The Presidency and Dr. Bukola Saraki were yesterday locked in war of words.
The embattled Senate President fired the first salvo with his allegation
that the administration of Muhammadu Buhari has been hijacked by
powerful forces.
“What has become clear is that there is now a government within the
government of President Buhari who has seized the apparatus of Executive
powers to pursue their nefarious agenda,” he said in a statement he
personally signed, shortly after the Federal Capital Territory High
Court granted him bail.
He said if losing his personal freedom was the price he had to pay for
not yielding to the nefarious agenda of a few individuals bent on
undermining the nation’s democracy and destabilising the Federal
Government to satisfy their selfish interests, “let the doors of jails
be thrown open and I shall be a happy guest.”
But the presidency in a swift reaction dismissed the allegation as a product of a troubled sleep.
According to Mr. Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President on Media
and Publicity, to claim that Buhari was anybody’s stooge was not only
ridiculous, but also preposterous.
“It is not in the character of our President,” the presidential spokesman said.
He added: “This claim by Senator Saraki would have been more worth the
while, if it had been backed with more information. If he had proceeded
to identify those who constitute the “government within the government,”
it would have taken the issue beyond the realm of fiction and mere
conjecture. But as it stands, the allegation is not even worth the
paper on which it was written, as anybody can wake from a troubled
sleep, and say anything.
“The Attorney-General of the Federation is the Chief Law Officer of the
state. It is within his constitutional powers to determine who has
infringed upon the law, and who has not. Pretending to carry an
imaginary cross is mere obfuscation, if, indeed, a criminal act has been
committed. But we leave the courts to judge.”
Saraki, his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, immediate past Clerk of the National
Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa and the acting Clerk, Mr. Benedict
Efeturi are facing charges for allegedly forging the Senate Standing
Rules used on June 9, 2015 to conduct the election that brought Saraki
and Ekweremadu to office as principal officers.
But Saraki described the trial as diversionary and accused the government of President Buhari of witch-hunt.
Saraki said in the statement: “In our view, the charges filed by the
Attorney General represent a violation of the principle of the
Separation of Powers between the Executive branch and the Legislative
branch as enshrined in our Constitution. Furthermore, it is farcical to
allege that a criminal act occurred during Senate procedural actions
and the mere suggestion demonstrates a desperate overreach by the office
of the Attorney General. These trumped up charges is only another phase
in the relentless persecution of the leadership of the Senate.
“This misguided action by the Attorney General begs the question, how
does this promote the public interest and benefit the nation? At a time
when the whole of government should be working together to meet
Nigeria’s many challenges, we are once again distracted by the Executive
branch’s inability to move beyond a leadership election among Senate
peers. It was not an election of Senate peers and Executive Branch
participants.
“Over the past year, the Senate has worked to foster good relations with
the Executive branch. It is in all of our collective interests to put
aside divisions and get on with the nation’s business. We risk
alienating and losing the support of the very people who have entrusted
their national leaders to seek new and creative ways to promote a secure
and prosperous Nigeria. As leaders and patriots, it is time to rise
above partisanship and to move forward together.”
The embattled Senate President added: “This latest onslaught on the
Legislature represents a clear and present danger to the democracy
Nigerians fought hard to win and preserve. The suit filed on behalf of
the Federal Government suggests that perhaps some forces in the Federal
Republic have not fully embraced the fact that the Senate’s rules and
procedures govern how the legislative body adjudicates and resolves its
own disputes.
“Let it be abundantly clear, both as a citizen and as a foremost
legislator, I will continue to rise above all the persecution and
distraction that have been visited on me. In the words of Martin Luther
King Junior, ‘the ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in
moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at a time of
challenge and controversy.’
“I will remain true and committed to the responsibilities that my
citizenship and my office impose on me. Without doubt, the highest of
those responsibilities is the steadfast refusal to surrender to the
subversion of our democracy and the desecration of the Senate. This is a
cross I am prepared to carry.”
Besides the current forgery suit, Saraki is facing another trial at the
Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) over claims that he under-declared his
assets as governor of Kwara State between 2003 and 2011.
Source:DAILY SUN
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