The leader of “The Patriots”, a group of pro-national
conference elder statesmen, Prof. Ben Nwabueze (SAN), explained yesterday why
he turned down his appointment as a member of the National Conference Advisory
Committee.
The retired university teacher said
that his age and fragile health stood on the way of the national assignment,
adding that he had been battling with prostrate cancer for years.
The committee chaired by former
university don and politician Dr. Femi Okunrounmu, was inaugurated last week by
the President. Ahead of the inauguration, the frontline legal scholar declined
the offer and nominated another legal luminary, Chief Solomon Asemota (SAN), to
represent The Patriots.
Nwabueze, in a statement in Lagos,
said he was not expecting President Goodluck Jonathan to make him the chairman
of the Advisory Committee. He said The Patriots only expected to nominate one
of its members to serve on the committee.
He, however, promised to contribute
to the conference’s proposals by mobilising lawyers and political scientists
for a deliberation on the matter at the proposed Uyo National Summit.
Nwabueze said following the
deliberation, he would submit “a Draft Peoples Constitution” to the Presidency
and the National Assembly for consideration, stressing that this move would not
conflict with the vague terms of reference given to the committee by the
President.
The statement reads: “I cut short my
stay in London for medicals and returned to Nigeria on Saturday 12 October,
2013 to keep a long-standing commitment to chair the Anambra Literary
Creativity Festival at Awka on 15 October. It may be necessary for me, after my
Awka engagement, to go back to London to continue my medicals.
“It is not generally known to people
that I have been fighting prostrate cancer for some years now, and have been
kept going by consultations from time to time with, and treatment by, a
Consultant Oncologist at Charing Cross Hospital, London. My appointment with
the Consultant Oncologist had been shifted many times because of several
postponements in the dates of The Patriots meeting with President Goodluck
Jonathan and the National Summit at Uyo, both of which eventually took place on
29 August and 3/4 September respectively, leaving me free at last to travel to
London on 8 September for my medical appointments.
“After The Patriots fruitful meeting
with the President, a member of our team who has access to him on a personal
basis was mandated to go back to get him to set up the Committee on the
National Conference of which he had earlier given a hint. My understanding from
the contacts with him was that The Patriots would be asked to nominate a member
to the Committee. I never expected to be appointed chairman or member of the
Committee, and would, quite frankly, have considered such an appointment
inappropriate in the circumstances. It is an appointment for a younger person,
not for an old man of 83 years afflicted by ill-health.
“But The Patriots remain willing to
work with the Presidential Committee, and to give it all necessary assistance,
if called upon to do so.
“While still in London and before
the setting up of the Presidential Committee was announced, I wrote to 13
prominent lawyers and political scientists to join me in a committee to prepare
a Draft People’s Constitution which will be submitted for deliberation at the
Uyo National Summit when it re-convenes in terms of Paragraph Seven of the
communique adopted at the 3/4 September meeting, and thereafter to be presented
to the Presidency and the National Assembly as a working Paper for the National
Conference proper. “This is the area in which I think my contribution to the
work of the Conference would be particularly useful, and I do not see this as
in any way conflicting with the Terms of Reference of the Presidential
Committee, although they (i.e. the Terms of Reference) contain a somewhat
vaguely worded item, to wit, “to advise government on legal procedures and
options for integrating decisions and outcomes of the national
dialogue/conference into the constitution and laws of the nation.
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