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Tuesday, 6 October 2015
Protests as Saraki unveils Buhari’s ministerial list
PROTESTS
at state
levels
greeted
Tuesday’s
announcement of President Muhammadu
Buhari’s ministerial nominees by the President of
the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki.
Saraki at plenary announced 21 names as
contained in the ministerial list sent to him on
September 30, saying the screening of the
nominees would commence on Tuesday, October
13.
But from the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders
came a petition to the Senate against the
nomination of a former Lagos State Governor,
Babatunde Fashola. Indeed, CACOL’s petition had
been dated Saturday, October 3, asking the
Senate not to confirm Fashola “should his name
pop-up as a ministerial nominee.”
In the petition signed by the CACOL’s executive
head, Debo Adeniran, copies of which were sent
to Buhari and Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, the group urged
the senators to visit Lagos, as governed by
Fashola, before screening and confirming him for
any appointment as a minister.
“Visit the Lagos Fashola left behind before
confirming his appointment as minister” is the
title of the group’s petition in which read in part,
“Howbeit, if the rumour making the rounds in
some quarters, which has also been confirmed by
some sections of the media, is anything to go by,
we would say Nigerians’ hope for a true change
has been dashed with the inclusion of some
names that in a saner environment should not
appear on the list, if integrity and honesty are the
basis of the selection criteria.
“We are therefore constrained at this point in
time to bring to your attention our critical
reaction to the rumoured nomination of the
immediate past governor of Lagos State, Mr.
Babatunde Fashola, as a minister in the new
government.”
The group therefore catalogued a number of
fraud and corruption allegations, most of which it
had before now levelled against Fashola.
Also, an anti-corruption group known as Integrity
Group has petitioned the President and the
Senate to protest the nomination of a former
Governor of Rivers State, Rotimi Amaechi, as a
ministerial nominee.
The group accused Amaechi of alleged fraudulent
practices during his tenure as governor.
The group urged Amaechi to first clear his name
over “allegations of fraud concerning the sale of
state power plants and conversion of proceeds of
$302m, unlawful payment of over N4bn to
Clinoriv Specialist Hospital and unlawful
enrichment of a firm, Messrs Collect Nigeria Ltd.
with public funds amounting to over N1.5bn.”
Addressing newsmen in Abuja on Tuesday, the
Publicity Director of the group, Mr. Livingstone
Wechie, alleged that Amaechi was currently being
investigated by anti-corruption agencies for
unlawful enrichment and conversion of over
N70bn state resources.
He added that the former governor had resisted
efforts to make him to explain the circumstances
regarding the money to the people of Rivers and
that he failed to appear before the Justice
Omereji-led Judicial Commission of Enquiry set up
by Amaechi’s successor, Governor Nyesom Wike.
In Oyo State, the ruling All Progressives Congress
asked on Buhari to revisit his nomination of a
legal practitioner, Adebayo Shittu, claiming that
the ministerial-nominee was not a team player in
the party.
It was learnt that Governor Abiola Ajimobi was
opposed to Shittu’s choice but the APC state
secretary, Mojeed Olaoya, told one of our
correspondents in Ibadan, the state capital, on
Tuesday that the issue was between the nominee
and the APC and not with the governor.
Responding to the opposition of his candidacy,
however, Shittu said he contributed to the success
of the party and that he had nothing against
Ajimobi.
Olaoya said, “This is the party talking and not the
governor. It was the party that wrote a letter to
the governor asking him to convey our message
on Shittu’s nomination to the President. We have
published paid advertisement in the newspapers
stating our position on Shittu’s matter.”
The party stated that despite the state’s
contribution to President Buhari’s victory at the
poll, it was not being adequately compensated. It
stated in the advertorial that Shittu’s nomination
had further compounded the political challenges
being faced by the party because of the
nominee’s “unacceptability among the people.”
Saraki said on Tuesday that the screening of the
nominees, 21 in all, would commence on Tuesday,
October 13.
He said this during Senate plenary after reading
out the names of the nominees.
Spokesperson for the Senate, Dino Melaye, also
told journalists shortly after plenary that the
upper legislative chamber would in the interim
called for the profiles and other documents on
the nominees in order to ensure thorough
screening.
He said, “While we want to expedite action, we
also want to be very diligent and thorough in the
screening of the ministerial nominees. We want to
ask for the citation and profile of the nominees so
that senators can study the resume of the
nominees and this will guide us in asking
questions and guide our deliberations when we
start the screening.
“We want senators to have enough time to study
submissions by the nominees so that relevant
questions could be asked during the screening
exercise. It is also from the Curriculum Vitae that
we will be looking at possible portfolio that the
President may be giving to the various nominees.
“The screening exercise would be taken live on
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and it would
not be influenced by political or religious
affiliations.”
*-Fashola, Ogbeh, Amaechi…-*
Earlier in plenary, the President of the Senate, Dr
Bukola Saraki, had unveiled the much awaited
nominees, reading out names that had been
correctly speculated in the media.
Buhari’s 21 nominees, as read out by Saraki,
include Abubakar Malami (SAN) (Kebbi);
Abdurahman Bello Dambazzau (Kano); Aisha
Jumai Al Hassan (Taraba); Alhaji Lai Mohammed
(Kwara); Babatunde Raji Fashola (Lagos); Adebayo
Shittu (Oyo); Solomon Dalong (Plateau); Senator
Chris Ngige (Anambra); Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers);
and Chief Audu Ogbeh (Benue).
Others are Mrs. Amina Ibrahim( Kaduna); Dr.
Osagie Ehaneri (Edo); Emmanuel Kachukwu
(Delta); Dr. Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti); Mr. Suleiman
Adamu (Jigawa); Mrs. Kemi Adeosun (Ogun); Dr.
Ogbonnaya Onu (Ebonyi); Ahmed Isa Ibeto
(Niger); Ibrahim Usman Jibril ; Senator Hadi Sirika
(Katsina); and Senator Udo Udoma (Akwa – Ibom).
Saraki said the nominees would be screened
during plenary on Tuesday.
But the Minority Leader of the Senate, Godswill
Akpabio, who raised a constitutional point of
order noted that it was constitutionally wrong for
Buhari to send 21 names as ministerial nominees,
instead of 36.
Saraki noted the observation of Akpabio and
explained that the President had already noted in
his letter that the complete list would soon be
forwarded to the red chamber.
*-Buhari not for screening-*
Melaye denied reports that Buhari would be
screened by the Senate since he had appointed
himself as the petroleum minister.
He said, “We are not going to screen President
Buhari but ministerial nominees. The insinuation
that he would be screened as minister of
petroleum is baseless and untrue. It’s a product
of imagination of people with inordinate
ambition.
Melaye, who said he could not ascertain whether
the Senate had received any petition against the
ministerial nominees, said all petitions received
would be treated accordingly.
“I cannot say how many petitions had been
received. Petitions on nominees will form basis
for the screening,” he said, adding however that
the Senate would be able to do a better job if the
President would furnish it with the expected
portfolio of the nominees.
*-Senators react-*
Senator Jeremiah Useni, in an interview with
journalists, said having only three women on the
ministerial list was not good enough.
“I wish to see more women on the list. I believe
that the President will be more gender sensitive in
the next batch since he said the 21 names he sent
is a partial list,” he said.
He also ruled out the possibility of giving special
considerations to either serving or past members
of the National Assembly whose names are on
the list, saying “there is no rule on the issue of
take a bow. The fact that the seventh Senate
adopted a convention does not mean that the
Eight Senate will adopt same.”
But the Senator representing Delta North, Peter
Nwaboshi, in an interview with journalists,
expressed disappointment that the list contained
names of older men and women who had served
as ministers about 36 years ago.
He said, “I think the youths of Nigeria should ask
questions. How can people who served as
ministers during the former President Shehu
Shagari’s administration in 1979 be presented as
ministers? I was a small boy when the particular
nominee was minister about 36 years ago. You
are bringing the person to be minister now.
“One would have expected that the younger
generation would have been injected into the list.
I wonder where we are going to in this country.
When will the youths be given opportunity?
“We already know all the people in the list. They
are governors who just finished their tenure after
eight years. Is that the change they are talking
about? It is left for Nigerians to judge.
*-‘Buhari never told me I would be minister’-*
A former Governor of Ekiti State, who is one of
the ministerial nominees, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has
described his nomination as a surprise.
He told reporters at the national headquarters of
the All Progressives Congress in Abuja on Tuesday
that Buhari never gave him a hint about being
nominated in spite of closeness to the President.
The former governor served as the Director of
Research and Strategy in the Buhari 2015
Campaign Organisation.
In response to a question as to whether his
nomination came to him as a surprise, Fayemi
said, “Well, to the extent that I was not told by the
President that I was going to be on his list, yes, it
came as a surprise. The President is a surprise
master; let me put it that way.
“He did not tell anyone to the best of my
knowledge and I would have thought that I was in
vantage position to know more than others, I was
with him for five days before then.
“I was with him in New York at the United Nations
General Assembly and he never uttered a word
about his list to me nor to anyone else.
“We came back to Nigeria together, I was with him
up till 4pm on the evening he submitted the list to
the President of the Senate and I didn’t have any
clue of what is going to happen. So, to that extent,
I was pleasantly surprised.”
Another Ekiti ex-governor, Segun Oni, said Buhari
had proved to all that he was not only a
statesman but also a loyal party man.
He said, “The President is a party member and his
thinking is always along with the party and he has
always been saying so.
“You will know that the President, on his own,
knows the party and he wants to involve the party
as much as possible and he has done that. No
one can complain now because you will see that
the leaders that we will want to see are there and
we are very grateful to the President.”
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