Tag: Rivers Assembly

  • Rivers Assembly elects four principal officers

    The Rivers State House of Assembly yesterday elected four of its members as principal officers.

    They are: Martins Amaewhule, from Obio/Akpor Constituency I (House Leader); Lolo Denabari, from Gokana (Deputy House Leader); Evans Bipi, from Ogu/Bolo (House Whip) and Major Jack, from Akuku Toru I (Deputy House Whip).

    In a unanimous voice vote, four of the former principal officers were returned unopposed.

    The Assembly also cleared four would-be commissioners, whose names Governor Nyesom Wike sent to them for approval.

    They are: Emma Aguma, Emma Okah, Onimi Briggs Jack and Dr Fred Kpakol.

    The lawmakers approved seven Special Advisers (SAs) for the governor.

    The Assembly got a letter from Wike, requesting for an mendment to the state’s High Court Law 2015.

    If amended, the court’s Registrar would no longer be empowered to assign cases to judges.

    The law was amended last year by the Rotimi Amaechi administration in the heat of the political crisis in the state.

    The Chief Registrar of the High Court was given the power to assign cases to judges.

    The Assembly adjourned sitting till next Monday.

  • Rivers Assembly threatens govt officials with warrant of arrest

    The Rivers State House of Assembly has threatened to issue a warrant of arrest against any official who fails to honour its invitation to its sitting tomorrow.

    Deputy Speaker Leyii Kwanee, who presided over the plenary yesterday, issued the threat, following the failure of some commissioners and heads of corporations to honour their invitation.

    Kwanee said: “If any person wants to test the will of this place, on Thursday at 10am, we will be compelled to issue a warrant of arrest. No one can test the will of the Assembly, no matter how short its time.”

    The House of Assembly, on Monday, summoned the Commissioners for Finance, Agriculture, Power, Health, Tourism, Information, Budget, Works and Transport.

    The Heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), who were also invited are: the Accountant-General, Chairmen of Board of Internal Revenue, Rivers State Assembly Service Commission and Secondary School Management Board.

    But, yesterday, only the Commissioners for Transport, Budget and Power and the Chairman of Rivers State Assembly Service Commission, appeared before the lawmakers.

    The summon was on the state economy and conflicting reports from  the government, which they said were “very embarrassing” to them.

    The lawmakers’ action followed a motion brought by Deputy House Leader Nname Ewor, on those matters.

    During the yesterday’s plenary, Kwanee suggested that the House of Assembly should adjourn till the next sitting to allow other officers invited to appear.

    They noted that some of the commissioners wrote for permission.

    But his suggestion was opposed by some lawmakers, particularly Deputy House Leader Ewor, representing Ahoada East Constituency I, and Benibo Anabraba, representing Akuku-Toru Constituency II.

    Ewor, who presented the motion, said: “If we want to screen them, they will rush down from any part of the world to attend because they want to get a job. This is a matter of state urgent importance. I do not know what is more important to them than this. We need to do something so that we can be taken seriously.”

     

     

     

  • Rivers Assembly suspends three council chairmen

    The Rivers State House of Assembly yesterday suspended three local government areas’ caretaker committee chairmen.

    The chairmen are: Cassidy Ikegbidi of Ahoada East; Ojukaye Flag-Amachree of Asari-Toru and Derick Mene of Khana local government areas.

    The chairmen were suspended for reasons bordering on insecurity and alleged financial mismanagement.

    The Assembly set up an ad hoc committee to investigate the activities of the suspended chairmen.

    It summoned, yesterday, nine commissioners and four heads of ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) to appear before it today (Tuesday) by 10am prompt over the economy of the state.

    They are: Commissioners for Finance, Agriculture, Power, Health, Tourism, Information, Budget, Works and Transport.

    Heads of MDAs invited are: The Accountant-General, Chairmen of Board of Internal Revenue, Rivers State Assembly Service Commission and Secondary School Management Board.

    The Assembly said it took the decisions following two motions presented by Deputy Leader Nname Ewor, representing Ahoada East.

    The Assembly expressed worry that while the state government claimed it had paid salaries of civil servants up to March, there were conflicting reports against the claim.

    Ewor, in the motion on the suspension of the chairmen, noted that insecurity and financial recklessness were common in the three local government areas.

    He said: “In these three councils, human lives have been rendered insignificant and financial frugality has been jettisoned to the waste bin. The local government areas are drifting to the Hobbesian state of nature.”

    Deputy Speaker Leyii Kwanee, who presided over yesterday’s sitting, said the Assembly’s decisions were not meant to witch-hunt anybody but to ensure justice.

    Kwanee, who represents Khana II, said reports on the state’s economy was worrisome, adding that it was important for the government officers to be summoned.

    He said: “As an arm of government, we are not out to witch-hunt the Executive, but we are out to straighten things. You are aware that the Seventh Assembly is gradually coming to an end. I want to tell you that it is better started than never.

    “We have been seeing a lot of conflicting reports. The other day, the Commissioner for Information (Mrs. Ibim Semenitari) was on air, saying workers had been paid up to March. So, we feel very embarrassed as an arm of government.”

  • Rivers Assembly suspends three council chairmen

    Summons nine commissioners, others over state’s economy

    The Rivers State House of Assembly on Monday suspended three Local Government Areas’ Caretaker Committee Chairmen.

    The suspended chairmen are – Cassidy Ikegbidi  (Ahoada East), Ojukaye Flag-Amachree ( Asari-Toru) and Derick Mene  (Khana).

    They were suspended for reasons that bordered on insecurity and financial mismanagement.

    The Assembly has therefore set up an ad hoc committee to investigate activities of the suspended council chiefs.

    The House has also summoned nine commissioners and four heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to appear before it on Tuesday over the economy of the state.

    The affected commissioners are that of Finance, Agriculture, Power, Health, Tourism, Information, Budget, Works and Transport.

    The invited MDAs are – the Accountant-General, Chairmen of Board of Internal Revenue, Rivers State Assembly Service Commission and Secondary School Management Board.

  • Rivers Assembly: NASS appeals against judgment, writes IGP

    Rivers Assembly: NASS appeals against judgment, writes IGP

    …Self-acclaimed Speaker meets Rivers police boss

    …Plot to remove Amaechi  thickens

     

    The National Assembly has written the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, to stay action on plans to allow anti-Governor Rotimi Amaechi lawmakers from gaining access to the Rivers State House of Assembly to take any action against the governor.

    The National Assembly said it has appealed against the judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja, which voided its right to take over the functions of the state House of Assembly.

    The National Assembly wrote the IGP through its counsel, Ahmed Raji(SAN) against the backdrop of plot to allow six anti-Amaechi lawmakers to begin the impeachment process against the governor on Friday.

    The Nation gathered that the self-acclaimed Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Evans Bippi had in the early hours of Friday met with Rivers State Commissioner of Police, Joseph Mbu on the readiness of the lawmakers to sit.

    Bippi was said to have allegedly told the CP that he had secured the signatures of 27 lawmakers to convene a session of the House of Assembly.

    As at press time, the police has allowed anti-Amaechi lawmakers into the Rivers House of Assembly to sit and begin impeachment proceedings against the governor.

    But the National Assembly said since its appeal was pending, it would be illegal to allow the anti-Amaechi lawmakers to sit.

    The letter reads: “We refer to our letter of yesterday (11/12/130 in respect of the above matter.

    “We are glad to learn that your officers in Rivers State prevented some members of the Rivers State House of Assembly from sitting in the Parliament today(12/12/13) on the ground that a copy of the Judgment has not been presented to the police.

    “It thus means that the Judgment of the Court has not been executed in any way. Meanwhile, shortly after the Judgment, we filed an Appeal along with a Motion for Stay of Execution and an Injunction.

    “We caused the two processes to be served on your office yesterday vide our letter dated 11th December, 2013

    “The implication of the two processes is that effect cannot be given to the Judgment delivered yesterday (11/12/13) until the motion filed by us is disposed of.”

     

     

  • Police disrupt resumed sitting of Rivers assembly

    The Rivers Police Command on Thursday in Port Harcourt disrupted the resumed sitting of the state House of Assembly.

    The Commander of the Port Harcourt Area Command, Mr. Aliyu Garba, told journalists that the command had not received any order from the court to reopen the assembly complex.

    Garba said the police did not allow anybody into the complex because there was no order for the police to do so.

    He said the role of the police was to avert the breakdown of law and order in the society.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the police sealed the complex after the crisis that hit the assembly on July 9 and 10.

    NAN reports that an FCT High Court On Wednesday ruled against the taking over of the functions of the state assembly by the National Assembly.

    Reacting to the situation, the Deputy Speaker of the assembly, Mr. Leyii Kwanee, condemned the continued closure of the assembly in spite of a court ruling ordering its reopening.

    He said as lawmakers, “we were voted to represent our people and we were ready to defend the mandate given to us by our constituencies.

    “We want to assure you that there is no going back; we are resolute and we are committed to this cause.

    “If need be, we are ready to sacrifice our lives for this cause; we are committed to defend the democracy of Rivers people,” he said.

     

     

  • Impeachment without quorum

    Impeachment without quorum

    Legislators involved in the Rivers Assembly fracas should face sanctions too

    Many journalists readily agree, in defining the concept ‘news’, that when dog bites man, it is no news; but when man bites dog, then that is news. Of course, this makes sense because, what they are trying to say in essence is that ‘news’ properly so-called is usually about the bad and the ugly. Bad news is therefore good news. It is common to see dogs bite man but it is unusual for man to bite dog. Here, we are not talking about the Ondo people who see ‘lokili’ (dog) as a delicacy and the Calabar people who also enjoy its meat that they fondly call ‘404’. To eat something is not necessarily the same as biting it.

    This analogy came about in view of what is happening in Rivers State. That state has not known peace in the last few months and it is not likely to know it anytime soon. One of the major actors in the crisis has only recently boasted that he would make the governor uncomfortable, and perhaps the state, ungovernable. That tells us the extent that people can go when seeking political power in the country. In sane environments, the man would have been invited by the security agencies because his statement is self-explanatory. I have said it often, and it bears repeating, that this country would have been a far better place if those seeking public offices put in half of the energy they put into the struggle for the offices into governance when they eventually get into those offices.

    Imagine all the resources that have been wasted in the efforts to ‘overthrow’ the Rivers State governor just because of the personal ambitions of a few persons. A serving minister of state for education, Nyesom Wike, who should be overseeing the crucial sector is rather busy doing unimaginable things while thousands of our youths in the universities are on the streets when they should be in the lecture rooms, due to strike by their lecturers. Their colleagues in the polytechnics went on strike for weeks while Mr. Wike was in the forefront of the battle to remove the state governor by hook or crook. I wonder why it has not occurred to those who appointed Wike that something is bound to suffer when a man in such a crucial sector abandons his beat to lead a campaign just because he wants to become governor. In saner climes, it is only people who performed creditably in lower capacities that get promoted in government. This is a minister without any clear achievements already eyeing a higher office, putting his hopes on some benevolent cleavages. Again, in countries where the government is serious, it would have seen such a person as a liability rather than an asset and promptly shown him the door.

    But this is not where I am going today, it is nonetheless useful though in bringing into perspective the unfortunate developments in Rivers State.

    Chinua Achebe says in his celebrated Things Fall Apart that “if a man comes into my hut and defecates on the floor, what do I do? Shut my eyes and pretend not to see him?” He says that cannot be; he will rather carry a stick and break his head! Well, I may not necessarily be talking about physical retaliation. But, Achebe’s novels, as is the Igbo culture generally, are replete with proverbs which are like oil with which yam is eaten (again, apologies to Achebe).

    What happened in the Rivers State House of Assembly on Tuesday July 9 falls into the category of the defecation that I have in mind. But I must stress that I am also not talking about someone in whose house another man has defecated carrying a physical stick (as it were) to break the intruder’s head. But the man who has been wronged deserves some pacification. Now, when only five of a 32-member House of Assembly attempted to impeach the speaker, Otelemaba Amachree, whereas the constitution stipulates that at least two-thirds of the members is required for such to be legal, what did they expect? Did they expect to be pecked or kissed and warmly embraced by their colleagues who are in the majority?

    Certainly not. But the five must have been that audacious because of the ubiquitous ‘federal might’ that they thought they had behind them. With the police merely playing the role of observers, they had thought they would just carry out their illegality while Nigerians would make the usual noise over a period and the result of the illegality of impeachment without the requisite two-thirds majority would have stood, until a time when the courts will declare the action illegal and order a return to status quo ante. And, in Nigeria, that could take as long as the usurpers want and that is understandable; they have nothing to lose; it is only the person that has been cheated out of the office that has everything to lose. And, as we all know, justice travels at a snail speed in the country. Injustice travels faster!

    However, the miscalculation of the misguided five legislators led to (probably) unanticipated violence and now, we are talking about one of those involved in the illegal impeachment saga, Michael Chinda, lying critically injured in hospital. Interestingly, the same police that have been partial since the crisis started promptly ensured that the majority leader in the state house of assembly, Mr. Chidi Lloyd, was promptly arraigned for attempted murder.

    This is the kind of thing that happens in a country where might determines right. If legislators who did what the ‘Rivers Five’ attempted in the past had been made to face the full wrath of the law, it would have served as a deterrent to others. Unfortunately, they did not pay for it because the then President Olusegun Obasanjo was solidly behind them. This was despite the fact that fortunately, the judiciary in that era reversed almost all the illegalities, in Oyo, Anambra, Plateau where the governors were said to have been impeached without the required quorum in the houses of assembly.

    Perhaps it was because the ‘Rivers 27’ in the house of assembly did not want to take any chances that things went awry on July 9. This underscores the need for people to respect the sanctity of the law and due process. I am not opposed to justice for the injured legislator but I am also strongly of the view that something triggered the violence in the house. In my view, this too should be of concern to us. In the light of this, someone should also test the judicial waters to see if any case can be established; that is, if under any circumstance people can try what the ‘Rivers Five’ did without facing judicial sanctions. If we saw such in the Obasanjo era, it does not make it right.

    Whoever goes to equity must go with clean hands, remains the usual refrain. When someone causes rain to fall, it doesn’t seem right to me for that person to complain if the rain is eventually accompanied with thunderstorm. If sustaining of injury during an illegal legislative process is newsy, then, getting justice for those cheated by the illegality should be newsier. If five legislators decided to impeach a governor when between 20 and 21 members are legally required, they should know that whoever their godfather is, that action is illegal. I therefore see nothing wrong in their paying for it through the judicial process. It is high time Nigerians challenged such illegalities in court.

  • TUC condemns Rivers Assembly crisis

    TUC condemns Rivers Assembly crisis

    The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) has described the crisis which broke out in Rivers State House of Assembly on Tuesday as “unparliamentary.”

    The congress stated this in a statement signed by Mr. Bobboi Kaigama and Musa Lawal, its President and General Secretary respectively, on Thursday in Lagos.

    It said that while Nigerians were yet to recover from the shock occasioned by the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) imbroglio, another crisis has come from the Rivers lawmakers.

    The congress said it was sad that the world watched agape as two factions in the assembly openly engaged in fisticuffs, and used dangerous weapons.

    “The spectacle of honourable legislators turned pugilists can best be described as very dishonourable and a show of shame.

    “They are proving that politics in Nigeria is seen more as a most lucrative business than a call to service, “the News Agency of Nigeria quoted TUC as saying in the statement.

    The congress said the reasons for the crisis were not far from interests and aspirations in the 2015 elections.

    It observed that the action of the lawmakers showed there was deep corruption in the nation’s political sector.

    “The conclusion of any onlooker will be that the lawmakers have compromised with some form of political inducement or the promise thereof from either of the political gladiators.

    “Little wonder that the honourable members cannot manage themselves properly and proved that they are very dishonourable, “it added.

  • Free-for-all fight in Rivers Assemby,

    …Amaechi supervises reinstatement of  impeached Speaker, House adjourns indefinitely

    There was free-for-all fight  on Tuesday at the Rivers State House of Assembly between pro and anti-Amaechi lawmakers.

    The five lawmakers loyal to the Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, initially impeached the Speaker, Otelemaba Dan Amachree, with a new Speaker, Evans Bapakaye Bipi, who represents Ogu/Bolo constituency, elected to replace him.

    As Bipi mounted the speaker’s seat to give his acceptance/maiden speech, the Rivers Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, stormed the main chambers of the Assembly, with Amachree, other loyal lawmakers and security men, leading to a clash between the two groups.

    In the course of fighting with dangerous weapons, the Speaker and Leader of the House, Chidi Lloyd, a lawyer, who represents Emohua constituency and loyal to Amaechi were injured. Lloyd is still in the hospital.

    Two anti-Amaechi lawmakers: Martins Amewhule and Michael Okechukwu Chinda  were  also seriously and are also being hospitalised.

    When the clash subsided, the House later sat amid tight security, with 23 pro-Amaechi lawmakers in attendance and presided over by Amachree. Amaechi left immediately.

    Rivers Deputy Governor, Tele Ikuru,  was later ushered into the Assembly chambers and he presented minor adjustments to the 2013 budget, on behalf of Amaechi.

    The Speaker said the amendment would not affect the earlier figure of N490 billion. Shortly after Ikuru left, the House was adjourned indefinitely, in view of the tension.

  • Reps investigate police occupation of Rivers Assembly

    Reps investigate police occupation of Rivers Assembly

    Order IGP to remove ‘his men’ from complex

    The House of Representatives has urged the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Abubakar Mohammed, to, as a matter of urgency, withdraw his men from the premises of the Rivers State House of Assembly.

    The lawmakers have also directed House Committee on Police Affairs, Human Rights and Justice to conduct a thorough investigation into the immediate and remote causes of the display of anti-democratic tendencies by the Nigeria Police within two weeks.

    The federal lawmakers also steered clear of legal controversies associated with the suspension of the chairman, deputy chairman and 17 Councillor of Obio/Akpor Local Government by the Rivers State House of Assembly.

    The withdrawal order from other places so occupied by police in the state as well, according to the lawmakers was to ensure unhindered and unencumbered access for those whose responsibility it is to use those facilities to work for the good of the people of River State.

    The decision of the lawmakers followed the adoption of a matter of urgent national importance by Sekonte Davies (PDP, Rivers) who, regretted that the Rivers State Police Command has resorted to intimidation of the state House of Assembly by occupying the complex.

    According to him, the occupation has caused the legislators to adjourn sine die (indefinitely) due to reports that trouble would be fomented at the Assembly complex which will afford the police a reason to cause commotion in a bid to declare a state of emergency.

    Saying that there was no time that the state’s Commissioner of Police informed Governor Rotimi Amaechi of the need to deploy such heavily armed police contingent being the Chief Security officer of the state, Davies said the deployment was capable of sending wrong signals of political and social instability to the people of the state, Nigerians and foreigners alike.

    The motion was unanimously supported when it was put to voice vote by the Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal.