Showdown imminent as Senate resumes dailytrust.com.ng
Showdown imminent as Senate resumes As the National Assembly resumes tomorrow, indications have emerged of an imminent showdown in the Senate.
Highly
placed sources in the upper chamber told Daily Trust that a number of
senators are still unhappy with the Senate President Bukola Saraki over
his recent remarks on the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).
The
senate president, Daily Trust reports, is already making frantic
efforts to calm aggrieved lawmakers following the controversy that his
comments have generated.
Senator Bukola Saraki, the sources said,
would have to convince his colleagues as to why he “unilaterally”
described the proscription of IPOB as illegal. But some senators close to Saraki said his seat “remained unshaken because he did not go beyond the boundary.”
It
was gathered that at the height of the debate ahead of the proscription
of IPOB, Saraki had serious misunderstanding with the Attorney-General
of the Federation, Abubakar Malami.
“A lot of issues came to
play, Malami felt the Senate president was undermining the executive. It
was a serious issue that Vice President Yemi Osinbajo had to
intervene,” a source said.
Saraki had last Monday issued a
statement describing as “unconstitutional,” the proscription and
declaration of the IPOB as a terrorists group.
Though some
sources said the Senate was sharply divided over what to do with Saraki,
considering the “weighty nature of the words he used in calling the
attention of the executive arm of government,” other sources said Saraki
actually fell into a trap.
It was gathered that Saraki’s
statement had angered many northern senators, who received endless calls
from their constituents as to whether he had their mandate to say what
he said.
“Many constituents, especially in the North and some
places in the South West, have undiluted support for President Muhammadu
Buhari. They hardly tolerate attack on Buhari; they therefore viewed
what Saraki said as an affront, disrespect or an attempt to ridicule the
presidency,” a source said.
A senator said: “Actually, it was a
section of the presidency that dug the ditch for Saraki. Some people
close to the corridors of power approached and asked him to make the
statement on IPOB as the chief lawmaker in order to stabilize the
polity.
“It was based on their prompting that he issued the
statement but unknown to him, it was meant to put him in trouble. But
after issuing the statement, they are now mobilising senators against
Saraki.
“It is serious treachery because many of the senators
are being encouraged to go against Saraki when we resume tomorrow on the
grounds that he was wrong to have spoken without first consulting us,”
he said. “While the call for Saraki to speak on IPOB made sense
on face value, the same people actually wanted to use what he said to
undermine him in the eyes of President Buhari,” another source said.
Aware
of the plot, Saraki last week embarked on marathon meetings with
caucuses of the Senate with a view to reassure his colleagues and
assuage their fears.
He separately met with senators from the
South East, South West, South South and then the North caucuses of the
Senate where the issue was reportedly discussed.
At the meeting
with the northern senators, Saraki was said to have assured them that he
was not against President Muhammadu Buhari and that he issued the
statement to simply douse tension in the country. It was gathered
that at his meeting with the South East senators, Saraki asked them to
use their caucus to preach for the unity and progress of the country. Specifically, Saraki appealed to them against preaching division and break up.
“In fact, he told them to stop playing the ostrich and talk to their people on the need to keep Nigeria one,” he said.
A
ranking senator said, “The meeting is not unusual, it’s a sort of
routine whereby issues relating to a particular caucus or forum is
discussed. The meeting was successful and it was to keep the Senate and
its various caucuses united for cohesion, stability and peaceful
coexistence,” he said.
On the possible showdown, he said people who were unhappy would inevitably raise the issue when the Senate resumes tomorrow. “Remember,
he spoke as an individual not as the Senate president. But even at
that, I’m sure people who are not happy with the statement will seek
explanation on Tuesday. There is a possibility that it will result to a
showdown.
“We are all members of the National Assembly,
representing various senatorial districts and constituencies. We are
here to promote, protect and foster the interest of our constituents,”
he said. He said members of the ruling All Progressives Congress
(APC) either in the executive or legislature must not be seen speaking
at cross purposes or fighting each other.
“We must at all times
support our armed forces to discharge their constitutional
responsibilities, anything short of this must be resisted,” the ranking
senator said.
President Buhari’s spokesperson, Mr Femi Adesina and Malam Garba Shehu, could not be reached for comment last night.
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