Tag: Senator Bukola Saraki

  • How Saraki looted Kwara – EFCC, CCB

    How Saraki looted Kwara – EFCC, CCB

    The Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Friday gave details of how Senate President, Bukola Saraki allegedly looted Kwara State while he served as the state’s governor between 2003 and 2011.

    The CCB and EFCC, in a joint response to claim by Saraki that his trial before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) was mere persecution and witch-hunt, gave details of how Saraki allegedly acquired property in Lagos, Abuja and London, using kwara State funds.

    The agencies also gave details of how Saraki allegedly syphoned Kwara state funds, using his link with a commercial bank, Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB) Plc into his foreign account, and with which he procured property in London.

    The joint response by the CCT and EFCC is contained in the counter-affidavit filed by the prosecution in the trial of Saraki on charges of false assets declaration.

    Saraki had, in a fresh motion filed by his new lawyer, Kanu Agabi (SAN), queried the competence of the charge against him, the jurisdiction of the CCT to try the charge on the ground that he was not accorded fair hearing by the CCB before he was charged before the EFCC over alleged discrepancies in his asset declarations forms.

    He queried the timing, arguing that most of the offences were allegedly committed about 15 years ago while he was a governor and that he was not confronted with the discrepancies as required under the Constitution, to  enable him explain either agree or deny the discrepancies.

    Friday, prosecution lawyer, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) argued the prosecution’s counter-affidavit and urged the court to dismiss Saraki’s fresh motion on the ground that it constituted an abuse of court process.

    An official of the CCB, Peter Danladi stated in the counter affidavit, that the investigation of the various petitions of corruption, theft, money laundering, among others against Saraki in 2010, was conducted jointly by official of the EFCC, CCB and the DSS.

    “The EFCC conducted its investigation on the various petitions and made findings which showed that the defendant/applicant abused his office while he was the governor of Kwara State and was involved in various acts of corruption as the governor of the state.

    “The defendant/applicant borrowed huge sums of money running into billions from commercial banks, particularly Guarantee Trust Bank and used the proceeds of the loan to acquire several landed property in Lagos, Abuja and London, while he was the governor of Kwara State.

    “As against the defendant using his own legitimate income to defray the loan, he took public funds, running into billions from Kwara State Government and lodged same in several tranches and in cash into his GTB account I GRA (Government Reservation Area), Ilorin, Kwara State.

    “The defendant/applicant’s account officer in GTB, confirmed that the defendant/applicant gave him several cash in government house to lodge into the account and in some occasions, the defendant sent his aids from government house to give him the cash for lodgement into his account.

    “When the EFCC submitted its report to its legal department and the Federal Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Justice formed the opinion that the offences revealed from the investigation, particlularly as they relate to the property acquired by the defendant/applicant while he was governor of Kwara State and various moneys sent into  his various accounts outside Nigeria can be better handled through the Code of Conduct Bureau  (CCB) and Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT).

    “The office of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) then sends the findings and the evidence gathered during investigation by the EFCC as a complaint to the Code of Conduct Bureau for investigation and that the operatives of the EFCC would collaborate with the officers of the CCB for effective investigation.

    “Our investigation on the CCB Assets Declaration Forms for public officers filed by the defendant/respondent revealed the following:

    “The landed property listed as No: 42 Gerald Road, Ikoyi was visited by Mr. Ikechi Iwuagwu (Deputy Director, CCB), Miss. Geraldine Longsten (DSS) and Adamu Garba (EFCC) sometime in 2006 and discovered that the property was under construction.

    “Contrary to the declaration by the defendant that he was earning an annual income of N110, 000,000 from No: 42 Gerald Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, there were no tenants in the property as same was an empty land as at the time of the declaration.

    “Contrary to the declaration by the defendant that he owned 15A and 15B Mcdonald, Ikoyi, Lagos as at the time of the declaration in 2003 our investigation revealed that the said property were acquaired in 2006 from the implementation committee on Federal Government Landed properties through his companies called Tiny Tee Limited and Vitti Oil Limited wherein he paid the sum of N396, 150,000 to the federal Government of Nigeria.

    “The defendant made an anticipatory declaration for the said 15A and 15B, Ikoyi, Lagos. The defendant acquired the property in the name of two companies because he could not buy two Federal government property in his personal name.

    “The defendant bided for and acquired 17, 17A and 17B Mcdonald, Ikoyi, Lagos from the Implementation Committee on Federal government Landed Property and paid an aggregate sum of N497, 200,000 to the Federal Government between October 2006 and 2007.

    “A scrutiny of the defendant’s salary account with the Intercontinental Bank (now Access Bank) of account No: 0100857813 reveals that his monthly take home salary as at the time he acquired the property was not more than N500, 000 and the defendant acquired property far in excess of his income.

    “While the Federal Government was selling its property, the Centarl Bank of Nigeria, being an agency of the Federal Government sold plot 2A, Glover Road, Ikoyi, Lagos for N325,000,000 between 2007 and 2008 to the defendant, which the defendant purchased through his company called Carlisle Properties when he was the governor of Kwara State,” Danladi said.

    He added that further investigation by the CCB  revealed that Saraki also acquired a property at Plot #&A  Glover Road, Ikoyi, Lagos through Carlisle Properties Limited while he was governor of Kwara state and that he has been receiving rent form the property.

    Danladi said investigation on the asset declaration forms submitted by Saraki between 2003 and 2011 revealed that he failed to declare his interest in Plot 2A Golver Road, Ikoyi, Lagos (in his 2011 asset declaration form); No: 1 Targus Street, Maitama, Abuja otherwise known as 2482 Cadastral Zone A06, which he claimed he acquired in November 1996 from one David Baba Akawu (in his assets declaration form of 2003).

    Saraki was also said to have failed to declare his ownership of No: 3 Targus Street, Maitama, Abuja otherwise known as 2481 Cadastral Zone A06, Abuja which he acquired from one Alhaji Attahiru Adamu in his asset declaration form (of June 3, 2011.) and No: 42 Remi Fani-Kayode Street, Ikeja Lagos, which he acquired through his company, Skyview Properties Limited from First Finance Trust Limited on December 12, 1996.

    “The defendant has a domiciliary account with GTB Plc in Nigeria with account No: 441441953210 from where he made various cash transfers totalling 3.4million US dollar between 2009 and 2012 to American Express Service Europe Limited with account No: 730580 maintained with the American Express bank, New York and the various sums were transferred into the defendant’s card account No: 374588216836009 maintained by the defendant outside Nigeria.

    “Sometime in February 2010 the defendant obtained a loan of N375, 000,000 from GTB Plc in Nigeria, which he converted into 1,516,194.53 pounds sterling and gave instructions to the bank to transfer the entire sum to the united Kingdom in favour of Forts Bank SA/NV the purpose of which the defendant stated to be the full and final payment of mortgage redemption for the property he purchased in London,” Danladi said.

    Arguing Saraki’s motion earlier, Agabi was of the view that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction to entertain the charges, on among other grounds, that the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice lacked the powers to file charges before the tribunal.

    He also argued that the failure of the Code of Conduct Bureau to invite Saraki to confront him with the breaches in his assets declaration form was fatal to the validity of the charges.

    Responding, Jacobs argued that Agabi’s argument was embarrassing and self-serving. Jacobs, who once served as aide to Agabi while he was the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) wondered why his former principal will now argue against the power to initiate proceedings before the CCT.

    “On their argument that the AGF cannot initiate proceedings before this tribunal, we are saying that issue, which is their NO: 2 is embarrassing. They had earlier argued, up to the Supreme Court, that it is only the AGF that can initiate cases here. They dragged that case before the Supreme Court and lost. Then they have come back here to now argue the opposite, that the AGF cannot initiate a case before the CCT.

    “Fortunately for me, I served with the lead defence lawyer (Agabi) as a Special Assistant (SA) when he was the AGF. He signed several charges, which I prosecuted before this tribunal on his behalf. Some these case included that involving former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT, Jeremiah Useni, former Plateau State governor, Joshua Dariye, among others.

    “He did not only sign those charges, I represented him. Having benefited and utilised those law, can he now come back to condemn the law? That is embarrassing. And it should not be accepted. The same AGF, who worked with that provision of the Constitution, cannot now argue that the EFCC cannot liaise with the CCB in investigating cases,” Jacobs said.

    Jacobs argued that the fresh motion by Saraki was an abuse of court process because he had raised similar issues and sought the same reliefs in about four other motions he filed before different courts in the country.

    He cited the cases marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/775/15, FHC/ABJ/CS/905/15 and FHC/ABJ/CS/1507/15 already filed by Saraki in attempt to frustrate his trial before the CCT.

    CCT Chairman, Danladi Umar has adjourned to March 24 for ruling and possible commencement of trial.

     

  • Saraki decries Niger lead poisoning

    Saraki decries Niger lead poisoning

    Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, Thursday  decried the outbreak of lead poisoning in Rafin Local Government area of Niger State.

    The lead poisoning was attributed to small scale or artisanal mining of gold in the area.

    A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Senate President, Sanni Onogu, said that Saraki spoke when the representatives of Doctors Without Borders led by Dr. Simba Tirima paid him a courtesy call in Abuja.

    It said that Saraki described the development as unfortunate especially as the incident in Niger State occurred at a time the nation is yet to recover from the ravages of a similar incident in Bagega, Zamfara State where over 400 children were affected in 2013.

    It said that Saraki lamented that 28 children had already died as a result of the lead poisoning  in Rafin Local Government of Niger State and called on the Ministry of Solid Minerals to be proactive in tackling the incidence so as to safeguard the health of the people living in the area especially, children.

    It quoted Saraki to have assured that th Senate would work with the various stakeholders to ensure that all funds made available are utilized for proper remediation of the affected communities and the treatment of children already affected by lead poisoning.

    Saraki said: “I want to assure you that this National Assembly will make this issue a matter of great urgency to ensure that all that was made available for the remediation that needs to be done either through the funds of the ecological agency or through the 2016 budget, is done not only to address the case in Niger State but also we must be proactive and there must be a level of funding available for this.

    “This cannot happen in any developed society today. We need to begin to also identify areas in this country where gold mining is resulting to lead poisoning. Like he (Tirima) said we cannot stop the miners because as a result of poverty, this is their only source of income to survive.

    “It is our duty to improve and make mining safer. I think it is important also that the Ministry of Solid Minerals takes quick and proactive actions in addressing the issue of lead poisoning.

    “The state government has a role to play as well. We must get the government of Niger State and Rafin Local Government involved. They should play their own role in educating the stakeholders there to understand why they must stop their mining activities.

    “Really, we must ensure that this does not repeat itself in this country. It is very unfair to the citizens, most especially the children that are affected. We will take it up from here to ensure that prompt action is taken, so we can quickly address the issue and treat those that were affected.”

    It said that the representative of the Doctors Without Borders, Dr. Simba Tirima, commended the Senate President for his efforts towards curtailing the lead poisoning incidence in Bagega, Zamfara State in 2013 when he was the Chairman, Senate Committee on Environment and Ecology in the 7th Senate.

    Tirima said: “Without His Excellency really, the funds that were allocated for that project would not have been released. But he personally went to Bagega to visit the people that were affected. I am very happy to report that Bagega is doing very well.

    “The kids who are on treatment are being discharged because there has been a lot of improvement and the treatment is going on very well through  Doctors Without Borders.

    “We want to thank you for your support in dealing with such a serious issue of lead poisoning which primarily attacks the very thing that makes us human and that is its impact on our brains especially poor children who are the future of this country. We thank you for your continued support,” he said.

  • Saraki canvases patronage for local auto manufacturer 

    Saraki canvases patronage for local auto manufacturer 

    The President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki has urged the three arms of government to ensure the success of indigenous manufacturers as a way of rebuilding the economy and providing employment for the youth population.

    A statement Monday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Sani Onogu said Saraki made the call while receiving a delegation from Innoson Motor Manufacturing Company, Nnewi, led by the founder, Chief Innocent Chukwuma.

    It further urged government to use legislative actions and policy initiatives to protect local industries as a deliberate way of reviving the economy.

    According to him, government should introduce policies geared towards boosting local industries through patronage by government agencies.

    “That is why this eighth Senate is determined to amend the Procurement Law to ensure that government agencies patronise made in Nigeria products. I am sure the House of Representatives is in support of this.

    “It is our joint responsibility to ensure that you succeed. If you are successful, a lot more small and medium scale enterprises will draw inspiration from you and they will become successful.

    “That will help to create jobs which are one of the mandate presented to us by the youths of this country during the last elections. We in the legislature will look at all laws and help to create an enabling environment for local businesses to thrive in Nigeria,” Saraki was quoted to have said.

    According to him, using laws to protect locally made goods is not peculiar to Nigeria, stressing that a similar thing was done in the United States under President Herbert Hoover in 1933 while India and China have also enacted similar laws in the past.

    He lamented a situation where a company like Innoson only sold about 3,000 units of vehicles in 2015 when Nigerians buy about a million vehicles annually, adding that If Nigerians patronise made in Nigeria, cars it will force foreign manufacturers to set up plants in Nigeria.

  • Saraki won’t resign unless convicted, says Senate Leader

    Saraki won’t resign unless convicted, says Senate Leader

    The Senate Leader, Ali Ndume on Tuesday said that the Senate President, Bukola Saraki will not step down from the number three position unless convicted by the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT).

    He made the remark while speaking with State House correspondents after leading some senators to a meeting with the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The Senate Leader also noted that it would be hasty to condemn the Senate President before the outcome of the tribunal’s trial since he has not been pronounced guilty.

    Ndume insisted that the closed door meeting with the Acting President was not to find a political solution to the travail of the Senate President but to solidarize with the Acting President.

    On possibility of Nigerians believing his visit to Villa was to seek political solution to Saraki’s travail, he said: “It is not new for people to read meaning. Are you saying that the Senate President should be convicted before the trial?

    “In our constitution, you are considered innocent until proven guilty,” he added.

    Speaking on the reason for their visit, he said: “This government is our government. I am the Senate Leader in this government, so my coming here today is not supposed to be a new thing. My coming here should even be more regular.

    “This is not the first time we are coming here. But this is the first time we are having the Vice President as acting President. That is one of the reasons why we are here.

    “This is because we are setting a new example. During the previous government, the President will just go and leave the place blank,” he said.

    Continuing, he said: “But this time around when our President goes for a few days, he transmitted to all Nigerians that the Vice President is to act as the President. So we came for the regular consultation. There is nothing new about it and we will be doing more of this.

    “You should expect me to be coming here. Now we have the budget as work in progress; we have we have the new Money Laundering Bill before the Senate, we have many things we are looking at. We have come to come and consult on these,” he stated.

    Among those who accompanied Ndume included Dino Melaye and Abdullahi Adamu.

  • CCT: Supreme Court decides Saraki’s fate Friday

    CCT: Supreme Court decides Saraki’s fate Friday

    Can the Chairman and a member of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) legally conduct proceedings where the Constitution says it must be constituted by two members and a Chairman?

    Was the CCT wrong to have assumed jurisdiction over the trial of Senate President, Bukola Saraki, charged with false asset declaration, without one of its members?

    These are among the issues to be decided Friday by the Supreme Court as it delivers judgment in the appeal brought before it by Saraki.

    Saraki’s appeal is against the October 30, 2015 judgment of the Court of Appeal, Abuja which dismissed an earlier appeal by Saraki with which he challenged the jurisdiction of the CCT to try him for alleged false declaration of assets.

    Saraki was arraigned before the CCT on September 22 last year on a 13-count charge after much resistance for the Senate President, prompting the tribunal to issue a bench warrant for his arrest.

    Although he pleaded not guilty to the charge, he subsequently challenged the power of the CCT to try him he challenged the composition of the tribunal and the legality of the charge, which he said was not endorsed by the Attorney general of the Federation (AGF).

    In its judgment on October 30, a three-man panel of the appellate court, in a split decision of two-to-one held that Saraki’s appeal lacked merit.

    Justices Moore Adumein (presiding) and Mohammed Mustapha resolved the six issues raised in the appeal in favour of the respondents including the CCT, while Justice Joseph Ekanem dissented on one issue, which was whether an official of the Federal Ministry of Justice was competent to endorse a charge in the absence of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF).

    While Justices Adumein (who read the lead judgment) and Mustapha dismissed the appeal, Justice Ekanem, in his dissenting judgment‎,‎ upheld the appeal, discharged and quashed the Senate President’s trial before the CCT.

    Justice Adumein, in the lead judgment, rejected all argument by Saraki, including his contention that the CCT, being an inferior body to the Federal High Court, ought not to have proceeded with his trial despite an order by the court.

    He held that Sarakiks complaint about not being personally served with the charge “was of no moment having appeared and taken his plea before the tribunal.”

    “On September 21, his counsel also appeared before the tribunal and made series of application without raising the issue of non-service,” Justice Adumein said.

    On whether two of the CCT three members form a quorum, Justice Adumein, though noted that  there was “lacuna”  in the laws, held that “the Interpretation Act has resolved the has becomes a helpful piece of legislation” by providing that a member of the tribunal and its Chairman could validly sit and conduct proceedings.

    Justice Adumein upheld the argument by respondents’ lawyer, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), to the effect that by the provision of Section 28 of the Interpretation Act, two members of the tribunal (including the Chairman) form quorum to validly conduct its proceedings

    He also held that by the provisions of Section 174(1) and (2) of the Constitution, where there is no substantive AGF, any law officer in the office of the AGF could validly file  charges.

    “M.S Hassan, a Deputy Director in the department of the AGF is eminently qualified to initiate criminal proceedings.

    “The Solicitor-General of the Federation, in the absence of the AGF may perform any of the duties and shall have the same powers as are imposed by law on the AGF,” the judge said.

    On the issue of the tribunal not being a court, Justice Adumein held that “there is no inherent difference between the tribunal and the court.”

    He noted that “the terminologies and phrases used in the CCT Act, such as “arraignment”, “arrest”, “taking plea”, “guilty” and “conviction” are associated with criminal proceedings.

    “The Code of Conduct Tribunal is a criminal court, albeit with limited jurisdiction,” he held.

    “Having resolved all the issues against the appellant, I hold that the appeal lacks merit and it is hereby dismissed,” Justice Adumein said.

    Justice‎ Ekanem, who dissented on a single issue, held that the absence of Attorney-General of the Federation had made the charge to become defective.

    He was of the view that the failure by M. S. Hassan (who endorsed the charge) to indicate who authorized him to file the charge, in his letter to the tribunal seeking leave to file the case, rendered the charge incompetent.

    While arguing his client’s appeal before the Supreme Court on December 3, Saraki’s lawyer, Joseph Daudu (SAN), who said six issues were formulate for the court’s determination, argued that the CCT was wrong to have assumed jurisdiction over his client’s trial because it was not properly constituted.

    He argued that by the provision of Paragraph 15(1) of the 5th Schedule to the Constitution, the CCT could only legally conduct its affairs where the Chairman sits with two members. He said it was only the Chairman and a member that sat in the trial of his client.

    Daudu also argued that the CCT was not a court with the capacity to exercise criminal jurisdiction.  He contended that having not been a court created under section 6 of the Constitution, it lacked the power to exercise the inherent jurisdiction of superior courts.

    He also argued that the CCT, being an inferior court with the status of mere disciplinary body for erring public officers, cannot apply the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 in its proceedings.

    He urged the court to allow his client’s appeal and grant all his prayers.

    Lawyer to the Federal Government, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) urged the court to dismiss the appeal and uphold the majority decision of the Court of Appeal, to the effect that Saraki’s trial before the CCT, with two judges sitting out of three, was in order.

    He argued that Paragraph 5(1) of the 5th Schedule to the Constitution only relates to the composition of CCT, but that the Constitution was silent on the number of members that constitute its quorum.

    He said where such lacuna exits, it was for the court to recourse to the Interpretation Act for help. He said under the Interpretation Act, two member of a three-man tribunal form quorum and could legitimately conduct business.

    Jacobs also argued that the CCT, being a body with limited criminal jurisdiction could apply ACJA 2015 in its proceedings. He contended that since the tribunal had applied the Criminal Procedure Act (CPA) and Criminal procedure Code (CPC) for its proceedings before the introduction of the ACJA, the new law, which replaces the CPC and CPA automatically, becomes an applicable law in the proceedings before the CCT.

    As against Daudu’s argument that the enforcement of the Attorney general of the Federation (AGF) was necessary before a charge could be validly filed before the CCT, Jacobs argued that any officer in the office of the AGF could validly initiate proceedings before the CCT where there is no AGF in office.

  • Insecurity: Senate meets with service chiefs

    Insecurity: Senate meets with service chiefs

    The Senate on Wednesday held a closed-door meeting with Service Chiefs in view of the prevailing security issues in the country, especially in the North East.

    The two-hour meeting, chaired by the President of the Senate Bukola Saraki, was attended by other principal officers of the Senate and chairmen of security related committees.

    Although newsmen were shut out of the meeting, the Leader of the Senate Ali Ndume later told newsmen that the issues discussed could not be revealed to the public.

    He said that they bordered on national security and as such was for the sole consumption of those who were in attendance.

    Ndume, however, expressed the satisfaction of the Senate as this was the first time the upper legislative chamber was being fully briefed on matters of security.

    “We have been briefed properly but these are security issues we cannot really disclose any of it.

    “Unlike before, the Senate was not abreast or updated on the efforts they are making; now we have very full, honest, open and transparent discussion on the activities.

    “This is a security meeting that we just had; it will be wrong for me to disclose the details.

    “We are satisfied because we have never had this kind of briefing before; we are part of it now; we know what is the problem; we know what are the challenges,” he said.

    The service chiefs present were Chief of Defence Staff, Maj.-Gen. Abayomi Olonishakin; Chief of Army Staff, Maj.-Gen. Tukur Buratai; Chief of Naval Staff, Rear Adm. Ibok-Ete Ibas and Chief of Air Staff, AVM Sadique Abubakar.

  • Justice Uwais, others back Buhari on anti-corruption war

    Justice Uwais, others back Buhari on anti-corruption war

    Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mohammed Lawal Uwais and Former Nigeria Ambassador to the United Nations, Professor Ibrahim Gambari has urged President Muhammed Buhari to remain resolute in his administration’s fight to free the country from corporate and individual corruption.

    They described as callous “the allocation of Nigeria’s scarce resource to individual for political interests at the expense of huge losses of lives and properties, especially, in the North-East, where the fight against Boko Haram continues to rage.”

    Acting under the Umbrella of the Council of the Wise, they said “ten months after Nigeria’s historic elections that pushed out of power, the 16-years PDP Government, President Buhari’s APC-led Government remains trapped by massive state corruption that has almost grounded the country to a halt”.

    They also applauded former President Olusegun Obasanjo for his recent letter to the National Assembly, and called on the Senate President, Bukola Saraki to do the needful by releasing details of the expenditures of the National Assembly for public scrutiny.

    The Executive Director of Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Development (SCDDD) and former Ambassador of Nigeria to Chad, Ambassador Abdullahi A. Omaki spoke on behalf of Justice Uwais and Professor Gambari.

    The Council of the Wise operates under the auspices of the Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Development. Justice Uwais is the Chairman of the Centre, while Professor Gambari is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the Centre.

    In a statement signed by Amb. Omaki they urged President Muhammadu Buhari, “to remain resolute in his administration’s fight to free Nigeria from the claws of corporate and individual corruptions that have held the country hostage”.

    President Buhari is the only Nigerian politician and leader that has the pedigree to engage this systematic corruption because of his own personal record of high integrity which was personalized during the campaigns for the highest office in our country,  Amb.Omaki observed in the statement.

    He said the need for the appeal was “hinged on the mind-boggling revelations on institutional rots that permitted for such callous and heartless lootings to take place under the PDP-Federal Administration until May 2015.”

  • Saraki leads delegation to UN Conference of Parliamentary Heads

    Saraki leads delegation to UN Conference of Parliamentary Heads

    Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, will on Monday lead the Nigerian delegation to participate in the 4th United Nations Conference of Parliamentary Heads holding at the organisation’s headquarters in New York, United States.

    This is contained in a statement by the Special Adviser to Senate President on Media and Publicity, Yusuph Olaniyonu released in Abuja.

    The statement said that the Senate President is billed to address the session of the world forum on Wednesday September 2 and later hold a press conference immediately after the speech.

    It said that this year’s conference which will be declared open by the United Nations Secretary-General, Mr. Ban Ki-moon, will feature presentation of reports and general debate on “placing democracy at the service of peace and sustainable development.”

    It said that other issues billed for debate include ‘Challenges facing Parliaments today’, ‘Parliamentary Oversight: challenges and opportunities ‘, while a bi-lateral meeting with Dr. Saraki is expected to be hosted by the Speaker of the Israeli Parliament (Knesset), Mr. Yuli-Yoel Edelstein.

    It added that the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR), Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) and selected Heads of Parliaments (GLOBE International Representation) are also expected to meet on the sidelines of the conference.

    Saraki is accompanied on the trip by Senators Andy Uba, Shehu Sani and Dino Melaye.

    Others on the entourage include Special Adviser to the Senate President on Economic Matters, Dr. Uchendu Okoye and Special Assistant on Public Partnerships.

    It said that the Saraki and his team departed the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja for New York on Saturday ahead of the conference which begins on Monday 31st August 2015 and ends on Wednesday September 3, 2015.

  • 8th Senate will be more focused – Saraki

    8th Senate will be more focused – Saraki

     

    [dropcap]P[/dropcap]resident of the Nigerian Senate, Senator Bukola Saraki,  has on Tuesday said that the 8th Senate would resume to better legislation following the break.

    Saraki said this on Tuesday through his social media platform adding that the senate under his presidency will be capable of producing watershed legislative interventions

    According to him: “As the Senate resumes today, it’s expected that the recess would, have in no small measure help us consolidate stability of National Assembly.

     “Now is time to move as one house in one direction to fulfill the promise we made to our constituencies that gave us our mandate.

    “It is time we remind ourselves of the solemn promise to deliver real change, which can’t be achieved in atmosphere distracted politics.

    “Elections are over; Nigerians didn’t put their lives on the line for politics but for responsible leadership that can deliver good governance.

    “Our mandate is not to come & play politics; our mandate is to be solution providers for the numerous challenges that bedeviled our country.

    “We have insurgency threatening very existence of our country & fabric of its unity from NE, we are facing dire streak due to mismanagement.

    “We have leadership task of turning challenges around through purpose driven lawmaking & Nigerians will not forgive us if we abdicate.

    “We can only achieve real change by working together & time is now. Before recess, we started process of laying down marker for new Senate.

    “8th Senate would be a much more focused legislative session, capable of producing watershed legislative interventions,” he said.

    [news_list display=”tag” tag=”Saraki, Bukola Saraki, NASS, National Assembly, 8th NASS” show_more=”on”]

  • Saraki and Apparition Ekweremadu

    Senator Bukola Saraki, the embattled Senate president, is trying to explain away the vile controversy surrounding his election.

    In combat term, Saraki’s is tantamount to winning the war and losing the peace — for why shed blood in battle, when you cannot secure the peace?

    That explains the no-war-no-peace situation in the Senate — indeed, in the two chambers of the National Assembly.  Though the Yakubu Dogara House of Representatives too appears a whirl of discontent, Saraki, that showed more desperation at his own election, would appear more on the spot.  He feels obliged to tell his own side of the story.

    On that score, the trading off, to Peoples Democratic Party’s Ike Ekweremadu, of the Senate deputy presidency, would appear Saraki’s first apparition, not unlike the three witches of Macbeth that baited, with a series of apparitions, the tragic hero of that Shakespeare play, first to commit regicide; and finally to doom himself.

    On the allegation of selling his party’s Senate patrimony to the PDP, in exchange for personal gain, Saraki has pleaded innocence.  In a well reported engagement with the media, omo Baba Oloye claims he was not to blame; but his co-APC members that mysteriously kept off the venue of the election.

    In a rather disingenuous alibi, he claimed that but for the arrival of APC House of Representatives members, from the botched meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari (to which, by the way, nobody invited the innocent Saraki), PDP would well have grossed the House deputy speakership, where it was in a roaring minority!

    What is more?  Saraki, “uninvited” to the presidential palaver, had intelligence he would be kidnapped and kept off the election venue.  That was why, he claimed, he arrived the National Assembly precincts early (around 6am) and sat in a non-descript car until 10 minutes to 10 am, the time the Senate presidential election was to kick off!

    Well, the Senate president can tell that to the marines!  Yes, Saraki has a right to defend himself and shed light on events to explain his case.  But this yarn would just not wash!

    All too soon, the senator is realising — hopefully not too late — that the Ekweremadu deal, which looked like a simple but telling trade-off that landed him the coveted seat, has turned into an apparition that just would not vanish.

    Besides, that it took Saraki no less than two weeks to rebut the widely reported story, which The Nation even broke on the eve of the June 9 election, that Saraki had sold his party to gain the Senate presidency, speaks volume about his so-called alibi.  Well, the embattled senator can kid himself with his latter-day yarn.  Hardball wonders if he even believes himself.

    Senator Saraki may well be right in his claim that the so-called meeting with the president, which explained the absence of most APC legislators from his election, was a manoeuvre by his intra-party opponents to tweak his colleagues and truncate his putative success.  That might be; for you cannot afford to trust politicians, who can go to any length to tilt things their way.

    But, as Saraki is finding out, there is a gulf between intra-party manoeuvring and alleged treachery and perfidy against own party and colleagues.

    That is why Apparition Ekweremadu would haunt the senator until the end of his political career, no matter how long or short.

    Not all the waters of Kwara (Niger) and Benue could wash it off his mind, any more than all the waters of Arabia could wash King Duncan’s blood off Lady Macbeth’s evil hands!