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Saturday, 27 June 2015
Dogara, Saraki, working against APC’s success — Sani-Abdu
Member of the House of Representatives from
Bauchi State, Mohammed Sani-Abdu, explains to
JOHN AMEH why the All Progressives Congress
must have its way in the tussle over the
appointment of principal officers
-*How do you feel that the issue of principal
officers led to a fracas in the House on
Thursday?*-
It is not very true to say that the fracas was
because of the names of the principal officers. I
think there are historical antecedents to the
fracas. Yes, the issue of principal officers is central
to it, but there was nothing much that was done
than the call that we should go into an executive
session; contrary to the House rules which require
that first, the House should be convened and
then call for prayers. There was no prayer on
Thursday. The speaker just came in and said that
we should go for an executive session. There will
first be prayers, petitions, and if there are letters,
he reads the letters and so on, before the orders
of the day will start. He skipped all these
procedure and just said we should go for an
executive session immediately he came in. For
sure, this angered the members and that is why I
said there are historical antecedents.
-*Are you sure people will agree with you that
the speaker didn’t follow these procedures or
what are the historical antecedents you are
referring to?*-
First of all, that seat (speakership) was keenly
contested; and (Yakubu) Dogara came out tops
with only eight votes margin. We should recall
that Aminu Tambuwal (immediate past speaker)
defeated his rival, Mulikat Akande-Adeola, with
over a hundred votes. I am drawing a parallel so
you can understand how the current House is so
sharply divided. If I were Dogara, immediately I
emerged, the first thing would be to secure my
seat and the stability of the House. Unfortunately,
he didn’t do that. I was the one who nominated
Femi Gbajabiamila to contest against Dogara.
Even though I am from Bauchi State (same as
Dogara), I have personal and other political
reasons why I did that, and Dogara knows.
However, I was one of the first to congratulate
him after he won and I told him because the
margin of victory was so slim, it was God’s margin.
I advised him to quickly heal the wounds of the
House and reconcile forces. I also told him that
we discussed with Umar Ghali Na’Abba (former
Speaker of the House) and other people that the
only way to resolve the problem at the National
Assembly, particularly, the House, is to ask the
present deputy speaker (Yusuf Lasun) to step
down and give that position to Gbajabiamila. This
would have allowed these parallel lines to have a
coterminous to serve as the beginning of the
healing. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen and it
is not his fault; he gave me plausible reasons why
that could not happen. At the end of the day,
Dogara’s camp kept both the speaker and deputy
speaker slots.
Was that why the APC insisted on playing a
role in the choice of principal officers?
We know that the party has a say in the
appointment of principal officers. The party
always has that fundamental role.
Constitutionally, there is no provision for
independent candidature in Nigeria. Therefore,
one has to be sponsored for an election by a
political party. By filling a membership form, an
individual has signed an undertaken that they will
be absolutely loyal to the rules and regulations of
the party. We all signed this and that is why they
gave us a level-playing field to go through the
primaries and the main elections. Therefore, we
are a product of our own family, the APC, or any
party as the case may be. So far, in the history of
Nigerian democracy, parties have this
commanding view of appointing principal officers.
Dimeji Bankole emerged from the South-West;
Tunde Akogun, who became the Majority Leader,
was the choice of the party; Bello Mohammed
from Zamfara State was the Deputy Minority
Leader; and at the same time, Kawu Sunmaila was
the Deputy Minority Whip. Therefore, it is nothing
new. During Patricia Etteh’s time (as the speaker),
it was the party, the PDP, that decided on the
principal officers. Why should the PDP do it, and
now that the APC is in control, everybody is
raising eyebrows and causing civil disobedience?
The sons of the APC are now trying to rebel
against their own father, the APC. That is very
wrong.
The argument of members on the other side is
that the party cannot make these
appointments without first agreeing with the
various caucuses.
When did we even form the caucuses? It is only
when the House has been convened and the
leadership is in place that the caucuses will
emerge. For example, who is the Minority Leader?
Can the person now decide what happens in the
PDP? For now, there is nothing like caucuses
because we don’t have them yet, technically or
legally speaking. But, we have different fora
within the House, whether the APC fora or zonal
fora, but these are not caucuses per say. Until the
leadership emerges, there is nothing like caucuses
as we speak. We have not reached that stage yet.
Therefore, the party has the power to look at
various equations, geographical balance and
otherwise, to appoint the leaders. Take someone
like Gbajabiamila for example. I came to know
him in the 6th Assembly as Deputy Minority
Leader. I worked with him closely because I was
the secretary of the minority caucus when it was
formed. I found him to be a very sound character.
Being a true Nigerian, I don’t look at where you
come from. If you are the most excellent to
perform a duty, I will go for you. That was why I
went for him against my brother (Dogara) who
comes from Bauchi-South where I come from too.
This is a national duty. My brother won the
speakership and I congratulated him; why are
they now working against the APC? That is the
beginning of the problem.
However, what is actually playing out is that there
is the re-engineering of the New PDP (breakaway
faction of PDP). They lost out at the front door of
elections and they want to get something through
the back door of the leadership in the National
Assembly to re-launch themselves. Where is all
the legacy of Bukola Saraki (Senate President)
from? The PDP. Dogara had always been in the
PDP, except about nine to 12 months ago when
they quarrelled with our state governor for over a
period of two years. It became so intense that he
had to leave the PDP and join us in the APC.
Otherwise, he had been one of the movers and
shakers of the PDP, even as a young man. Thus, if
you look at all of this and what played out today
on the floor, all those who went to protect and
champion the cause of Dogara today are from the
PDP. So sad, the APC has been gullible and we
have played into the hands of the New PDP. You
know that some of them are extremely ambitious
and have started planning for 2019 already. We
knew all along that Dogara and Saraki have the
same forum; they have been working together.
Also, there is Tambuwal, who has always been a
PDP man. He just happened to join the APC. He
has been in the ANPP, PDP, New PDP and finally
he is back to the APC. Now he is fighting some of
his makers and there is ‘Tambuwalisation’ of the
House for obvious reasons. There is a bigger
picture which will follow. What played out today
was not just about the names of principal officers.
There will be an implosion if things continue this
way.
-*You just admitted that the APC has been
gullible. How is the party going to handle the
situation before there is an implosion?*-
The fact is that the party made a mistake. The
mistake is what I may call naivety or youthful
exuberance of the party. The APC was formed by
three and a half of or three and two-halves of
different political parties. The merger that gave
birth to the party was historical in the sense that
it was the first time (such would happen). The APC
is barely two years old, yet we went through the
crisis of merger when nobody gave us a chance to
succeed. The euphoria of forming a new party
from different interest groups and parties, that
puberty thing, is making the party not to go the
whole mile.
The President may be a well determined and
experienced person and a democrat, but as a
group, we have failed by not going the whole mile.
We dislodged a ruling party that was so wealthy
and very ambitious, only for us to now say that
we don’t care about the emergence of the leaders
of the National Assembly. That is the greatest
mistake and it is a natural mistake because they
wanted to imbibe the spirit of true democracy,
but we are not there yet. They have forgotten that
the enemies armed with sophisticated weapons
are still around the corner and they are within the
National Assembly. In fact, that is where they are
strong. The President has dislodged the executive,
but in the National Assembly, the enemies are still
strong. To me, the naivety is the biggest mistake.
It is not worrisome that one made a mistake, but
it is worrisome if one doesn’t rise quickly to
amend one’s mistake and wax stronger. I think
the party will rise to the occasion as we have done
before.
-*What is the way forward for the APC in this
case?*-
As far as I am concerned, the onus lies on Dogara,
the Speaker, being the number one person in this
matter. As the leader of the House, he has to be
responsible to Nigeria, his country, and the
constituents that elected us all. My constituency,
which is not his constituency, now directly relies
on him because his responsibility is also to guide
me into doing the right thing. There are many
people who can tell him the truth and I am one of
those people. He should stabilise the House. The
onus is on him to allow party discipline to prevail,
if he is truly an APC person. He needs to go back
to the line of the party, heal the wounds and
appoint these principal officers the same way God
appointed him to be the leader of the House. He
should discountenance whatever promises he
made to anybody outside the party. If this APC
platform crumbles, he too will crumble forever.
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