposed to know the Standing Rules so that when somebody fails to observe the rules, either in the Senate or the House of Representatives, you let the public know in your reports.

    “If you are supposed to sit on Seat Number 10 and you go and sit on Seat Number 13, you will not be recognised by the Presiding Officer. And if the affected lawmaker insists that he or she must be recognised, katakata (commotion) will surely come up.

    “Also, seats allocated to senators are not permanent. The reason the Senate President, as mandated by the provisions of Rule 6(1), can re-allocate the seats of senators.

    “The National Assembly is not a banana republic where there are no laws. Our laws must be obeyed by us and understood by Nigerians, who are to be educated on them by those of you covering the Senate.

    “In fact, parliamentary reporters, like those of you covering the Senate, are expected to be educated and knowledgeable like lawmakers themselves, and even more knowledgeable.”

  • Natasha: Senate urges Journalists to educate Nigerians on its rules

    Natasha: Senate urges Journalists to educate Nigerians on its rules

    The Senate on Wednesday tasked journalists to educate Nigerians on its standing rules to prevent misinterpretation of any action taken against an erring senator during plenary sessions.

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Yemi Adaramodu (Ekiti South), gave the charge in his presentation at a one-day capacity-building workshop organised by the Senate Press Corps for its members in Abuja.

    “One of the rules Nigerians need to be educated on,” Adaramodu said, “is Section 6(1) of the Senate Standing Rules, which empowers the President of the Senate to allocate and reallocate seats to Senators at any time.”

    In apparent reference to what caused the crisis between suspended Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan and the Senate in February this year, Adaramodu said that the refusal of any Senator to obey the rules will always lead to avoidable crises.

    The ongoing legal tussle between the Senate and Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan emanated from the refusal of the latter to accept a new allocation to her by the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio.

    Read Also: Why Natasha cannot resume yet – NASS

    Adaramodu said, “Journalists, like lawmakers, are supposed to know the standing rules together so that when somebody fails to observe the rules, either in the Senate or House of Representatives, you let the public know in your reports.

    “If you are supposed to sit on seat number 10 and you go and sit on seat number 13, you will not be recognised by the Presiding Officer, and if the affected lawmaker insists that he or she must be recognised, ‘katakata’ will surely come up.

    “Also, seats allocated to Senators are not permanent, the reason why the President of the Senate, as mandated by provisions of rule 6(1), can reallocate the seats of Senators.

    “The National Assembly is not a banana republic where there are no laws. Our laws must be obeyed by us and understood by Nigerians, who are to be educated on them by those of you covering the Senate.

    “In fact, parliamentary reporters like those of you covering the Senate are expected to be educated and knowledgeable like lawmakers themselves and even more knowledgeable.”

  • You can’t resume until your appeal is decided in court, Senate tells Sen. Akpoti-Uduaghan

    You can’t resume until your appeal is decided in court, Senate tells Sen. Akpoti-Uduaghan

    A fresh row broke out yesterday over the expiration of the six-month suspension slammed on Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan by the Senate and her request for resumption.

    The National Assembly and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) disagreed over whether the senator should resume at the Upper Chamber, following the expiration of the sanction.

    Explaining why Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan cannot resume her legislative duties, the Acting Clerk of the National Assembly, Dr. Yahaya Danzaria, said the suspension is still a subject of litigation at the Court of Appeal.

    But the PDP, on which platform she was elected into the upper legislative chamber, kicked against the Senate’s position, accusing it of denying the senator, her constituency and the party of legitimate representation.

    Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended by the Senate over alleged misconduct on March 6, but she challenged the action in court.

    On September 4, the Senator, representing Kogi Central wrote a letter, which has gone viral, to the Clerk to the National Assembly, notifying him of her plan to resume.

    READ ALSO; Open letter to the Northeast Development Commission

    However, the acting Clerk explained in a letter that she cannot resume while the appeal she filed challenging the judgement of the Federal High Court that found her guilty of contempt of Court is still pending at the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division.

    He said no administrative action would be taken on her request until the Court of Appeal disposes off the appeal.

    The Clerk said Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan would be officially informed of the Senate’s position on her request to resume after the case has been heard and judgment delivered.

    Resumption is prejudice, says National Assembly

    The National Assembly explained that Akpoti-Uduaghan’s return to the Senate will be subjudice until the adjudication on the court case.

    The Clerk’s letter to the senator with reference number NASS/CNA/29/VOL.1/41, dated September 4, is titled: “Re: Notice of Resumption.”

    It reads: “I am directed to acknowledge the receipt of your letter notifying this office of your intention to resume sitting and other legislative duties in the Senate on the 4th of September, 2025, which you claim is the date of expiration of the six months suspension imposed on you by the Senate.

    “I am further directed to inform you that your suspension was with effect from Thursday 6th March, 2025 and draw your attention to the fact that the subject matter of your suspension is presently before the Court of Appeal.

    “The matter therefore, remains subjudice, and until the judicial process is concluded and the Senate formally reviews the suspension in the light of the Court’s pronouncement, no administrative action can be taken by this office to facilitate your resumption.

    “You will be duly notified of the Senate’s decision on the matter as soon as it is resolved.”

    Akpoti-Uduaghan’s letter to the Clerk titled: “Notice of Resumption” and dated August 28, reads: “I write in my capacity as Distinguished Senator representing Kogi Central Senatorial District, in respect of the above-referenced matter.

    “You will recall that in spite of the judgment of the Federal High Court delivered on the 4th day of July, 2025, which held that my suspension was excessive and unconstitutional, subsequently directing the Senate to recall me to resume my legislative duties, I was denied entry into the National Assembly Complex on the 21st day of July, 2025 on the grounds that the Senate President filed an appeal to the Court of Appeal against my resumption.

    “I write to formally notify you on my decision to resume my legislative function upon the expiration of the suspension period.

    “I wish to formally notify this office that the six-month suspension period imposed upon me shall expire on 4th September, 2025, being exactly six months from the date of imposition.

    “Consequently, by operation of law and in accordance with the terms of the Senate’s resolution, I am entitled to resume my full duties as a Distinguished Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “It is pertinent to state that my entitlement to resumption of my senatorial duties upon expiration of the suspension period subsists without prejudice to the appeal I have filed in appeal No: CA/AB.J/CV/1107/2025, challenging, among others, the constitutionality of the referral leading to the suspension and terms imposed as well as the order of contempt made against me by the Federal High Court; and the Cross-Appeal filed by the Senate President.

    Both matters being currently pending before the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division.

    “Notwithstanding that the Senate is currently on recess, I hereby formally request that arrangements be made to grant me immediate access to my senatorial office upon expiration of the suspension on 4th September, 2025.

    This request is founded on the folowing compeling grounds:

    “Having been away from active senatorial duties for six months, I require adequate time to review pending legislative business, catch up on committee assignments and reports, attend to constituency matters that may have accumulated during my absence and prepare for the resumption of plenary sessions.

    “I remain constitutionally bound to represent my constituents effectively, and such representation requires proper preparation and access to official resources.

    “Access to official correspondence, files, and other materials in my office is essential for the proper discharge of my senatorial responsibilities.

    “I wish to respectfully remind your office that the suspension was for a definite period of six months, not indefinite; upon expiration, my full rights and privileges as a Senator are automatically restored.

    “Any attempt to extend, or vary the terms of the suspension beyond 4th September, 2025, unilaterally would constitute a breach of the principles of natural justice and fair hearing.

    “I trust that your office will take all necessary steps to ensure compliance with this legitimate demand, which is founded on law and the clear terms of the Senate’s own resolution.

    “I look forward to your written confirmation of the arrangements for my resumption of duties, and would be grateful if same could be provided before the 4th day of September, 2025.”

    PDP: It is a violation of her right

    The PDP complained against the Senate’s position on resumption, describing it as a plot to deny Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan’s right to perform her legislative duties.

    The party alleged in a statement by the National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, that the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, was orchestrating a clampdown on Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan through the Office of the Clerk.

    He described the move as “a calculated attempt to abridge the right of representation of the people of Kogi Central Senatorial District and deny them a voice at the highest law-making body in the country.”

    Ologunagba said there is no legal or logical basis to hinder Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan from performing the duties she was elected to discharge.

    He added: “The extreme persecution of six months suspension unjustly imposed on Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan, contrary to the Rules of the Senate, is more than enough and the PDP stands with the people of Kogi Central and all well-meaning Nigerians in condemning this unwarranted renewed attack on Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan.

    “Our party strongly cautions the Clerk of the National Assembly to withdraw the said letter and play by the rules by being neutral as a bureaucrat and not allow himself to be politically entangled and used as a tool to undermine democracy and the rule of law in the National Assembly and Nigeria.”

    Ologunagba condemned what he described as the “use of bureaucratic tools to hound opposition voices in the Senate,” warning that such acts amount to an erosion of democratic norms and a drift toward authoritarianism.

    He said: “The persecution of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan is not just an attack on one lawmaker, but a dangerous signal to every Nigerian that opposition voices can be silenced at will.

    “The APC-led Senate is not only suffocating democracy, but also deepening the culture of intimidation against women in politics.”

    Lawyer faults Senate’s position

    A lawyer, Inibehe Effiong, who faulted the Senate’s position, described it as “an act of lawlessness” and “a scandalous assault on common sense and the sensibility of Nigerians.”

    The lawyer, who spoke on a national television, said the Senate was deliberately fabricating a controversy that had no legal basis.

    Effiong said: “The whole controversy and personalisation of the issue has now been vividly demonstrated by what is imprudently an act of lawlessness on the part of the Senate.

    “You cannot say that somebody who has served the punishment apportioned to her exhaustively for six months should still be kept out of the chamber simply because there is a pending appeal. That is witchcraft logic.”

    He dismissed suggestions that the six months should be calculated only on legislative sitting days, insisting that “no sensible parliament can manufacture a different calendar to determine suspension.”

    Effiong maintained that the resolution passed by the Senate on June 3 clearly spelt out the terms of the suspension, which had elapsed.

    He added: “It will be the act of silliness for the Senate to say they are going to calculate the six months based on legislative sitting days. Even the letter from the Clerk to Senator Natasha did not put forward that argument.”

    Effiong aligned with the position of the PDP,  which has directed the senator to resume.

    He said: “If I were her lawyer, I would accompany her to the Senate to resume her legislative functions. There is no basis in law, morality or common sense to keep her out any longer.”

    Effiong warned that the Senate risks turning the country into a laughing stock before the international community, describing the action as “insidious and profoundly embarrassing.”

  • Senate to Natasha: Your suspension expired, but you can’t resume yet

    Senate to Natasha: Your suspension expired, but you can’t resume yet

    The National Assembly has explained why Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan cannot yet return to legislative duties, despite the expiration of her six-month suspension.

    Akpoti-Uduaghan, who represents Kogi Central, was suspended by the Senate on March 6 over alleged misconduct.

    She later challenged the action in court.

    On September 4, she wrote to the Clerk to the National Assembly, Kamoru Ogunlana, notifying him of her plan to resume.

    The letter, which has since gone viral, was met with a response from the Acting Clerk to the National Assembly, Dr. Yahaya Danzaria.

    In the reply, also circulating online, Danzaria stated that the senator cannot resume legislative activities while her pending appeal against a Federal High Court judgment, which found her guilty of contempt of court, remains before the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division.

    He stressed that no administrative action would be taken until the appellate court delivers its judgment.

    The letter, dated September 4 and referenced NASS/CNA/29/VOL.1/41, assured Akpoti-Uduaghan that she would be officially informed of the Senate’s position once the case is heard and decided.

    “I am further directed to inform you that your suspension was with effect from Thursday, 6th March, 2025, and draw your attention to the fact that the subject matter of your suspension is presently before the Court of Appeal.

    “The matter therefore remains subjudice, and until the judicial process is concluded and the Senate formally reviews the suspension in the light of the Court’s pronouncement, no administrative action can be taken by this office to facilitate your resumption. You will be duly notified of the Senate’s decision on the matter as soon as it is resolved.”

    Akpoti-Uduaghan’s letter of request to the Clerk to the National Assembly titled, “Notice of Resumption” and dated August 28, reads in part: “I write in my capacity as Distinguished Senator representing Kogi Central Senatorial District, in respect of the above-referenced matter.

    Read Also: Natasha’s appeal reveals no order for recall, says Akpabio’s aide

    “You will recall that in spite of the judgment of the Federal High Court delivered on the 4th day of July, 2025 which held that my suspension was excessive and unconstitutional, subsequently directing the Senate to recall me to resume my legislative duties, I was denied entry into the National Assembly Complex on the 21st day of July, 2025 on the grounds that the Senate President filed an appeal to the Court of Appeal against my resumption.

    “I write to formally notify you of my decision to resume my legislative function upon the expiration of the suspension period.

    “I wish to formally notify this office that the six-month suspension period imposed upon me shall expire on 4th September, 2025, being exactly six months from the date of imposition.

    “Consequently, by operation of law and in accordance with the terms of the Senate’s resolution, I am entitled to resume my full duties as a Distinguished Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “It is pertinent to state that my entitlement to resumption of my senatorial duties upon expiration of the suspension period subsists without prejudice to: The appeal I have filed in appeal No: CA/AB.J/CV/1107/2025, challenging, amongst others, the constitutionality of the referral leading to the suspension and terms imposed as well as the order of contempt made against me by the Federal High Court; and the Cross-Appeal filed by the Senate President.

    Both matters are currently pending before the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division.

    “Notwithstanding that the Senate is currently on recess, I hereby formally request that arrangements be made to grant me immediate access to my senatorial office upon expiration of the suspension on 4th September, 2025.

    This request is founded on the following compelling grounds: “Having been away from active senatorial duties for six months, I require adequate time to review pending legislative business, catch up on committee assignments and reports, attend to constituency matters that may have accumulated during my absence, and prepare for the resumption of plenary sessions.

    “I remain constitutionally bound to represent my constituents effectively, and such representation requires proper preparation and access to official resources.

    “Access to official correspondence, files, and other materials in my office is essential for the proper discharge of my senatorial responsibilities.

    “I wish to respectfully remind your office that the suspension was for a definite period of six months, not indefinite; upon expiration, my full rights and privileges as a Senator are automatically restored;

    “Any attempt to extend or vary the terms of the suspension beyond 4th September, 2025, unilaterally would constitute a breach of the principles of natural justice and fair hearing.

    “I trust that your office will take all necessary steps to ensure compliance with this legitimate demand, which is founded on law and the clear terms of the Senate’s own resolution.

    “I look forward to your written confirmation of the arrangements for my resumption of duties, and would be grateful if the same could be provided before the 4th day of September, 2025.”

  • Why Natasha cannot resume yet – NASS

    Why Natasha cannot resume yet – NASS

    The National Assembly has clarified why suspended Kogi Central lawmaker, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, cannot immediately return to her legislative duties despite insisting that her six-month suspension has elapsed.

    In a letter dated September 4, 2025, and addressed to the senator, the Acting Clerk to the National Assembly, Yahaya Danzaria, explained that her resumption was not possible because the case is still pending before the Court of Appeal.

    Akpoti-Uduaghan had earlier notified the Clerk of her intention to return on September 4, maintaining that her suspension, which began in February, had officially ended.

    Read Also: Natasha’s appeal reveals no order for recall, says Akpabio’s aide

    But in his response, Danzaria emphasized that the matter remains sub judice, adding that no administrative step can be taken until the appellate court delivers its judgment and the Senate formally reviews the suspension.

    Quoting from the correspondence, he wrote: “I am directed to acknowledge the receipt of your letter, notifying this office of your intention to resume sitting and other legislative duties in the Senate on the 4th of September, 2025, which you claim is the date of expiration of the six-month suspension imposed on you by the Senate.

    “I am further directed to inform you that your suspension was with effect from Thursday, 6th March, 2025, and draw your attention to the fact that the subject matter of your suspension is presently before the Court of Appeal.

    “The matter therefore remains sub judice, and until the judicial process is concluded and the Senate formally reviews the suspension in the light of the Court’s pronouncement, no administrative action can be taken by this office to facilitate your resumption.

    “You will be duly notified of the Senate’s decision on the matter as soon as it is resolved. Please accept, Distinguished Senator, the assurances of my highest regards.”

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended by the Senate in March over alleged misconduct and her refusal to comply with the chamber’s seating arrangement during plenary.

  • Natasha’s appeal reveals no order for recall, says Akpabio’s aide

    Natasha’s appeal reveals no order for recall, says Akpabio’s aide

    The decision to suspend Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan was not due to personal differences with Senate President Godswill Akpabio, his Communications and Strategy Consultant, Sir Kenny Okolugbo, said yesterday.

    On claims that her suspension had to do with her sexual harassment allegations, Okolugbo said: “Senator Akpabio acted within the bounds of the Constitution and Senate rules.

    “The decision to suspend her was not personal. It followed due process under Section 60 of the 1999 Constitution and Senate Standing Orders.”

    He said the Senate had left a clear pathway for Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s return by including a proviso in her suspension terms.

    “All she needed to do was apologise publicly for her behaviour on the 20th of February 2025, and her suspension would have been lifted.

    “Even the Brekete Family, where she ran for sympathy, advised her to apologise.”

    On the way out, Okolugbo said the ball remains in Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s court.

    Read Also: No court order mandated Natasha’s return to Senate, says legal expert

    “If she apologises and retracts her claims, this ends immediately. But if she continues on this path, the legal process will take its course,” he said.

    Okolugbo told reporters that Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s July 22 return to the National Assembly was a premeditated stunt devoid of any legal basis, citing her own court filings to assert that the judgment she relies on did not nullify her suspension.

    The spokesman noted that had the court ordered her recall, proper procedures required the Clerk to inform Senate leadership, which would then deliberate before taking action.

    He also rejected allegations Natasha made against the Senate President, ranging from sexual harassment to assassination plots.

    Addressing concerns that her Kogi Central constituency had suffered due to her suspension, Okolugbo said the Senate continued work on her legislative interests.

    “The bill establishing the Federal Medical Centre, Ihima, Kogi State, was passed into law during her suspension. She also sponsored the Gold Reserve Bill and Diaspora Banking Bill — both of which are moving forward. Her people were never abandoned.”

  • No court order mandated Natasha’s return to Senate, says legal expert

    No court order mandated Natasha’s return to Senate, says legal expert

    A legal analyst, Dayo Fadugba, has criticised Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s protest over her suspension from the Nigerian Senate, describing it as a “self-serving drama” staged for online attention.

    Fadugba stated this while commenting on the senator’s recent appeal against the Federal High Court’s judgment on her six-month suspension in Abuja on Friday.

    In the appeal, Senator Natasha’s legal team raised thirty grounds challenging the judgment, particularly highlighting the lack of a clear court order mandating her recall.

    One of the key grounds —Ground 23—accuses the trial judge of failing to nullify the suspension, despite describing it as excessive and beyond constitutional limits.

    Fadugba argued that the absence of a direct judicial order invalidated the senator’s claim that the Senate defied a court ruling by not recalling her.

    Read Also: Natasha blocked, released at Abuja airport

    “The judge merely expressed that the Senate should recall her, not that it must. There was no binding directive,” Fadugba stated.

    He further criticised the senator’s attempt to return to the Senate chamber, calling it a “staged spectacle” designed to generate social media sympathy rather than pursue justice.

    According to him, Senator Natasha’s dramatic entrance with a media entourage and supporters was inappropriate and disrespectful to the Senate’s decorum.

    He warned that her conduct could warrant further disciplinary measures, saying: “This is not how a senator should behave.”

    Fadugba urged Nigerians to respect the full judicial process and avoid politicising legal matters for personal gain.

  • Natasha blocked, released at Abuja airport

    Natasha blocked, released at Abuja airport

    • Kogi Central senator off to UK

    Officials of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) yesterday detained embattled Kogi Central Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan briefly at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja.

    The suspended lawmaker was trying to board a flight to the United Kingdom when the NIS officials stopped her briefly.

    Mrs. Akpoti-Uduaghan was reportedly stopped and told she could not travel because her name had been placed on a watch list — allegedly at the request of the leadership of the National Assembly.

    Read Also: Natasha, supporters create scene at National Assembly entrance

    A source said the senator was traveling with her husband to attend the graduation ceremony of her stepson in the UK when the Immigration officers blocked her at the departure terminal.

    “She was told that the leadership of the National Assembly requested that she be considered a flight risk and placed on a watch list,” the source said.

    The incident caused a brief stir at the airport.

  • Natasha: Sound and fury…

    Natasha: Sound and fury…

    Since the July 4 decision of the Federal High Court on the famous Natasha case, the plaintiff and her enablers have been treating the public to all kinds of drama over what the judge said and did not say. On the day of the verdict, the social media, which is known more for its sensationalism and recklessness in the way it treats sensitive and even, non-sensitive issues, reported that Justice Binta Nyako had ordered that Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan be recalled from her six-month suspension.

    Did the court really say that? We will answer the question presently. As Natasha wanted, the story trended on social media, a space where she is comfortable fighting her suspension battles, rather than laying the cards on the table. The traditional media too did not help matters in reporting the verdict. The story was slanted to put in the court’s mouth what it did not say. The certified true copy (CTC) of the verdict has put the lie to these reports.

    Natasha is wittingly using the media to fight her battle. She knows the power of the media, and she is exploiting it, especially the online platforms, to paint herself as a victim in a family dispute of sorts, which could have been settled internally within the Senate without too much fuss. But Natasha will not be Natasha without the gra gra and the showboating that have become her stock in trade. Honestly, I do not have anything against Natasha. I like her guts as a woman who is ready to stand up for her rights and speak her mind, any time, any day.

    But she needs to tone down the drama. Theatrics will never help her case, particularly in a judicial dispute where everything is black and white. There is nothing hidden in a court matter. The cards are usually face up, as the facts are there –  for all to see. She did no wrong by going to court in anticipation of a breach of her fundamental right, as held by Justice Nyako. But, without mincing words, she and her enablers made the wrong move by trying to colour the verdict to favour her. That was patently wrong. No litigant can ever colour a judgment in order to change its content to suit his or her wish because court proceedings, like the hansard of parliament, are well kept.

    If these documents are doctored, it means that something untoward must have happened inhouse. As the Yoruba will say: ejo l’owo ‘nu (someone has tampered with the records). Justice Nyako was clear and unambiguous in her pronouncement in the 33-page judgment in the Natasha case, which was well reviewed by our Abuja Bureau Deputy Chief Eric Ikhilae on the Law pages of this paper on Tuesday. The judge was careful in her use of words. She could not understand why the Senate who sits for 181 legislative days  would suspend a member for 180 days.

    To her, “to make a law that has no end is excessive”. She was referring to the Senate Rules that allow the upper chamber to suspend a senator for as long as it wishes. But she could not do anything about it because her hands are tied under the doctrine of separation of powers – that is to say the court cannot interfere in the work of the legislature – except there is a breach or anticipatory breach of a person’s fundamental right. The court made its position clear on page 31 of the judgment. Justice Nyako held that it was not the intention of the Constitution that a senator be suspended ad infinitum (forever).

    Read Also: World Bank, partners back Nigeria’s 90,000km fibre optic network drive

    She refrained from making any order, citing the principle of separation of powers, and chose to appeal to the conscience of the Senate to forgive Natasha. She held: “I am of the opinion that the Senate has the power to review…the Senate Rules and even amend Section 14 (2) of the Legislative Houses (Powers & Privileges) Act for being over reaching. The Senate has the power to and I believe should recall the plaintiff and allow her to same time, represent the people who sent her there to represent them”. In law, this is not an order, but an opinion, which a judge can digress and make in the course of delivering a judgment.

    It is called obiter dictum (‘something  said in passing’) and the ninth edition of Black’s Law Dictionary defines it as: “a comment made while delivering a judicial opinion, but one that is unnecessary to the decision in the case and therefore not precedential (although it may be considered persuasive)”. So, if the Senate is persuaded enough by the opinion, it may recall Natasha, but if not, the heavens will not fall if it does not recall her. The court did not compel the Senate to recall her. As a lawyer, she knows what to do to end this matter. It is not by trying to force her way back into the National Assembly Complex with her enablers and a motley crowd in tow, as they attempted to do on Tuesday. Enough of the drama!

    Natasha knows that the court did not order her recall. She is deliberately raising the political temperature by resorting to self help to enforce, mind you an opinion, which is different from an order, which Black’s Law Dictionary describes as “a written direction or command delivered by a judge”. Ironically, the orders the court made were all against her for contempt. For now, Natasha should cut the drama and allow the matter to run its course at the appellate courts, where she and Akpabio have headed for. This is the right thing to do.

    She should concentrate on her appeal and stop this shenanigan of trying to come through the back door to get what the court did not give her in the first place. It will not work. It is an  action full of sound and fury signifying nothing, apologies to Shakespeare.

  • Natasha, supporters create scene at National Assembly entrance

    Natasha, supporters create scene at National Assembly entrance

    Suspended Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan was yesterday denied access to the National Assembly Complex as she attempted to resume plenary.

    This followed a blockade of her convoy at the gate by the police, Sergeants-at-Arms and security operatives.

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan had arrived at the outer gate, which is behind the National Arcade, at about 12noon in a four-vehicle convoy comprising three black coloured Sports Utility Vehicles and a white 15-seater bus.

    After a few minutes inside the SUVs, she stepped out of one of the SUVs accompanied by activist Aisha Yesufu and other supporters and trekked for about 900 metres to the inner gate, where security also stopped them by locking the inner gate.

    After about 30 minutes of her arrival at the inner gate, she spoke to reporters before making a U-turn and trekking to the outer gate with her supporters to board their vehicles.

    The National Assembly had beefed up security in anticipation of her planned resumption.

    Security agents, comprising operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS), police and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), manned the main and adjourning gates.

    Vehicles bound for the National Assembly were frisked, and those that could not produce their identification cards were denied entrance.

    Before beating a retreat, the Kogi Central senator said she would consult her legal team to determine her next line of action.

    She vowed to resume once the Senate, expected to proceed on a six-week annual vacation today, resumes.

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan had last week vowed to resume yesterday based on a judgment by Justice Binta Nyako, but the Senate insisted there was no order to recall her.

    The Senate on March 6 suspended her for six months over her reaction to the reallocation of her seat.

    She challenged her suspension, claiming that it followed her refusal to yield to sexual advances by Senate President Godswill Akpabio.

    The Kogi central lawmaker claimed her suspension was illegal.

    Justice Nyako found Akpoti-Uduaghan guilty of contempt of court and ordered her to pay a fine of N5million into the treasury of the Federal Government as well as tender an apology in two national dailies.

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan, however, appealed against the N5million fine, saying it was improper for the court to fine her over a contempt that was not committed on the face of the court.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio also cross-appealed, arguing that the court lacked jurisdiction to make some of the findings.

    Why I tried to return, by Natasha

    Speaking with reporters outside the National Assembly complex, Akpoti-Uduaghan said that she had every right to resume.

    She alleged that the Senate did not appeal Justice Nyako’s judgment, saying it was Akpabio who did.

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan faulted the Senate leadership for ignoring the court’s ruling.

    She said: “It’s not about beating the first and second gates and barricades. It’s about me as a duly elected senator walking into the chambers to resume my constitutional duties, as I was elected and mandated by the good people of Kogi Central.

    “It’s unfortunate that we got in, having duly notified the Senate through two letters that I would be resuming functions today. I’m disappointed on two grounds.

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    “One is the number of policemen that we met outside, all well-kitted with guns, who charged at an unarmed female senator with her people, a group of Nigerians.

    “And the second thing is the fact that the Senate, under the leadership of Godswill Akpabio, has decided to become lawbreakers by denying me entrance into the chambers to resume my duty.

    “It’s a personal vendetta that Akpabio is unleashing on me, hiding under the wings of the institutions and it is wrong.

    “It is wrong because you can’t have a whole senatorial district deprived of representation.

    “There is just no reason why these gates should not be open. But by and large, considering the fact that the Senate will likely go on recess tomorrow (today), whenever they deem it fit to resume, I will resume as well.

    “Akpabio cannot be greater than the Nigerian Constitution. The Office of the Senate President does not give me legitimacy.

    “My legitimacy comes from the people of Kogi Central who voted me in. The court has ruled in my favour, and an appeal does not invalidate that ruling.”

    The Senator said refusing to obey the court’s decision is a serious threat to the rule of law and a bad example for Nigeria’s democracy.

    “That I’ve been denied entrance to the National Assembly is a clear statement. The National Assembly under Akpabio has chosen to act in contempt of court.

    “It’s ironic that those who make laws are the first to break them. How far have we come in our democracy?”

    She also questioned the legal process used to suspend her in the first place, calling it flawed and not done properly.

    “Even the suspension ab initio was fraudulent, the document was faulty. The document that recommended my suspension wasn’t even attested to by the committee members.

    “It was just a photocopy of an attendance sheet passed off as their signatures,” she said.

    The lawmaker added: “Going forward, I will meet with my legal team to proceed to the appellate court for interpretation of what just happened.

    “I am a law-abiding citizen and will continue to pursue justice through due process.”

    Yesufu accused the National Assembly leadership of bringing down the moral principles of the institution.

    “The people who scaled the wall in 2014 are the same people now blocking people from entering the assembly,” Yesufu said.

    Natasha still suspended, says Senate spokesman

    The Senate maintained that Akpoti-Uduaghan remains suspended until a clear and enforceable court order dictates otherwise.

    Spokesman, Senator Yemi Adaramodu, dismissed her dramatic return to the National Assembly as a “continuation of content creation.”

    Speaking on television, he insisted the Upper Chamber acted within the ambit of the law in suspending the Kogi Central lawmaker, describing her latest actions as “season film” and “skit-making.”

    “The Senate has done what it is supposed to do, and which the court upheld,” Adaramodu said.

    “Section 60 of the Nigerian Constitution and the Senate rules give us the power to discipline our own. We’re lawmakers, not spectators for content creation.”

    Adaramodu made it clear that the Senate has “no interest” in revisiting the matter unless compelled by a superior legal directive.

    He added: “We’re not actors. We’re lawmakers. And we are not interested in all these kinds of things. All this episode is about content creation… It’s now degenerating into a seasonal film. We are not interested.”

    The Senate’s stance, he said, is backed by the judgment of the Federal High Court, which, contrary to reports, did not explicitly declare the suspension illegal.

    “Go and read the certified copy of the court judgment,” Adaramodu said.

    “It was nowhere in the judgment that it was pronounced that the suspension was illegal or unconstitutional.

    “The only court order was for her to apologise to the court and pay a N5 million fine. She has appealed it.”

    On the implications of the court’s remarks concerning the constitutionality of suspending an elected senator, Adaramodu waved it off as mere opinion and not binding.

    “In my opinion, these are not court orders. Those are the judge’s personal views, not enforceable directives.

    “The only enforceable part of that judgment is the fine and the order to apologise,” he said.

    He dismissed suggestions that Akpabio was driving the suspension, saying the issue was not about him but the institution of the Senate.

    “It is not about Senator Akpabio at all. It’s about the Senate. And like I said, let’s go to where Nigeria can move forward,” Adaramodu said.

    Lawyer faults Senator

    A senior lawyer, Ken Harries, criticised Akpoti-Uduaghan for attempting to enforce a judgment she had already appealed.

    He faulted her “invasion” of the National Assembly, calling it a “display of lawlessness” unbecoming of a federal lawmaker.

    “How do you enforce a judgment that you have said you are not satisfied with, condemned, appealed…?” he asked.

    Harries noted that Akpoti-Uduaghan had not fulfilled court conditions, including paying N5 million and publishing a public apology.

    “Whoever goes to equity must go with clean hands,” he added, urging her to respect lawful procedures.