Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Why we are giving N10,000 collateral free loans, by Presidency

    The presidency said yesterday that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration would intensify efforts to empower Nigerians economically, as it continues to launch the TraderMoni N10,000 collateral free loans for petty traders.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President, Office of the Vice- President, Mr. Laolu Akande, gave an update on the microcredit scheme.

    To qualify for the TraderMoni scheme, he said no documentation of any kind was required.

    Akande spoke against the backdrop of claims about Permanent Voter Card (PVC) being a requirement for the loans.

    He said: “The traders are not required to show PVC or any document for that matter. They are only expected to show they are petty traders and this is why the enumeration is done in the markets and wherever the traders ply their trades.”

    Akande said those who questioned the timing of the loans have forgotten that the credit scheme is part of the Social Investment Programme of the Buhari presidency, and it began in 2016.

    Stressing that the TraderMoni was conceived in 2016, he said: “Must we then suspend the empowerment of the traders just because some people will insinuate motivations?

    “The petty traders, whose trades and lives are being positively impacted as they receive the N10,000, are telling a different story from those making political insinuations. And it is their stories that inspire us.

    “Nigerians already know that the Buhari administration is one that is projecting the interests of the common man, Nigerians who are at the lower rungs, and this is not a new perception at all,” Akande said.

    This week, the interest free loans, which have now been launched in eight states, including the FCT, will be extended to more states, including Oyo, Cross Rivers and Kaduna.

    According to him, the micro-credit scheme has been introduced in the following states: Lagos, Kano, Abia, Akwa Ibom, Katsina, Osun, Kogi and FCT.

  • We breached no law in buying nomination form for Buhari – Group

    The Nigerian Consolidation Ambassadors Network NCAN, the group which last Wednesday purchased the Expression of Interest and Nomination Forms for President Muhammadu Buhari said on Friday that it has not contravened any law in deciding to buy the form for the President.

    The group also said that it has concluded plans to formally present the form to the President latest by Monday, September 10 which is the initial date for the closing of sales of nomination forms that has now been extended to Tuesday.

    Read Also:Buhari should campaign by road, says Bafarawa

    Speaking with newsmen on the controversy surrounding the purchase of the form, National Coordinator of the Group, Barrister Sunusi Musa said also denied link between the group and Kogi state Governor, Yahaya Bello, stressing that the group has been planning to purchase the nomination form since it was set up in August 2017.

    He also said that the reference of the Electoral Act does to individual or group contribution to campaign fund is restricted to candidates contesting elections and not aspirants, referring to a Supreme Court decision on who is a candidate for an election and who is an aspirant.

    He said by the provisions of the law, the President is not qualified to be referred to as an aspirant yet u till he gets the nod of the party to participate in the primaries after submitting his nomination form and scaling through the screening process, with the party presenting him with a certificate of clearance.

    He said further that they have not presented the form to the President because he was outside the country, pointing out that the form will formally be presented to the President very soon.

    He said “The president is just back, so we have not yet presented the form to the president. We are in the process of sending it. We will send it to him”, he said.

    While denying link with Governor Yahaya Bello, Musa said “Let me say that as a person, I have never met Gov. Yahaya Bello. I do not know him personally and vice versa.

    “Of course, it is possible for him to have known some members of our group in his state but NCAN as an association formed since August 2017 has never made any effort to meet with Gov. Yahaya Bello or any other governor to solicit for financial support. Probably, some people think that by the apparent closeness of Gov. Bello to President Buhari, the governor might have procured the form.

    “Again, because some of the founding and prominent members of this group are from Kogi state, that might have informed such insinuation but I want to say that as at now, not a single government official has contributed a kobo to our purse. Certainly, no”, he explained.
    Many pro-Buhari groups had reportedly lobbied to‎ be the ones to purchase the form for the president.

  • Chinese consortium to begin work on Mambilla power project  – Presidency

    President Muhammadu Buhari has received assurances from the Joint Venture Partners assigned to construct the 3050 Megawatts Mambilla Hydro-electric Power Plant, that all processes leading to the start of work would soon be completed to pave way for the commencement of the project early next year.

    At a meeting on Thursday in Beijing with Professor Lyu Ze Xiang, the President of CGCC, the construction company, President Buhari asked to be briefed on time lines for the commencement of work, following his highly successful meeting with the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping.

    Read Also:KEDCO FG’s inability to complete Mambila power project 30-years after

    The Nigerian President, who likened the Mambilla to China’s Three Gorges Dam, said given the significance of the project to Nigeria’s socio-economic development, there was a need for its speedy completion.

    In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, Buhari said “I am very pleased with the concern you have shown for the significance of this project. I would like you to ensure its speedy completion.”

    Xiang informed President Buhari that Nigerian officials and the project consultant would meet in two weeks to address the questions raised by President Xi for more detailed and updated feasibility and sustainability studies.

    He said a team had already been set up to work on the financing aspect.

    “We fully understand the importance of this project to the economic and social wellbeing of Nigeria. In two weeks, we will sit down with the parties for the economic and sustainability analysis. It would take about four weeks to conclude the update,” he assured.

    According to the lead contractor, “pre-commencement work,” would thereafter begin, dealing with access to site and putting in place the necessary support infrastructure such as power, water and transportation.

    “Our target is to commence the project early next year,” he told President Buhari shortly before the Nigerian leader’s departure at the conclusion of his six-day official trip to China.

  • Group purchase nomination form for Buhari

    …Says President not a millionaire

     

     

    A group of Nigerians under the auspices of Nigeria Consolidation Ambassadors Network on Wednesday stormed the APC National Secretariat with a dummy check of N45 million to purchase nomination for and expression of interest form for President Muhammadu Buhari to contest the presidential nomination of the party.

    Also an Enugu based business man who identified himself as Chief David Ibe presented a check of N5 million to the APC national Chairman, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole for the expression of interest form for the President.

    It was however a busy day at the APC secretariat as interested aspirants who have been waiting for the release of the timetable besieged the place to purchase the nomination and expression of interest form.

    Read Also:Buhari not sympathetic to killer herdsmen, says Presidency

    Former Zamfara state Governor, Mamuda Shinkafi and former FCT Minister, Akpan Udoedehe, were some of the early callers at the secretariat to buy form to contest for the governorship of their state.

    Speaking while presenting the dummy check to the APC Chairman, National Coordinator of the Group, Sunusi Musa said the group which was formed in 2017 to propagate the second term bid of the President decided to pull resources together to purchase the nomination form for the President.

    He said they were aware that the President was not a millionaire, but has millions of supporters across the countries who are angling for him to continue in office.

    He said “We believe in the leadership of President Buhari; we can count on him to consolidate the good work he has started for another four more years.

    It is for this reason Mr. Chairman we have decided to “pull our meagre resources together and purchase the expression of interest and nomination form for President Buhari as he present himself to our party members to be chosen as its candidate for the 2019 general election.

    “Our members from the various villages, local governments and states have contributed to making this happen. We know President Buhari is not a multi-millionaire cash wise, but he has millions of supporters who are always ready to come together to pay for his nomination form.”

    He said further that “Members of our great party across the country are in unison on the applause you deserve for the work you have started towards redemption of the party. Your leadership has brought the stability the revolution of ideas and the team spirit of change that is needed in this journey of making Nigeria great.

    “We are members of the National Consolidation Ambassadors Network (NCAN) here present are representatives of our members from the different states and zones of the country. Our resolve since our formation over a year ago is primarily to ensure that President Buhari sought for another term as well ensure that the President emerge victorious in the 20 l9 elections.

    “Our reason for embarking on this project is based on the recognition of the fact that the President has started laying a foundation for a better Nigeria and there is need to consolidate on the gains so far made. It is for this reason, that we are pride ourselves as Network of Consolidation Ambassadors.

    “From September 2017 till April 2018, NCAN was in the forefront calling on President Buhari to seek re-election in order to consolidate on the good work that he has been doing by building on the foundation he has laid for a prosperous Nigeria.

    “As God will have it, Mr. President acceded to the call of voice of reasoning and declared his intention to seek re-election in 2019.

    “We have no doubt that Mr. President has both action and word being working and laying a foundation for greater and prosperous nation that our generation and future generation will be proud of. Under his administration Nigeria has become a country sought after for investments in the world; Nigeria has assumed its leadership role in not just Africa but the world.

    “Nigeria‘s moribund infrastructure is being revived. There is no state In Nigeria that does not have several Federal Government infrastructure project either completed or being, executed under President Buhari.

    “We have a stable and steadily growing economy that is departing from the monotonic oil dependence: Agriculture is now an attractive venture as farmers are becoming multi-millionaires Nigeria is now an exporter of Agricultural products as oppose to what it was three years ago.

    “For the first time since the return of democracy, Nigerians have a President who can beat his chest and state that he has never stolen from the purse of government.

    “We have a President who is not having meetings at night to strike shady personal deals but rather is ensuring that every agreement entered into by Nigeria is in the interest of the country and for its generations unborn.

    “This has indeed boosted the confidence of investors hence the increase in flow of Direct Foreign Investment into the country. Looted funds are being recovered and ploughed back to developing our country’s deficit infrastructure.

    “Almost a million farmers under the Anchor Borrowers Programme are benefiting from low interest loans that they accessed without “chua chua”. 500 000 previously unemployed graduates me now employed under the NPower Scheme; 400,000 extremely poor families are receiviiig_5,000 Naira monthly and that is changing, their lives. Over 8 million children are being fed daily in our public schools across the country.

    “Today, and for the first time in our history, we have a government that is honest and sincere in investing in the lives of the poor, the masses and the underprivileged.

    “Before President Buhari came on board, 14 local governments of this country were under the control of the terrorist group Boko Haram. That is no longer the case anymore. In the North Eastern part of this country which was hitherto a theatre of war, farmers are returning to their farms. Businesses are reopening and roads closed for over three years have been reopened. Live is returning back to normal.

    “The Niger Delta agitators, whom were forced to become militants due to deliberate neglect of the people of Niger Delta by successive regimes, have seen reason to give peace a chance due to sincere effort being made to develop the region.

    “No doubt Change indeed is being delivered as promised. We cannot afford to go back to Egypt. We cannot afford to destroy the future of our children. The foundation laid by President Muhammadu Buhari must be reinforced.”

     

  • Buhari not sympathetic to killer herdsmen, says Presidency 

    The Presidency on Wednesday dismissed as wicked and unfounded the conclusion by a media house that President Muhammadu Buhari is sympathetic to the activities of violent herdsmen.

    According to the report, the President has been indifferent to the killer herdsmen atrocities.

    But a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, rejected the allegations of the media house.

    Read Also:Atiku’s allegations: Buhari not power drunk – Presidency

    He said “We reject The Punch newspaper’s September 4th, 2018, editorial which alleged that President Buhari had sympathy for criminality perpetuated by a misguided group.

    “The editorial was not only disrespectful of the President and his office, but was also reckless, thoughtless, inflammatory and totally irresponsible.

    “It is steadily becoming clear from the views, news and opinions of this newspaper that it will explore every opportunity and twist every fact to declare every Nigerian and ECOWAS member with Fulani blood a terrorists, who must be stripped of their rights as citizens, or worse subjected to ethnic cleansing.

    “We believe and strongly insist that criminality perpetrated by some miscreants should not be used to demonize other responsible and decent members of the same ethnic group.

    “The collective demonization of any ethnic group because of the misguided behaviour or conduct of criminals is improper and no responsible government will ever do so.”

    He went on “The Punch editorial is, therefore, sheer blackmail and mischief designed to push its own sinister and unpatriotic agenda disguised as free speech.

    “By inciting the people against an ethnic group because of the criminal activities of a few is unhelpful and deleterious to peace.

    “Rather than proffer solutions, the editorial only regurgitated simplistic narratives of complex national issues, deliberately neglecting the broader and unbiased understanding and interpretation.

    “After the highly biased and misleading editorial, the newspaper could not but come to terms with the established fact that climate change and criminality remained key drivers of the farmers-herdsmen conflict.

    “Currently, a massive and fierce military operation is going on in Zamfara State to neutralise the activities of bandits who have been sacking communities and killing innocent people, and the security outfits have been deployed to safeguard lives and property.”

    The President’s commitment to the security and wellbeing of all Nigerians, he said, is unwavering and total, and no criminal group, herdsmen or ethnic militias, will be spared the wrath of the law.

    He added “In its attempt to build a case against the President and tarnish his hard-earned reputation, the newspaper misquoted and removed from the actual context words attributed to him, one or two of which we wish to clarify here.

    “In pointing out that some Nigerians, who dare the desert and the Mediterranean in order to migrate illegally to Europe have to blame themselves, the President had a context, following severe warnings by local authorities that were clearly being ignored.

    “The unfortunate Nigerians were always lured into harmful and unsafe journeys, with high likelihood of death or slavery.

    “The President said the ECOWAS protocol allows freedom of movement but Nigeria will not tolerate the illegality. An administration that paid USD500,000 to evacuate 3,000 stranded Nigerians in Libya and a similar amount to bring back those that went to Russia to watch the World Cup this year cannot, in all fairness, be accused of insensitivity to the plight of illegal migrants.

    “The question to ask the newspaper is simple: are we to say nothing, do nothing when our young citizens make the wrong choice of embarking on journeys that lead to slavery and death in the Mediterranean?

    “Is it out of place to warn of the dangers of such wrong decisions?” he queried

    He said that for the second issue, the President could not have been wrong in drawing attention to negative, abrasive and insensitive reporting by a section of the press that threatens to jeopardize national security by draining the morale of uniformed men and women who are sacrificing their lives to keep the country united.

    “Without a safe, peaceful and stable country, it is difficult to imagine how newspapers can prosper in their trade.

    “Under this administration, no media, no matter how provocative, will be fettered in their freedom of expression. Rather, we will continue to appeal to their conscience to place national interest and professionalism above narrow concerns.

    “The Presidency advises members of the media to exercise restraint and good judgement for the larger good of the society.

    “We must not forget the significant and unsavoury roles played by journalists in the Rwandan genocide of 1994, which claimed almost one million lives. We should all work for the good of the country and all citizens.”

     

  • PDP to N/Assembly: Override Buhari’s veto on Electoral bill

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has called on the National Assembly to override President Muhammadu Buhari’s veto of the Electoral Act 2010 (Amendment) Bill without further delay.

    The bill automatically becomes law if two-thirds of members of the two legislative houses vote against the President’s veto if he failed to assent to it within a given period.

    Read Also:Saraki heads 85-member PDP’s Osun campaign council

    In a statement Monday by the spokesman of the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party said the President’s veto on the bill did not come as a surprise. It added that Buhari’s commitment to a free and fair 2019 election was mere lip service.

    The statement said, “It is now manifestly clear to Nigerians that all the reasons adduced by President Buhari for withholding his assent in the past were lame excuses.

    “The clerical and drafting arguments put forward by President Buhari could not in any way outweigh the importance of amendments meant to engender a free, fair, credible and transparent elections in 2019.

    “The PDP therefore charges the National Assembly to stand with Nigerians in the overall quest for credible elections by immediately overriding President Buhari on the bill”.

  • Saraki heads 85-member PDP’s Osun campaign council

    The President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki is heading an 85-member campaign council of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the September 22 governorship election in Osun State.

    All the party’s serving governors and presidential aspirants are also members of the council. The council, which was inaugurated in Abuja Monday by the national chairman of the PDP, Prince Uche Secondus has since resumed work.

    Read Also:Crisis rocks Imo PDP over alleged alteration of delegate list

    Secondus, while inaugurating the team, described election rigging and vote buying as the worst forms of corruption, warning that the PDP would not tolerate the charade.

    The party chair recalled that the July 14, 2018 governorship election in Ekiti State was marred by vote buying and election rigging and warned that the Ekiti experience must not be allowed to happen in Osun.

    Secondus said, “Enough is enough, PDP will not tolerate Osun being rigged like Ekiti. We have a popular candidate and the performance of the APC ruling government has been awful with months of salaries owed to workers.

    “We are aware that the electoral commission that is supposed to operate as an unbiased umpire in the conduct of elections has suddenly made itself a parastatal of the federal government, conniving with APC and security agencies to exchange results.

    “Even security agencies whose allegiance should be to the constitution and people of Nigeria, have allowed themselves to behave as if they are operatives of the ruling APC.

    “We decided to set up this high powered committee to demonstrate the importance we attach to this election. All our presidential aspirants and some state governors are members, plus all other critical stakeholders from South West and other parts of the country”.

    The party chairman implored lovers of democracy around the world to show more than passing interest in the Osun State governorship election, saying that the APC is not disposed to conducting free and fair election.

    In his remarks, Saraki charged President Muhammadu Buhari to stand on the commitment he made recently to two world leaders that visited the country recently; that he would conduct free, fair and credible election, with Osun as example.

    Saraki said that aside the popularity of the PDP candidate in Osun State, Senator Ademola Adeleke, the people of the state were yearning for change to return their state to the PDP.

  • Buhari administration addressing illegal migration, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has condemned an attempt by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to politicise President Muhammadu Buhari’s statement on illegal migration and trafficking of Nigerians.

    The President reportedly spoke during the visit of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    APC’s Acting National Publicity Secretary Mr. Yekini Nabena, in a statement yesterday in Abuja, said:

    “PDP in its typical insensitive and unguarded stance on matters affecting the country is exploiting an issue that borders on the lives of Nigerians (mostly youths). It is a fact that Nigerian families have suffered grief as a result of deaths and other inhuman treatment that have befallen relatives attempting migration to Europe and other parts of the world.

    “Through support of international agreements/efforts towards curbing illegal migration, repatriation of stranded Nigerian migrants and addressing causes encouraging illegal migration of Nigerians, the President Buhari administration has demonstrated the political will to check the scourge.

    “The pains and suffering most Nigerians go through with the hope of reaching Europe has been well reported. Through relevant agencies, the President Buhari government has continued to mitigate the migration crisis, particularly in Libya and Mediterranean Sea.

    “Citizens will recall the presidential directive for Nigerians to be evacuated from Libya and other locations and be returned home safely. Already in place are interventionist programmes of the Federal Government to enable them start new and productive lives.

    “With unemployment and poverty identified as one of the root causes of illegal migration, the President Buhari administration is using initiatives, such as N-Power, Bank of Industry Youth Entrepreneurship Support, Central Bank of Nigeria support schemes, agriculture, as well as Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) to reduce the rate of unemployment.”

  • Rule of Law in Nigeria

    Speaking at the 58th Annual NBA Conference in Abuja recently, President Muhammadu Buhari proclaimed that “the rule of law must be subject to the supremacy of the nation’s security and national interest”. Grasping the significance of this statement requires recalling a bit of history. When in 1949 George Orwell wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four, his seminal dystopian book, he could have hardly imagined that script being played out fully anywhere.  But in a classic case of life imitating art, Nineteen Eighty-Four transpired in Nigeria in 1984, albeit under a military leader, whose regime lasted till 1985.

    Thirty years later, during his fourth attempt at the running for the presidency, candidate Buhari made a declaration of conversion in his famous address at Chatham House in London on February 26, 2015. He said, “I cannot change the past. But I can change the present and the future. So before you is a former military ruler and a converted democrat, who is ready to operate under democratic norms and is subjecting himself to the rigors of democratic elections for the fourth time.” Ever since the Buhari administration was inaugurated after the 2015 presidential elections, Nigerians have gauged the performance of the current administration not only in terms of three public policy priorities – fighting corruption, tackling security and reviving the economy — that Buhari campaigned on, but also watched his every move on rule of law.

    Global norms relating to rule of law are quite unambiguous. In any true democracy, certain creeds and tenets stand inviolable. Of the lot, the separation of powers and respect of ordered liberties top the list.  As experts have observed, these narratives are “foundational and settled concepts” of any worthwhile democracy.  Section 1(1) of the 1999 Constitution clearly states inter alia, that “all people and institutions are subject to and accountable to the law.”  No exceptions. Security and national interest ought not to precede legalities that derive from the constitution. It is a false choice to pit national security or national interest against the rule of law. Citizens in a democracy are entitled to both.

    At a time when the nation should be embarking on modernisation of its economy and strengthening the foundations of its democracy, we are witnessing a severe reverse, especially in regard to the latter. The signs have come in increments but the direction seems clear enough. Nigerians can still recall the invasion of the residences of some serving judicial officers by security agents; the invasion of a High Court premises in Rivers State in May; the non-compliance by government agents with court orders of habeas corpus and indeed, the growing contempt of court orders by the Attorney General of the Federation and other appointive and elected officials. Former NSA Sambo Dasuki and Islamic Cleric El Zakzaky have been in detention for over three years and well beyond what the constitution permits.

    Not long ago, there was illegal siege laid over the National Assembly Complex by armed and hooded security agents on August 7 – an action that was quickly reversed – and the freezing of Ekiti State, Benue State and Akwa Ibom State bank accounts.  All these have and are happening in a democratic Nigeria.

    Yet, what separates a well-functioning democracy from non-democracies or illiberal democracies is the rule of law. In its broadest and best construction, the rule of law means that all persons are equal before the law, constitutional norms are supreme and must be strictly adhered to, and when there is doubt about the application of the law; the courts are the only arm of government that is empowered to interpret and clarify the situation.

    Nigeria isn’t alone in manifesting certain governance limitations in a democratic dispensation.  Its current governance leaning mimics discomforting trends elsewhere; “the discomforting truth is that some amount of ethnic nationalism is not just tolerated, but accepted as completely legitimate.”  This erodes the very foundation of Nigeria’s nationhood, more so its quest for true federalism.  This reality continues to fuel calls for restructuring. Issues such as these cannot be quelled or overcome by ignoring the rule of law or subjugating it to the whims of elected and appointed officials.

    Nigeria, having survived thus far as a political entity, even overcoming a civil war, represents a triumph of faith over resilience and experience. Faith in Nigeria cannot depend on good will or benevolence of leaders. Hope and faith in a nation are cultivated and nurtured and not forced. That requires fair, even and consistent application of rule of law. This critically depends on ensuring that institutions that are designed to act as guardians of rule of law function as intended. This is the premise for the observation that great nations rely not on the will of great men or women but on the reliability and effectiveness of national institutions.

     

    • Otobo is at the Global Governance Institute,

      Brussels.

    • Obaze is a public policy expert based in Awka,

     Anambra State.

  • The legality of Executive Orders

    THE other day, the Presidency announced, with gusto, that President Muhammadu Buhari had signed Executive Order 6 into law. Executive Order 6 means there have been five earlier Executive Orders! Executive Order 6 whose short title, “Preservation of Suspicious Assets Connected with Corruption and Other Related Offences”. The “Order”, smacks of criminal law legislation, enacted by the president, who is the head of the executive arm of government!

    I submit, to start with, that the Order which seeks to empower the president or the agencies of the federal government to impound any landed property that is subject to litigation pending the determination of such a suit by a court of competent jurisdiction, contravenes all the known laws in the democratic world, where the rule of law and the due process of law hold sway. It stands the democratic logic on its head: presume guilty before being proved innocent!

    The doctrine of separation of powers among the three arms of government—the legislature, the executive and the judicature—is rigidly enshrined, respectively, in sections 4, 5 and 6 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as altered), which the president solemnly swore to uphold. This doctrine was adopted to provide checks and balances among the three branches of government, a fortiori, to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power.

    In Myers v. United States 272 US 52, Brandeis J. of the US Supreme Court stated, with approval, that the “The doctrine of separation of powers was adopted by the Convention of 1787 not to promote efficiency but to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power.” This case, a locus classicus, has had a hortatory effect on a long line of Nigeria’s Supreme Court cases. In Unongo v. Aper Aku (1983) 2 SCNLR 332 @361, for instance, the Supreme Court, per Kayode Eso (JSC, as he then was), observed: “The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1979 (read 1999) … is very unique, compared with the previous constitutions, in that the executive, the legislature and the judicature are each established as a separate organ of government. There is what can be termed a cold, calculating rigidity in this separation…”

     Aside from the executive’s involvement in the legislative process, whereby the president assents to a Bill that has been duly passed by the two chambers of the National Assembly to become law, I know no zone of twilight in which the executive and the legislature possess concurrent authority to legislate. So, from where does the Nigerian president derive the authority to legislate, interpret and enforce laws, which executive orders and proclamations are?

    The president’s advisers would readily point at section 5 (1) (a) of the 1999 Constitution, which perspicuously provides that “…the executive powers of the federation—(a) shall be vested in the president…”, subject (it should be noted) to the provisions of the constitution and to the provisions of any laws made by the National Assembly. That section further states that the executive powers vested in the president could also be exercised by either the vice-president, any of the ministers of government and officers in the public service of the federation. Quite clearly, it would be asinine to suggest that the vice-president, the ministers and officers in the public service of the federation are directly or indirectly constitutionally empowered to issue executive orders and proclamations having the force of law!

    Section 5 of the 1999 Constitution can, therefore, not be the source of the executive orders and proclamations issued by the Nigerian president.

    In all probability, the president has decided to take a leaf out of the practice in the US, where the presidents issue executive orders and proclamations with abandon, even if unconstitutionally. US presidents have based their executive orders on Section 1 of Article II of the US 1787 Constitution, which nebulously provides: “The executive power shall be vested in a president of the United States of America”. That provision has been described as being maddeningly vague. In the epic case of Youngstown Sheet & Tube v. Sawyer 343 US 579 (1952), the court found that the president had acted without statutory or constitutional authority. Besides, the court declined to entertain the contention that presidential power to issue executive orders should be implied from the aggregate of his powers under the constitution. The court further explained that the president’s power to issue executive orders must stem from either an act of Congress or from the constitution itself.

    However, Dames & Moore v. Reagan 453 US 654 (1981) dealt with President Jimmy Carter’s Executive Order freezing Iranian assets in the US, in November, 1979. The court, in that case, found that Congress had acquiesced in the president’s action and, accordingly, ruled in favour of that Order because, traditionally, executive orders and proclamations involving foreign policy and security are given great leeway by the courts. Other than such issues, US Courts have severely criticized the issuance of executive orders by American presidents. Justice William Howard Taft, the only individual to have served as both the president and the Chief Justice of the US, in “Our Chief Magistrate and His Powers”, (New York, 1916), posited: “The true view of executive functions is, as I conceive it, that the president can exercise no power which cannot be fairly and reasonably traced to some specific grant of power or justly implied and included within such express grant as proper and necessary in its exercise. Such specific grant must be either in the federal constitution or in an act of Congress passed in pursuance thereof.”

    A long line of the US Supreme Court cases, now loci classici, reprobates the whole concept of executive orders and proclamations as they are neither specifically provided for in the 1787 Constitution (as amended) nor defined in any statute, authorizing quasi-executive legislation.

    Executive orders in the US are generally directed at, and govern actions by, government officials and agencies, unlike in Nigeria, where executive orders are targeted at individuals directly, thereby flagrantly infringing on their fundamental human rights. If US presidents issue executive orders, they also claim to rely on a Congressional Statute, the Neutrality Act (1794), which gave the executive the power to prosecute those who violated President Washington’s proclamations. There is no such statute in Nigeria. So, what is the source of executive orders in Nigeria? One of our problems is that Nigerians, including lawyers, are hardly litigious. So, every dictatorial autocratic act of government goes!

    It is sad that Nigerian leaders luxuriate in photocopying the negative aspects of the US Constitution as though Nigeria and America shared a community of socio-cultural and politico-economic antecedents, ignoring such positive areas of the US Constitution as a rigid adherence to the Rule of Law and the Due Process of the law (usually set aside in Nigeria, with abandon and without demur, in favour of “national interest”), the democratic principle, respect for the citizens’ fundamental human rights and human dignity, catering for the welfare and security of the  citizens, etc.

    Executive Order 6 is a classic example of Nigerian leaders’ penchant for setting all democratic principles at nought; it is designed to usurp the functions of the legislature (making laws) and the judicature (interpreting and enforcing laws) contrary to section 36 (5) of the 1999 Constitution (as altered), which stipulates that “Every person who is charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed to be innocent until he is proved guilty.”

     

    • Akiri is a Lagos based attorney.