A Federal High
Court sitting in Abuja, yesterday, aborted moves by the House of
Representatives to commence hearing on the allegation that the Minister of
Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison Madueke, spent about N10 billion on
chartered private jets.
In a ruling
yesterday, Justice Ahmed Ramat Mohammed, ordered the legislative house to
shelve its plans to begin probe into the allegation on June 25.
The judge further
directed all the parties to maintain status quo till July 3, a date the
High Court slated to hear the substantive suit that is challenging the powers
of the Public Accounts Committee, PAC, of the House of Representatives to
investigate such allegation.
The court order
was sequel to an oral application made by counsel to the minister, Mr. Etigwe
Uwa (SAN), who, yesterday, informed the court that despite the pendency of the
suit, the House, on May 23, wrote a letter to the Petroleum Minister and the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, asking them to ensure that they appeared
before its probe committee on June 25, 26 and 27.
Uwa told the
court that the House had in the said letter threatened that it would not
hesitate to invoke its powers and issue a warrant of arrest against the
minister should she fail to appear before the committee on the aforementioned
dates.
He said: “My
Lord, the 2nd defendant in particular (House of Reps), in their letter to my
clients, said they noted with dismay that we approached this court in a bid to
stop them from performing their constitutional duties. They also boasted that
no arm of the government has the power to stop them.”
Besides,
Uwa told the court that they had already written a letter to counsel to the
House of Reps, Mr. A. B. Mahmood (SAN), requesting him to enter an undertaking
that his client would not take any action capable of overreaching or
jeopardising the ‘Res’ of the dispute before the high court.
He said: “We
sought an undertaking from him that his client will not proceed with the
hearing as planned so as not to destroy the ‘Res’ of this suit or make nonsense
of the proceeding before this court.
“If they are
allowed to conduct the hearing, our suit, which has already been granted an
accelerated hearing, will be overtaken by events and thus occasion an
irreparable damage on my client.”
The House of
Reps, through its lawyer, Mr. Aminu Sadauki, insisted that the court lacked the
requisite powers to stop it from going ahead with the planned probe.
According to the
House, “we cannot enter an undertaken on behalf of an arm of government
carrying out its constitutional duty.
“If my Lordship
makes the order as prayed by the plaintiff, it would amount to granting their
reliefs even before hearing the substantive suit. I, therefore, urge this court
to refuse this application.”
On its part, the
National Assembly, which was joined as the 1st defendant in the matter, through
its counsel Mr. Obasi Nwabueze, said they were equally served with a letter
from the plaintiff seeking the maintenance of status quo.
Nwabueze said
his client resolved to leave the issue to the discretion of the court.
After
listening to all the parties, Justice Mohammed stressed that though Section 4
of the 1999 Constitution conferred exclusive powers on the National Assembly,
he however noted that Section 6 of the same constitution imbued the court with
the statutory powers to mediate and adjudicate disputes involving any organ of
the government.
He berated the
House for accusing the court of attempting to usurp its constitutionally
guaranteed oversight function, noting that the 2nd defendant, having already
briefed a lawyer and submitted itself before the court, ought to have shown
respect to the court by putting its planned action in abeyance pending the
outcome of the suit.
Justice Mohammed
ruled: “The court has the inherent power to intervene with a view to protecting
its sanctity and integrity. Consequently, I hereby direct parties in this suit
to maintain status quo from now till the next adjourned date.”
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Nass
Abeg live our Diezani alone o! Abi na only men go dey tif governmant money ni? Okey continue!
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