Tag: Reps

  • Reps panel: we won’t restrict agencies, NGOs from rebuilding Northeast

    Members of the House of Representatives ad hoc Committee on Media and Public Affairs yesterday said the House will not restrict well-meaning humanitarian agencies and non-governmental organisations from helping to rebuild the Northeast, which has been devastated by Boko Haram insurgency.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Sanni Zoro, had in statement last week said the House Committee on IDPs would ensure that there would be a restriction on the unchecked influx of humanitarian agencies into the Northeast for security reasons.

    However, a new statement by three other members of the ad hoc committee – Abdulrazak Namdas, Rimamnde Shawulu Kwewum and Mark Gbillah – said no such action was in the offing.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to the news items published last week to the effect that the House of Representatives was worried about the ‘unseeingly unchecked influx of Foreign Non-Governmental Organisations into the Northeast’.

    “The news report further said that the influx ‘portends a security risk’. According to the news report credited to Hon. Sani Zorro, the newly created House Standing Committee on IDPs, Refuges and Initiatives on the Northeast zone would ‘beam its searchlight into their activities’.

    “The House of Representatives would like to assure Nigerians and the international community and particularly the people of the Northeast region that the House would not abridge the rights of well-meaning people to give help or prohibit the traumatised peoples of the Northeast from receiving assistance to rebuild their lives and communities.

    “As a lawmaking institution, the House of Representatives respects the laws of Nigeria and all the international conventions and treaties that the Nigeria state is a signatory to. We would therefore not be putting in place new measures that are contrary to the extant laws of Nigeria.

    “The creation of the new committee only underscores the seriousness with which the House and the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara, take the issue of the Northeast. The Northeast situation has been on the frontburner at the House of Representatives. The Legislative Agenda, as adopted by the House, sets out the Northeast situation as a serious issue.

    “The House also, unanimously adopted a motion, which among other resolutions, sought the cooperation of all well-meaning people in the world to join hands to reconstruct the Northeast, rehabilitate the several millions of people displaced by the insurgency and reintegrate communities that have been ravaged by the activities of insurgents.

    “It is therefore a welcome development that the call of the House has been heeded by people from around the world. The House would welcome more well-meaning people who will help in this regard. It is important to place on record that the new standing committee came about also as a result of the request of the International Development Partners, who suggested that legislative oversight is necessary for the reconstruction and rebuilding process of the Northeast to be transparent and accountable.

    “Given the fact that Nigeria today hosts about five million internally displaced persons, the second biggest host, next to Syria, the House decided to create the  standing committee, whose responsibility includes the Northeast reconstruction initiatives.”

    It added: “The House of Representatives would, therefore, like to assure all civil society groups, development partners and well-meaning individuals that as the bastion of democracy, the House, which is committed to the Northeast reconstruction and rehabilitation, will continue to welcome partners in accordance with extant laws and International conventions and treaties.”

  • Reps to probe Jonathan’s N18.7b railway project

    Reps to probe Jonathan’s N18.7b railway project

    House of Representatives’ members have mandated a yet-to-be constituted ad hoc committee to probe President Goodluck Jonathan administration’s N18.7 billion railway project between 2010 and 2014.

    The committee will investigate the Federal Ministry of Transport, the management of the Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (SURE-P) and the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) as well as the contractors handling the rail rehabilitation project.

    The lawmakers, who voted overwhelmingly for the adoption of the motion sponsored by Solomon Ahwinahwi (PDP, Delta), regretted that despite sinking billions of naira to upgrade the country’s rail transportation, there was little success to show for it.

    Ahwinahwi explained that the funding of the project through budgetary appropriation, foreign loans and SURE-P funds, should not be ignored following the dismal result of the project.

    He raised concern about the level of performance of the rail track contracts, particularly the 463-kilometre Port Harcourt-Makurdi rail track rehabilitation that incurred N19,963,752,330.20.

    Of the amount, he explained that the NRC paid N4,017,054,841 and SURE-P paid N5,594,021,377.07.

    He said: “With these payments, only about three kilometres of ballast has been done with 400 kilometres left undone despite the total money released so far amounting to N9,661,076,318.

    “We are not unaware of the report of a project monitoring committee that not more than three kilometres of ballast has been done on the entire track network from Port Harcourt-Enugu-Makurdi of a total of 463 kilometres of rail track, thus the N9,661,076,218.01 expended cannot be justified.

    “Furthermore, the Abuja-Kaduna rail project had $841 million as the project cost, out of which the China Exim bank provided a loan of $500 million with about 25 per cent of the project completed when the entire project was envisaged to have been completed in 2014.

    “We are equally aware that the Lagos-Jebba track rehabilitation project was awarded at a cost of N12,293,390,000 with the payment made so far at N11,699,999,111 without any tangible work done.

    The lawmaker added: “Again, it is a fact that the Jebba-Kano track rehabilitation project had a contract sum of N12,169,237,337 with the payment of N10,423,318,023 without any appreciable work done.

    “It is the same story with the Zaria-Kaura track rehabilitation project with N1,147,471,038 paid out of N3,206,241,650.

    “We were reliably informed that procurement and rehabilitation of wagons, coaches and locomotives (narrow gauge) were projected at N6,502,914,067 with N4,071,008,628.64 so far paid. Kuru to Maiduguri track rehabilitation project has gulped N6,499,618,120 out of N23,720,359,045; all to no avail.

    “Also, N718,205,192 has so far been paid for the track rehabilitation consultancy fee of N19,963,752,330.20.

    “It should be of concern to all Nigerians that despite the billions sunk into this project, there was little or nothing to show for it as the coaches and locomotives running on these tracks are still a relic of modern railway transport.”

    The motion was adopted after it was put to a voice vote by the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara.

    In another motion, the lawmakers also ordered the probe of the sale of power assets by the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) during the last administration.

    An ad hoc committee to be set up by the House will “investigate the processes and sale of all aspects of the power assets in Nigeria by the BPE to determine if there were malpractices and misconduct in the exercise.”

    The committee is also to determine whether the appropriate value was attached to the assets and if any person breached the law in the eventual sale of the assets of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

    The resolution was sequel to the passage of a motion titled: “Need to Investigate the Alleged Non- Transparent and Fraudulent Sale of  Power Assets by the BPE” sponsored by a member, Chike Okafor.

    Okafor, while presenting the motion, noted that the sale of PHCN assets did not pass the transparency test and that Nigerians disengaged from their jobs in the privatisation process were unfairly treated.

    According to the lawmaker, there was lack of improvement in power supply despite the privatisation of the power sector.

    When Dogara  called for a voice vote on the motion, it was passed unopposed by members.

  • Reps calls for national policy on Hepatitis B

    Reps calls for national policy on Hepatitis B

    • Raise alarm over 23million Nigerians affected by virus 

    The House of Representatives has raised the alarm over the prevalence of Hepatitis B Virus in the country.

    The lawmakers said it has become expedient for the federal government to formulate a national policy as a result of the prevailing infection rate of 13.7percent in the country.

    According to the House, 23 million Nigerians are currently afflicted by the virus, while calling for an immediate, deliberate and actionable plan against the dreaded disease.

    The decision of the lawmakers followed the adoption of a motion sponsored by Hajia Aishatu Dukku (APC Gombe), who said a policy similar to that on HIV and AIDS is urgently required, as the number of people affected has made Nigeria one of the countries with the highest incidences of HBV infection globally.

    Dukku further noted that the creation of public awareness on hepatitis and the integration of the Hepatitis B vaccine into the National Immunisation Programmes would go a long way in curbing the spread of the disease.

    She said: “Despite the fact that Hepatitis B causes chronic liver disease, it has received little or no attention in Nigeria, thereby making it a major public health hazard in the country. The virus was epidemic in nature, as carriers are often unaware of their status and can therefore infect others through blood or bodily fluids exchange.

    “The most common of hepatitis infection can cause long term disease, chronic liver disease and severe scarring of the liver if detected before it progresses to acute liver infection level and is treatable with the possibility of the life of the victim being prolonged. However, only 20percent might progress to the liver disease stage after treatment compared to nearly 100 per cent of HIV patients.”

    The motion was unanimously adopted when it was put to a voice vote.

  • Reps urge FG to rehabilitate dilapidated Ondo roads

    The House of Representatives on Thursday, urged the Federal Government to rehabilitate two dilapidated roads in Ondo State to curb incessant accidents and loss of lives.

    This was sequel to a motion by Rep. Babatunde Kolawole (Ondo-APC), who said that Owo-Iyere-Ipele-Ago, Alao-Owoani-Idoani-Ifira-Sosan-Isua road and Owo-Oba- Ajegunle-Akungba-Iwaro-Oke-Oka-Okhia-Epinmi-Isua road were in deplorable states.

    He said the roads were arterial and important to the socio-economic development of the state and its environs.

    Kolawale said that the roads also linked the western part of the country to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    According to him, the roads have deteriorated in the past 20 years as a result of abandonment, thus leading to accidents that have claimed several lives.

    Adopting the motion unanimously, the house urged the Federal Ministry of Works to include a proposal for the construction of the roads in the 2016 budget estimates.

    It also urged the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) to, in the interim rehabilitate the Owo-Iyere-Ipele-Ago, Alao-Owoani-Idoani-Ifira-Sosan-Isua road to facilitate easy movement.

  • Reps to probe AMCON’s N5trillion debts

    Reps to probe AMCON’s N5trillion debts

    The House of Representatives is to investigate the huge debt profile of the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON).

    It will set up an ad hoc committee, which will also examine whether the acquisition and sale of assets, banks, shares and landed property by AMCON was consistent with due process and extant laws.

    The committee will ascertain if the operations of AMCON are devoid of fraud, and determine the losses, if any, suffered by Nigeria as a result.

    The committee is to report back to the House within six weeks.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to the passage of a motion by a member, Hon. Gabriel Onyenweife who claimed that AMCON had accumulated over $25 billion (about N5trillion) debts as against the mandate of a debt profile of N800 billion as a ceiling, and thus has exceeded its debt ceiling  by N4.2trillion.

    “The AMCON balance sheet has a shortfall of N3.8 trillion ($19 billion) and that the geometric accumulation of debts by AMCON will no doubt endanger the dwindling national reserves put at $30 billion  since the Federal Government is the guarantor of AMCON bonds as enshrined in Section 27 of AMCON Act, 2010,” he said.

    The lawmaker said the accumulated debts of AMCON in five years were more than the debts owed by the Federal Government to the Paris Club of creditors in 50 years.

    He said: ”Over N2trillion was lost in the not-too-transparent process adopted in the sale of some banks, including Oceanic Bank, Intercontinental Bank, Enterprise Bank, and MainStreet Bank.”

    The lawmaker alleged that the disposal of assets, such as shares landed property, plant and equipment acquired by AMCON was shrouded in secrecy.

    “Most of the assets disposed were alleged to have been sold to cronies and close associates of the officials of the corporation without recourse to due process or extant laws.

    “If these practices of AMCON are not urgently addressed , its negative impact on the banking sector, which is the soul of the Nigerian economy, will not only impact negatively but will also jeopardise its health,” he said.

    The motion was passed when the Speaker, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, called for a vote.

  • Reps leadership: Tambuwal, Dogara and Gbajabiamila

    Reps leadership: Tambuwal, Dogara and Gbajabiamila

    Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State stoked controversy again when he indirectly claimed credit for the victory of Hon Yakubu Dogara in the June 9 leadership election of the House of Representatives. The governor made the claim when he received visiting Sayawa leaders from the Speaker’s constituency of Bogoro/Tafawa Balewa in Bauchi State. His main reason for backing Hon Dogara, he disclosed, was the Speaker’s competence. There is little in his summation of the June 9 election that showed Mallam Tambuwal was  completely honest, nor that even if he could be so regarded, that he spoke wisely, minded his logic, or paid heed to the wider import of his choices. Hon Dogara’s Sayawa leaders were clear who they thought championed the cause of their son, and they travelled to Sokoto to let the world know, and to pay homage.

    Hear Mallam Tambuwal: “Eight out of ten members of the Body of Principal Officers in the 7th Assembly supported Dogara’s aspiration. Only Hon Femi (Gbajabiamila) and Hon Datti Ahmad supported Femi. I have strong affinity with Hon Femi. He was closer to me than Dogara. But when talking about leadership and collective decisions, sentiments have to be put aside. I’m not here to tell you that my support made Dogara the Speaker, no. Two things made Dogara to become the Speaker, one is God and two, Dogara’s competence. The acknowledgement of Dogara’s competence did not start with me. It started from the time of Hon Patricia Etteh and Hon Dimeji Bankole when they entrusted him with a sensitive position of the Chairman of House Services Committee.”

    The governor continues: “The committee is one of the most sensitive in the legislature. Apart from taking care of the welfare of members, the committee oversees all procurement processes. As the Speaker, I only did what my predecessors did by giving Dogara this sensitive position. No person, as far as I know, has ever served as chairman of the House Services committee in two dispensations. Dogara broke that jinx. All through my tenure, I brought Dogara close to me because I found in him a person who is competent, accommodating, and with capacity to lead. Anyone doubting Dogara’s ability to lead, should ask members of the 7th Assembly how he handled their matter. So we supported Dogara not for any reason but because he was competent to deliver on any task given to him.”

    Mallam Tambuwal spoke engagingly to the Sayawa leaders; but he spoke fulsomely like someone whose conscience was troubled, partly indicating that he seemed oblivious of the wider ramifications of his statement. He must be a politician of enormous courage and indifference to anchor his backing for Dogara purely on competence. For a man with presidential ambition, and one who admitted he was closer to Hon Femi Gbajabiamila, it is still mystifying why he discountenanced that closeness and the support the Surulere, Lagos Rep gave him during his leadership of the lower chamber to back a different horse. In his address to the Sayawa leaders, Mallam Tambuwal was in effect saying that Hon Dogara was more competent than Hon Gbajabiamila, a fact he believed was reinforced by the support given the new Speaker by eight out of 10 principal leaders of the 7th House of Representatives.

    Stung to the quick, and probably miffed by the suggestion that Hon Dogara was more competent than he, Hon Gbajabiamila retorted  that the God factor in his opponent’s victory was a more rational explanation for the outcome of the election. Just as it is not known what other motives really propelled Mallam Tambuwal to back Hon Dogara, it is also not quite certain that Hon Gbajabiamila told the whole truth on the value of Tambuwal’s influence on the election. Two facts are, however, obvious from the Dogara victory. The competence argument advanced by Mallam Tambuwal appears far-fetched. Given the margin of the Dogara victory (182 to 174) — or just eight votes — the vaunted influence of the eight out of 10 principal officers of the 7th Rep celebrated by Mallam Tambuwal may be a red herring. Second, the closeness of the Rep leadership election, though it ended in defeat for Hon Gbajabiamila, testified to his popularity and strength. Had Senator Bukola Saraki not become Senate President, thereby distorting the zoning arrangement in the National Assembly, Hon Gbajabiamila would probably have won, especially given his strong showing on June 9.

    There were insinuations that Mallam Tambuwal backed Hon Dogara probably because he was unhappy with the party’s preference for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, now president. Some staunch Southwest APC members had bought a nomination form for Mallam Tambuwal, and for a moment, it appeared the party’s leadership was poised to back him all the way. He was, however, unceremoniously dumped after a lot of political calculations and jostling. Mallam Tambuwal is thought to be still smarting from the incident. In addition, the Sokoto governor is also thought to be anxious to join others in curbing the influence of the national leader of the APC, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who seemed to loom rather large over the party’s structure and ambitions. Mallam Tambuwal has declined absolutely to address these suppositions. Instead, he merely focused on what he described as Hon Dogara’s competence. Few politicians believe him.

    The implications of the National Assembly leadership elections will doubtless manifest in the coming months and years. Reacting to Mallam Tambuwal’s explanation on the outcome of the Reps leadership election, Hon Gbajabiamila said he wished the Sokoto governor well in his future endeavours. Many take this as a veiled indication that  should Mallam Tambuwal need the support of Hon Gbajabiamila and possibly the Southwest sometime in the future, he would find it tough going. It is however too soon to draw such inferences and conclusions.  Instead, the question to ask is whether in the political circumstances surrounding the Reps leadership election of June 9 Mallam Tambuwal acted with enough discretion and foresight to keep his presidential ambition alive for approximately the next four years. No conclusions can be drawn with any certainty.

    What is, however, clear is that Mallam Tambuwal may not have acted with substantial wisdom in retaining his friends and courting those outside his close circle of friends. Even if he was right to conclude that Hon Dogara was more competent than Hon Gbajabiamila, as an ambitious politician, he should have asked himself whether the call he was about to make was politically expedient for both his present and future needs. Given the closeness of the June 9 vote, it does appear there is no settling the precedence between Hon Dogara and Hon Gbajabiamila in terms of competence. Worrisomely too, Mallam Tambuwal’s choices may signify a hitherto hidden part of his person and psychological make-up. Was it possible that when they backed him for the Reps leadership election in 2011, the progressives in the then Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) didn’t know him as much as they thought? Just as the drawn-out conflict between the pro-June 12 activists and the Gen Sani Abacha military government  in the 90s exposed the inner but appalling character of many otherwise respected Nigerian politicians, especially from the Southwest, the June 9 Reps leadership election may have exposed the true character, ideology and preferences of many supposedly principled and brilliant politicians.

    It also took the election of the Christian and South-South Goodluck Jonathan in 2011 and his reelection campaign in 2015 to expose the true nature,  prejudices and poor judgement of many southern and especially Southwest politicians. After Dr Jonathan, Nigerian politics, not to say Southwest politics, is unlikely to be the same again. After the June 9 National Assembly leadership elections , especially Mallam Tambuwal’s controversial ratiocination, Nigerian politics and power relations in the legislature and elsewhere at the national level are certain to be affected or even altered in ways many politicians cannot begin to imagine.

  • N120bn Budget:  Reps set up committee to assess NASS’ needs

    N120bn Budget: Reps set up committee to assess NASS’ needs

    House of Representatives  Speaker, Yakubu Dogara, yesterday inaugurated  a committee to conduct a Needs Assessment of the chamber / National Assembly.

    The committee, which is made up of eminent Nigerians and representatives of  civil society organizations,  is to “judiciously determine the proper cost of running the legislative arm of government to enable it play its constitutionally-assigned responsibilities.”

    Dogara  said at the inauguration that for the legislative arm to function effectively, resources must be made available by the executive.

    “However, resources that may be made available would be based on the actual needs and not greed of the Legislature. There has been no study or assessment of what the legislature needs to perform optimally in Nigeria. We have all been making, at best, educated guesswork on whether the legislature is adequately funded or not,” he said.

    “An appropriate Needs Assessment may well find out that the Legislature in Nigeria is overfunded or that it is underfunded. There should be an empirical and objective study to determine this.

    “It is as a result, that the House of Representatives made a commitment in its Legislative Agenda to set up an Independent Committee comprising – Civil Society Organisations (CSO’s), independent Groups and professional bodies with the support of international development partners, to conduct a Needs Assessment of the actual requirements of running and maintaining the institution of the House of Representatives/National Assembly in Nigeria in order to carry out its legislative functions.”

    The terms of reference of the committee include:

    What it would cost the House of Representatives and the National Assembly to conduct Public Hearings on the bills and other legislative measures passed by both chambers, including live coverage of these activities; what it would cost to communicate all its proceedings and activities to its different constituencies and the general public;  what it would cost to build, equip and maintain all the infrastructure, like offices of the bureaucracy, Members, Committee Rooms, Hearing Rooms; modernization of Chambers of both Houses, electronic communications infrastructure, e- parliament facilities; what it would cost the National Assembly to conduct proper policy and budget oversight on the executive branch, including all its agencies in order to expose corruption, inefficiency or waste and what it would cost to take important legislative measures down to the grassroots, to members constituencies.

    Members of the Committee include Clement Nwankwo       (PLAC), who is the Chairman; National Institute for Legislative Studies (Secretariat);  Representative of the Clerk to the National Assembly,  Austin Alegeh; NBA President or Representative, Otunba Olufemi  Deru (ICAN President) or Representative,  Waheed Odusile (NUJ President)    or Representative, Elias Mbam (RMAFC)      or Representative, Senator Ita Enang        and Hon Albert Sam-Tsokwa.

    Others are Prof Mike Obadan, Dr Kabiru Mato,  Seun Onigbinde (BUDGIT), Idayat Hassan (CDD), Samson Itodo (YIAGA), Ben Arikpo (FEPAR), Saudatu Mahdi (WRAPA),  Mimidoo Achapa (WREP),  Clara Barnet (DFID)    and  Bolaji Kehinde (UNDP).

  • Reps to investigate Agip, other oil firms

    The House of Representatives has resolved to investigate the state and age of the operational equipment of oil- producing companies in the country.

    The resolution, which was passed sequel to the adoption of the prayers of a motion by a member Goodluck Opia (PDP-Imo), is meant to reduce the spate of oil spill and environmental pollution in the Niger Delta region.

    While arguing on the need to investigate oil pollution in Ohaji-Egbema and Oguta Local Government Areas of Imo state, the lawmaker described the affected areas as operational base of Agip Oil Company.

    He pointed out that the areas suffered avoidable oil spillage and fire explosions.

    According to him, there is the need to investigate the state of equipment used by Agip Oil Company in its 50 years of operations in the communities.

    Opia told the House that “virtually all oil companies operating in the Niger-Delta region use substandard and outdated equipment that are unsafe and pollute the environment and they also have little regard for the safety of lives and property of the host communities.”

    While supporting the motion, another member, Aliyu Magaji (APC-Jigawa) said there was need to constantly monitor activities of the oil companies to ensure compliance with the extant laws regulating their operations.

    Magaji said: “There is need to find out if these oil companies are actually doing what they are supposed to do.

    “There is also need to ensure their facilities are monitored to guarantee they are up to standard and this is crucial in averting poor maintenance services.”

    However, Lovette Idisi, (Delta-PDP) cautioned that it would be judgmental to state that the equipment used by Agip Oil Company are obsolete, adding that it would be putting the cart before the horse as the proposed investigation was yet to commence.

    Speaker Yakubu Dogara in his ruling said the investigation into the remote and immediate cause of the incident will be carried out by an ad hoc committee to be set up by the House.

    The committee, he said, will also investigate damages caused to the host communities and determine the state of operational equipment used by Agip Oil Company and other oil producing companies in the affected areas.

    The committee has four weeks to report back to the lower chamber.

  • Reps intervene in sack of CRIN workers

    Reps intervene in sack of CRIN workers

    The House of Representatives has received the petition of 277 staff of the Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN) in Ibadan, the Oyo State capitalwho were allegedly illegally dismissed.

    January 24 and January 27, 2014, some workers comprising mainly junior staff of the institute were issued sack letters by the management.

    A member of the House of Representatives representing Oluyole Federal Constituency, Olusunbo Olugbemi, told reporters over the weekend, that the House would investigate the matter .

    In the petition, the workers are accusing the Executive Director of the Institute, Prof. Malacky Akoroda, of harassment and intimidation.

    Olugbemi said the House send the petition the appropriate committee for investigation.

  • Reps: we’ve  powers to confirm  Service chiefs

    Reps: we’ve powers to confirm Service chiefs

    The House of Representatives yesterday said it had powers to confirm Service chiefs.

    The House condemned the impression that only the Senate was empowered to screen and confirm the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) and the Service chiefs.

    The House said it had the constitutional power to screen and confirm the appointment of the military chiefs as well.

    Chairman of the Ad hoc Committee set up by the House to screen and confirm the military chiefs, Garba Datti, while presenting the report of the Committee on the floor yesterday said Section 18 (1) of Armed Forces Act empowers the National Assembly and not the Senate alone to carry out that particular functuon.

    He said the confirmation of the appointment of the military Chiefs was not in the same category as the confirmation of Ministers and others that concerns only the Senate.

    The single resolution of the Committee was approved at the Committee of the Whole House chaired by the Deputy Speaker, Lasun Yussuf.

    In a related development, the Speaker  urged members to disregard messages making the round about the activities of Selection Committee of the House.

    A member of the majority party in the House All Progressives Congress (APC) from Imo State, Austine Chukwukere yesterday asked the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara to revisit the issue.

    He complained that the Southeast geo-political zone was excluded from the leadership positions in contravention of the federal character principle as recognized by the constitution.

    The crisis was resolved last week following a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari and the leadership of the party.

    Chukwukere, who raised the issue in a point of order said, “For the first time, federal character was neglected in the selection of Principal officers.

    The Speaker sustained the point of order, while ruling that a Committee of the leadership of the House would examine the complaints to see if any law was breached concerning the issue.