THESE may not be good times for the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki,
as a complex negotiation to save his job through a political solution
to his false asset declaration trial appeared to have failed.
The
last-minute attempt to save Saraki was said to have been spearheaded by
some leaders of the ruling All Progressives Congress but the efforts
crumbled because of the conditions which Saraki had found impossible to
satisfy.
If the efforts had not failed, a source said Saraki
would not have appeared before the Code of Conduct Tribunal on Wednesday
and be in the dock for the second time within one month.
The APC
face-savers were said to have prevailed on the Senate president to
respect the party’s
position on the appointment of the Senate
leadership, a position Saraki had breached when he chose Senators Ali
Ndume, Bala Na’Allah and Francis Alimikhena, as Senate Leader, Deputy
Leader and Deputy Majority Whip, respectively.
The APC choices
for the positions had been Senator Ahmed Lawan (North-East) as Majority
Leader; George Akume (North-Central) as deputy Majority Leader, and Abu
Ibrahim (North-West) as Deputy Chief Whip.
Reversing the positions was said to have been the minimum condition for Saraki to retain his position as the Number Three man.
Sources,
who asked not to be identified, said Saraki had indeed tried to reverse
the appointments of the Senate principal officers but that he met
resistance from them, especially Ndume, who was said to have told the
Senate president to his face that he could not surrender the mandate
given to him by other senators from his zone.
Ndume asked Saraki
to forget the vacating of office for Lawan. Bala Na’Allah and Francis
Alimikhena were also said to have refused to abandon their mandate for
Akume and Ibrahim respectively.
It was the search for the
solution to the imbroglio that reportedly informed a meeting between the
Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, Ndume and three other ranking senators,
including Ibrahim Gobir (Sokoto East) and Senator Danjuma Goje (Gombe
Central), on Monday night.
Osinbajo was said to have told the APC
senators that the position of the Presidency remained that Saraki must
toe the party’s line on the appointment of principal officers.
But
Ndume, according to a source very close to the senate leadership,
allegedly told Osinbajo point blank that the decision to quit office as
senate leader was beyond him because he was being threatened by his
colleagues against succumbing to any pressure to do so.
The
source added that the meeting, which also had in attendance the APC
chairman, Chief John Odigie – Oyegun, said the Borno senator insisted
that having been elected by his colleagues from the North-East, he could
only quit the position at their instance.
Ndume was said to have
told Osinbajo that the Presidency should not blame his emergence on
Saraki because he was voted for as Senate Leader, having lost the
contest for the Deputy President of the Senate position to Senator Ike
Ekweremadu.
He was also said to have also told Osinbajo that the
APC could not sanction him because he was a popular politician who had
been winning elections in his area even when he was not in the party.
“With
due respect, Mr. Vice-President, I cannot give you what I don’t have.
It is the North-East caucus in the Senate that gave me their mandate;
they are the only one that can withdraw it.
“Apart from this,
asking me to relinquish my position will likely create enmity between
Borno and Yobe states because the Borno South would see it as a case of
deliberate persecution of their representative in the APC government,”
the senator reportedly told Osinbajo.
Ndume was also said to have
argued that his constituents would not take it lightly with him because
they saw him as holding the position in trust for them. He said he had
been been warned before attending the meeting against trading off his
mandate.
The Senate Leader was said to have added that having
emerged the Senate Leader by the votes of a majority of the senators
from the North-East, Saraki could not unilaterally remove him.
A
three member committee headed by the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, was said to have been working on
the planned political solution aimed at resolving the impasse.
It
was learnt that while the Dogara committee had convinced Na’Allah and
Alimikhena to accept resignation as principal officers and accept
chairmanship of juicy committees, Ndume had consistently been rejecting
the offer.
Another senator from the North-West geopolitical zone
also hinted our correspondent that Saraki had actually informed Lawan to
be prepared to take office as the senate leader.
“The issue
would have been resolved long time ago if Ndume had agreed to be the
chairman of a juicy committee since his deputy, Na’Allah, had agreed to
resign and accept chairmanship of a juicy committee,” the senator said.
Odigie-Oyegun
had on June 24 written to Saraki and Dogara, listing the names of
proposed occupants of the leadership positions in the Senate and the
House of Representatives.
While Dogara accepted the party’s decision, Saraki had named different people on the floor of the Senate in July
Odigie-Oyegun
had, in the letter to Saraki, named Lawan (North-East) as Majority
Leader; Prof. Sola Adeyeye (South-West) as Chief Whip; George Akume
(North-Central) as Deputy Majority Leader and Abu Ibrahim (North-West)
as Deputy Chief Whip.
Attempts to speak with the spokesperson for
the Senate, Senator Dino Melaye, on the issue were unsuccessful as
calls put across to his mobile were not answered while a text message
sent to him on the matter had yet to be acknowledged as of the time of
filing this report.
Ndume declined comments when contacted on the
phone, saying that he could only speak to our correspondent on issues
before the Senate as the leader.
“I am the leader of the Senate
and not that of APC senators. I can only speak on issues that concern
the entire Senate, which had been tabled for deliberation.”
Source: Punch
0 Comments