Tag: national assembly

  •  Still on National Assembly perfidy

    The gangsterism involved in the emergence of Senator Bukola Saraki as Senate President amongst other things is vividly illustrated by his own admission of hiding in the car park of the National Assembly before dawn on the day of the election. He reportedly said: “I sat inside a small car parked in front of the assembly from 6am until 10am”.

    A chronological replay of the subsequent acts and scenes of the day will reveal further unethical, immoral but seemingly legal decisions to ensure his emergence as the number three man in the country. When did Nigeria descend to this abyss of immorality? When did we exchange gangsters for political leaders?

    The conspiracy involved in the planning of the inauguration of the eighth National Assembly on June 9 is an issue that should be properly and painstakingly investigated by the Inspector General of Police (IG) for several reasons. The Police Act, (Police Act CAP 359 Laws of the Federation 2010) apart from vesting the IG with the duty and powers to enforce the laws also place on him vicariously the responsibility to maintain a national ethical standard that will portray the nation in good light in the comity of nations, (see Part II section 4).

    A few years ago, Colin Powell, the American Secretary of State and earlier, the chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff of the American Armed Forces, described Nigeria as a nation of scammers. The whole nation rose in one voice to defend Nigeria reputation from such verbal assault. Recent development has come to justify Powell’s assertions which was based on this summation of the country’s profile in the American records.

    The handling of the rules of the Senate in the present dispensation has revealed some underhand conspiracy, tinkering and brazen impunity even in dealing with distinguished senators in hallowed chambers that is expected to be the uterus of our laws. The amendments to the rules of the Senate cannot be attributed to any sitting of the Senate and as it was seen, it was used to outflank other senators. A request on the floor of the Senate by Senator Kabiru Marafa to clarify its  origin was treated with impunity and ruled out of order.

    When the foundations are faulty, what can the righteous do? The foundation of the eighth Assembly is erected on falsehood and this must be corrected. The origin of the amendments foisted surreptitiously on the assembly must be investigated and prosecuted. Rules of the senate were amended to achieve certain predetermined agenda of the conspirators. The voting procedure traditionally in the standing rules of the National Assembly had been by voice acclamation and or division. The rules were amended prior to the inauguration without disclosure to or to the knowledge of all the elected members. The amendments were given physical expression by the provision of ballot boxes and papers, and probably electronic devices for electronic voting to make secret balloting a fait accompli. They will create a situation in which political parties cannot measure or ascertain the fidelity of its elected members.

    With the amendment in place, the conspirators executed with military precision the inauguration operation with the principal actor cum beneficiary hiding in the National Assembly car park and the critical mass electors (PDP senators and associated APC conspirators) admitted into the chambers with the proceeding flagged off on the dot of 10am. The Clerk of the National Assembly and all the other officials and elected members present cannot in good conscience deny that they were executing a self-serving proceeding to the disadvantage of other members at the time, legal but unethical and immoral.

    I  ask, can we build a nation on such a foundation? President Muhammadu Buhari owes it a duty to the vast silent moral majority of this country to cause and direct the Inspector General of Police (see Police Act Part II section 10) to investigate and prosecute all the conspirators in this legislative coup against the will of the people of Nigeria.

    For the war against corruption, to be effective, it must be applied starting from high places. It is popular opinion that Nigerian jails are not for the political and economic elites but for the common people. This erroneous belief must be destroyed by the actions and disposition of the President in confronting corruption, impunity and criminals in high places. A situation where the assets of a thoroughly corrupt governor are only seized without a jail term, and over 10 former governors have cases to answer in courts for more than five years without a conviction or otherwise encourages distrust to government amongst the people.

    The utterances of Senators Mao Ohuanbunwa and James Manager reveal the unconscionable leadership with which the country is yoked. Both senators believe that the separation of power does not permit the police to investigate crimes and misdemeanor in the legislature. They also aver that whatever is done in the National Assembly is covered by legislative immunity and that at worst, the police formation in the assembly complex is good enough to do  the  job. I do not agree because I fear the National Assembly police will merely massage their bloated legislative egos. They had better know that the laws of the land is higher and greater than the lawmakers of the land.

    The attempt of the PDP publicity secretary, Olisa Metuh to pull the wool over the eyes of the people by blackmailing the government with accusations of autocratic tendencies will not equally wash. The people have voted for change and it cannot be “Business as usual”

    I call on President Muhammadu Buhari to muster the historical will of Hannibal to confront the enemies of the country and I pray for his success in this task.

     

    • Osunloye, an architect is chairman Lagos State Afenifere Renewal Group.(ARG).
  • Asiwaju and National Assembly leadership crisis

    Asiwaju and National Assembly leadership crisis

    Chief Bisi Akande, former governor of Osun  State and interim national chairman of the now ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), is hardly your typical politician, who is easily given to demagoguery. As anyone familiar with the key role he played in how the APC evolved into the eventual nemesis of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) – the self-styled biggest party in Africa, which misruled us for the past 16 years – would testify, the elderly chief was a great voice of wisdom for restrain and the politics of give and take, all the way back to the genesis of the party before 2011.

    Late last month, however, the chief gave in to the strong temptation to be your typical politician when he issued a statement in which he described the raging National Assembly leadership crisis, which has divided the APC right down the middle, as a conspiracy of the North against the Yoruba.

    “Most Northern elite, the Nigerian oil subsidy barons and other business cartels who never liked Buhari’s anti-corruption political stance,” the chief said in his statement, “are quickly backing up the rebellion against the APC with strong support…A large section of the Southwest sees the rebellion as a conspiracy of the North against the Yoruba.” With due respect to the highly-esteemed chief, nothing could be further from the truth.

    The frustration behind the chief’s statement is understandable. The political sleight of hand Dr. Bukola Saraki, incidentally himself a Yoruba, used to become Senate President on June 9, whereby 51 senators of APC out of 69 were denied their right to choose their leader, is a cause for great anger, especially given the gratuitous concession of the deputy Senate presidency to the PDP. Saraki is, of course from the North, even if a Yoruba minority in the region. But it should be obvious to even a political illiterate that the man did it for himself, not for the region; in making his bid, he neither sought for nor obtained anyone’s mandate.

    As with Saraki so also it is with Honourable Yakubu Dogara as Speaker, even though there is a difference in his circumstance; in his own case, no members were deprived of their right to vote even though, like Saraki, he submitted himself for election and emerged victorious in defiance of his party’s wish.

    Akande’s opposition to Saraki and Dogara clearly derives from the great anger of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu at the apparently successful defiance of the party by Saraki and Dogara. Without doubt, the Asiwaju is today the most pre-eminent Yoruba politician since the beginning of the current Republic in 1999, bar possibly President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    And just like the failure of General Muhammadu Buhari to seal the deal for an alliance as leader of Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) with Tinubu as leader of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) back in 2011 doomed his presidential bid to failure that year, their handshake last year was probably, more than any other factor, responsible for the general’s success this time around. So Tinubu is entitled more than most top shots of APC to call its shots.

    This status, however, does not entitle him to think, as many believe he does, that he is the conscience of the party any more than other chieftains are entitled. In other words, his insistence on party supremacy in the choice of the National Assembly’s APC leadership, though seemingly in the interest of party discipline and cohesion, is hardly as selfless as he and his acolytes would like the world to believe. Tinubu, many believe with good reason, has insisted on party supremacy only because it serves his interest of having Honourable Femi Gbajabiamila, former minority leader and his crony, as the Speaker, instead of Dogara.

    In principle, party supremacy is necessary for discipline and cohesion. However, any party which insists on handing down orders from above all the time in the name of party supremacy without first gauging the true feelings of its rank and file, as is clearly the case in the current APC crisis, only courts precisely the indiscipline and chaos it seeks to avoid by invoking the mantra of party supremacy.

    As for Tinubu’s entitlement to call APC’s shots, surely he must be aware that there are widespread concerns even among some of his acolytes that, having singlehandedly nominated both the interim and the elected party chairmen and the vice-president, he has called more than enough of the party’s shots even as arguably its greatest architect. That this concern is not exclusively Northern can be seen from a full page news item in The Nation of June 14 as reported by one of its managing editors and ace investigative reporter, Yusuf Alli.

    The story, entitled: “How oil barons, others hijacked Senate, House elections”, spoke about how an anti-Tinubu cabal met at various times in Port Harcourt, Lagos, Abeokuta, Abuja and Ilishan to plan how to “decimate APC national leader, Asiwaju Tinubu.” The plotters, according to the story, included four serving governors and seven ex-governors, two of each from Asiwaju’s South-west backyard.

    The story also claimed an “influential emir” was also involved. The emir, according to the story, had unsuccessfully pleaded with Asiwaju to intercede with President Buhari in the cases of some oil barons who have been fearful of the president’s commitment to investigate the oil subsidy scam. The story did not identify the oil barons but chances are they came from all sections of the country.

    What all this means is that the crisis of the National Assembly leadership election is not, as Chief Akande claims, any Northern conspiracy against the Yoruba.  Neither Saraki nor Dogara, it bears repeating, sought for or obtained the region’s mandate to do what they did. And, to the extent that there is any conspiracy to clip Asiwaju’s wings, most likely the co-conspirators come not from one section of the country alone but from all over.

    Besides, it is instructive that much of the public gloating about Asiwaju’s current predicament has come, not from the North, but from his own backyard. Predictably leading the gloating is Chief Bode George, the Lagos-born PDP chieftain who has blamed Tinubu for his jailing years back on corruption charges as chairman of the Nigerian Ports Authority. Asiwaju’s political influence, George said with apparent glee, first in THE PUNCH (June 10) “is coming to sunset” and then added in the July 6th edition of the same newspaper that Tinubu and his group “have now been given political circumcision.”

    Quick on his heels was Dr. Frederick Fasehun, co-founder of the militant Oodu’a Peoples Congress. Fasehun said in a two-page advert in The Guardian of July 5 that the National Assembly leadership crisis had nothing to do with the Yoruba but instead was “the demystification of Goliath.” As such, he said, Akande’s call on the Yoruba to see it as a slight on their nationhood “should be ignored.”

    Not left behind was the voluble Mr. Femi Olukayode (formerly Fani-Kayode), spokesman for ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s campaign organisation, who, among other nasty things, said on his official Facebook page on July 9 that the crisis was “the destruction and demystification of Bola Tinubu and his Yoruba loyalists by his erstwhile northern allies in the APC.”

    The Asiwaju should not bother himself about all those gloating over his predicament. In politics, no one, not even the most sagacious politician, can win all the time. He may have lost the battle for the leadership of the National Assembly, but winning the war of stemming the rot of 16 years of PDP’s misrule is far more important. And this war can still be won in spite of the new National Assembly leadership, should it constitute itself into an obstacle against Buhari’s declared war on corruption and of restitution.

    Therefore the Asiwaju, as a key APC chieftain, should never regret the key role he played in the emergence of his party as PDP’s nemesis simply because he has lost one, albeit an important, battle, among the many he has fought to bring hope of a new dawn to Nigeria.

    AN EXPLANATION AND AN APOLOGY

    The attentive reader of this column in Daily Trust last week would have noticed that a few things were wrong with it. First, the article had no title. Second, it did not reach any conclusion. Third, the readers’ responses to the previous column were not edited to remove the sometimes annoying shorthand language of mobile phone texts.

    What happened was that I did not realise I had not saved my final draft before sending it out until I cross-checked my out box. To my great dismay, it turned out that what I’d sent was the original draft which fell short of the final copy by about 500 words and contained the errors I’d corrected.

    By then it was well past my deadline. So I called the editors of The Nation and Daily Trust, and later texted the editors of my online publishers, Gamji and Newsdiaryonline, to drop the article. Whereas the editors at The Nation used their discretion and reproduced an old piece, those at Trust still went ahead to run it because they said they misunderstood my instruction.

    I am sorry for the mix-up.

  • ‘Stop playing politics with national budget’

    ‘Stop playing politics with national budget’

    The Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry has called on members of the National Assembly to stop playing politics with the nation,s budget, saying timely and realistic budget will save the nation a lot of loss.

    In a statement, its President, Tony Ejikeonye said there will  always sharp disagreement between the Executive and Legislature in the area of budget benchmark, urging that theleaders should stop playing politics with the country’s budget parameters.

    He said: “One of the problems we have is that the government usually sets these budget benchmarks based on political considerations.

    “So when the interest of the country is paramount, realistic budget benchmarks will be set. It is high time our leaders stopped playing politics with budget parameters, there should be reduction in cost of governance at all levels.

    “Government should dicentralise some of the ministries which services are needed at the rural area, but which are concentrated in the capital. Most civil servants are concentrated in the urban areas but we equally need their services in the rural areas and so it is just to spread them out.

    He lamented a situation  for instance, a ministry where the bulk of its workers are supposed to be in rural areas, a lot of them are in Abuja. So we need to redeploy our work force effectively and efficiently.

    Ejikeonye, said to avoid budget failure,  government should be realistic and draw up a timely budget, adding that this is one of the best ways to address the challenges in the nation’s budget formulation and implementation process. If the budget is not well structured, it will fail, he added.

    The President pointed out that some of the figures that are inputted into our budgets are not realistic, pointing out that one of the major reasons for budget implementation failure is because of the over-bloated expenditure of government.

    “This is where we always give government knocks. Usually, our budget is supposed to be ready long before January 1. In other economies of the world, their 2016 budget has already been passed. If you don’t have a financial plan that you will work with, it’s a key to failure.

    He said the Chamber’s advice to the government is to make sure that the budget is ready on time, adding that they should always use adequate benchmarks to guage revenue inflow.

  • National Assembly crisis and the real issues

    National Assembly crisis and the real issues

    Since President Muhammadu Buhari took the oath of office on May 29, I have been following the political developments with a keen interest, especially the events at the National Assembly.

    I have witnessed the attacks on theAll Progressives Congress (APC) leadership by those who lost the elections and those who fed from the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) inept leadership in the last 16 years. I have seen those who should know better attacking APC leadership, insisting that the party is not prepared for leadership. I have seen interlopers, intruders, mercenaries, grovellers, supporters of any government in power and hangers on working so hard to fix themselves back into the system to continue the systematic vandalism of the project Nigeria. In all this, I thank God that we voted PDP out of power even though I know that it is not over until it is over.

    Those who lost the elections have not gone home to rest. They are bitter, they are angry and they are cursing and abusing the drivers of this monumental change. Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who led the team that showed PDP the way out has been the target of the vicious attacks by these losers. They call him names; they say he is greedy, they say he wants everything including the Presidency and other key positions for himself. But these people are wrong. The leader wants Nigeria to succeed. The leader put everything in place, both human and material resources, to push this change. The leader sacrificed time, energy and strength to push this change. Now can a man be punished for doing good? Can a man be crucified for helping to change the way we think, the way we do things, the way we plan, the way we reason and the way we apply our common sense even though common sense is not common? Can we continue to rubbish our brightest and best because of groundless and unfounded petty jealousy? When has it become a crime to work so hard for your country in times of need?

    How can any person ask APC to go to sleep with what we saw at the National Assembly? How can APC allow unqualified politicians in the house it has laboured to build for 16 years because the enemies expect that we should keep quiet and look the other way? How can any man allow what we saw in the hallowed chamber of the Senate when 49 PDP senators ‘purchased’ eight APC senators and closed the door for 51 APC senators because they want Dr. Bukola Saraki as President and Senator Ekweremmadu as Deputy Senate President? Are the teeming supporters of APC throughout the country aware of the meaning of this political calculations and permutations by the defeated PDP?

    Do we know that APC has plans of what to do with Nigeria and the people it needs to drive the change? Do we know that one odd person in the fold can pull down the whole house? They say a tree cannot make a forest, but one man who is not good can pull down an organisation. A Senate President and a Deputy Senate President who are not keyed to the APC agenda to rebuild Nigeria may be a cog in the wheel of progress. Students of the Bible must find out what happened to the people of Israel because of one ugly man called Achan or Jonah who endangered the people in a boat because he was running away from God. The same Bible tells us in Isaiah 65: 22 “They shall not build, and another inhabit; they shall not plant, and another eat: for as the days of a tree are the days of my people, and mine elect shall long enjoy the work of their hands

    A retired US Army General, General Powel, says: “Organisation does not really accomplish anything. Plans don’t accomplish anything either. Theories of Management don’t matter. Endeavours succeed or fail because of the people involved. Only by attracting the best people will you accomplish great deeds” 

    The best preparation for tomorrow is doing your best today. A day’s planning is done in the morning. PDP members have been shamelessly dancing and entertaining themselves because they think they are gaining some ground and they are even thinking about 2019. This is a party that got itself nailed in the coffin through rampant and systematic impunity in every sector of our national life. Professor Itse Saggy says: They (PDP) have established a system of very low values, total lack of commitment to the country and have demonstrated utter disdain for the welfare of the Nigerian people” In the words of former President Olusegun Obasanjo: ”Those criminals, crooks, persons of dubious character, the corrupt and corrupters and those whose track record are so blemished that no amount of white washing and propaganda and re-inventing of their personal profiles can cover up their dirty past must be prevented by all lawful means from corrupting, contaminating and compromising our democratic process” Those who created yesterday’s pain do not control tomorrow’s potential. Actions carry consequences!

    This is the PDP that ruined our lives for 16 years, destroyed all things we hold dear and dared us to do our worst. May APC leaders never think that change will come easy. Machiavelli has told us that “Nothing is more difficult to bring about than a new order of things because those who profit from the old order will do everything possible to prevent a new order from coming about”

    I still share the sentiments of Mr. Warren Buffet that “in a chronically leaking boat, energy devoted to changing vessels is more profitable than the energy devoted to patching the leaks.”

    It is a blessing in disguise that these problems are coming from this beginning. I think it is better for APC to roll up its sleeves to deal with this Saraki and Ekweremmadu challenge now, instead of patching the leaks. The vessel may capsize on the way and everybody will be drowned. This is why I want real APC supporters, the ordinary Nigerians, those Internet warriors, those agents of change who worked with empty stomach, those unknown Nigerians and the poor Nigerians who desire change to continue to stand behind APC in this struggle for a better Nigeria. Great success comes from great support.

    For our great and dogged fighter, Asiwaju Tinubu, I urge him to remember once again a page document titled: THE PENALTY OF LEADERSHIP, which the late Chief Bola Ige of blessed memory gave us at the Muson Centre in 2000 when he turned 70. Hear Chief Ige: “In every field of human endeavour, he that is first must perpetually live in the white light of publicity. Whether the leader be vested in a man or a manufactured product, emulation and envy are ever at work. In art, in literature, in music, in industry, the reward and punishment are always the same. The reward is widespread recognition, the punishment fierce denial and detraction.

  • NASS crisis: My hands are clean – Oyegun

    NASS crisis: My hands are clean – Oyegun

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, on Thursday exonerated himself from the National Assembly crisis.

    He noted that the crisis has assumed an unbecoming dimension with people accusing him of accepting gratification from senators.

    The APC chairman hosted South East/South South Professionals who visited him in his office in Abuja.

    Oyegun said the accusations are strange to him because he has no reason to collect money from Senators since he is not in a position to vote for them in the National Assembly.

    He described those peddling the rumour as devoid of conscience, noting that God will eventually vindicate him and make his opponents regret their actions.

    He said: “So if they are saying you have taken money from a Senator, I am not a Senator. I cannot do it. I cannot at this age be a Senate President or Senate Leader.

    “So what is he giving me money for? And in politics when you throw this into public domain, how many people know me personally? So it is annoying, it is dirty. It is crude, it is unbecoming.

    “It shows the people are so devoid of conscience. It doesn’t make me lose sleep because I have God that is so preventive of me because the people who are doing this will eventually eat their own words. I have no doubt at all in my mind.”

    He expressed surprise that the party is not completely done with the 2015, members are already accusing him of conspiring to favour the north in the 2019 elections.

    Oyegun noted that since he is not from the north and does not organize them for elections, the accusation is meaningless.

  • NASS crisis: My hands are clean – Oyegun

    NASS crisis: My hands are clean – Oyegun

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, on Thursday exonerated himself from the National Assembly crisis.

    He noted that the crisis has assumed an unbecoming dimension with people accusing him of accepting gratification from senators.

    The APC chairman hosted South East/South South Professionals who visited him in his office in Abuja.

    Oyegun said the accusations are strange to him because he has no reason to collect money from Senators since he is not in a position to vote for them in the National Assembly.

    He described those peddling the rumour as devoid of conscience, noting that God will eventually vindicate him and make his opponents regret their actions.

    He said: “So if they are saying you have taken money from a Senator, I am not a Senator. I cannot do it. I cannot at this age be a Senate President or Senate Leader.

    “So what is he giving me money for? And in politics when you throw this into public domain, how many people know me personally? So it is annoying, it is dirty. It is crude, it is unbecoming.

    “It shows the people are so devoid of conscience. It doesn’t make me lose sleep because I have God that is so preventive of me because the people who are doing this will eventually eat their own words. I have no doubt at all in my mind.”

    He expressed surprise that the party is not completely done with the 2015, members are already accusing him of conspiring to favour the north in the 2019 elections.

    Oyegun noted that since he is not from the north and does not organize them for elections, the accusation is meaningless.

  • National Assembly crisis part of democracy, says French envoy

    •Saraki promises quick clearance of ministerial nominees

    French Ambassador to Nigeria Mr. Denys Gaver yesterday described the leadership tussle at the National Assembly as part of democratic process.

    Gaver, who spoke when he visited Senate President Abubakar Bukola Saraki in his office in Abuja, said there should be cooperation between the Legislature and the Executive arms of government.

    He said the international community expected much from Nigeria, calling for cooperation between the nation’s private sector and France’s.

    “Nigeria is now the first trade partner of France in Africa and we are really willing to continue with the level of relations we established a long time ago.”

    On security, the French envoy said Boko Haram was a real threat to Nigeria and neighbouring countries

    “Those neighbouring countries happen to be Francophone countries, which we have very close and traditional relations with. That is why France engaged very strongly in the fight against Boko Haram last year.

    “We organised the regional summit in Paris, with the presence of the Nigerian president and the presidents of all the neighbouring countries to encourage a better cooperation and collaboration  of those countries and to put their means together to fight the spread of Boko Haram.

    “Since then, the preparation has developed quite positively and terrorist organisations have not been eliminated, but have been pushed back. We have to continue to make sure the work is finished and we are encouraging neighbouring countries to cooperate with Nigeria in fighting this battle and we are also cooperating with the Armed Forces of Nigeria in providing intelligence,” Gaver said.

    The envoy added that France had invited President Muhammadu Buhari to visit Paris as soon as possible for discussions on further cooperation.

    The two countries, according to him, could cooperate in future on parliamentary levels because “we have Senate in France and, as such, we will be very happy to develop the relationship on both sides.”

    Saraki  noted that though the Senate was on break, “we are working and we are ready to reconvene any time to attend to any national assignment, including the confirmation of President Muhammadu Buhari’s ministerial nominees.”.

    The Senate President pledged the cooperation of the National Assembly with the Executive in accomplishing the programmes of the administration.

    Saraki said the Bills from the Executive would be treated with despatch, as part of efforts to support the President to actualise the positive change expected from his administration by Nigerians.

    He told the French envoy that the Senate had already begun work with the inauguration of an 18-man ad hoc committee to formulate a realistic and progressive Legislative Agenda.

    The agenda, he said, would address issues, such as poverty alleviation, law enforcement, national security, commercial disputes, eradication of corruption and investments in the petroleum sector.

    Saraki noted that the National Assembly would partner with the French National Assembly on capacity building for legislators, strengthening the bilateral relations between the two countries and ensuring that more French investments flow into Nigeria.

    He solicited for the co-operation of the French government in tackling the security problems in the Northeast

  • Lam Adesina’s son apologises for National Assembly crisis

    Lam Adesina’s son apologises for National Assembly crisis

    THE lawmaker representing Ibadan North East/South East , Adedapo Lam-Adesina, has apologised to the citizenry following the disruption of legislative activities last week in the House of Representatives.

    Augments over leadership positions led to a free-for-all in the House.

    Lam-Adesina spoke when he met with the Community Development Council (CDC) of his constituency.

    The lawmaker described the crisis as part of the teething problems of a new party in government after the amalgamation of different political forces, which culminated in the formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “We shall surely overcome this crisis and sooner put smiles on the faces of Nigerians by enacting laws that will address all the mirage of problems confronting us as a nation,” he said.

    He appealed to the Speaker Yakubu Dogara and Deputy Speaker Lasun Yussuf to interact with the party’s national leaders to bring about a quick resolution to the logjam.

  • National Assembly crisis: ‘APC should ‘ve  zero-tolerance for divisive elements’

    National Assembly crisis: ‘APC should ‘ve zero-tolerance for divisive elements’

    A group of Nigerian youths, Youths for Change Nigeria, has decried the National Assembly crisis involving the All Progressives Congress (APC) and some of the party’s lawmakers.

    Its National Leader, Mr. Seun Bobade, in a statement yesterday in Lagos, noted that the party was bigger than any individual ambition.

    It said it had been following the National Assembly crisis and that it was shameful that a group of APC legislators decided to impede and forestall the party’s plan to provide good governance.

    “These legislators have been identified, and it’s become clear that they have no concern for the people nor respect for due process.

    “These are qualities that shouldn’t be exhibited by the people we’ve elected to be our lawmakers.

    “We are saddened by this shameful act that these legislators have demonstrated. We want to remind them that they all ran on the platform of the party and not as independent candidates. Therefore, party supremacy should be adhered to by all members under the APC platform,” the group said.

    The statement said members that would not allow the party to actualise its plans for the people should be shown the way out without sentiments.

    “There should be zero-tolerance for individuals who would rather satisfy their selfish interests at the expense of the party and the people of this country. Sanctions should be admitted to party members who go against the party that brought them in for elective positions. This will serve as a deterrence to curtail future rebellion within the party,” the group said.

    It said no personal interest should be allowed to undermine the supremacy of the party.

    ‘’We implore the leadership of the APC to do the needful now to prevent future embarrassing situations.

    “It is time for the President to set the records straight and take a hard stance against these divisive elements within the governing party. Discipline is needed. We certainly believe that the APC can deliver its campaign promises to the people. Therefore, we urge Nigerians to be patient,” the youths added.