Senators have levelled 14 impeachable allegations against President
Goodluck Jonathan.
The lawmakers are expected to harmonise their allegations with members
of the House of Representatives before sending an impeachment request to Senate
President David Mark.
The pro-impeachment Senators and Representatives may meet before the end
of the week to agree on when to present the request to Mark, in line with
Section 143 (1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution.
Top on the list of the allegations is the President’s refusal to sign
120 bills into law.
The President is expected to explain why he could not curtail the Boko
Haram insurgency; and non-release of the abducted 219 Chibok girls.
Other issues are undule politicising of the security situation; failure
to act as de facto President; $10.8billion missing from the Federation
Account; squandering of N10billion private jets; and sloppiness/ failure in
governance.
Some of the allegations also include alleged violation of the
constitution/ Oath of Office; failure to implement recommendations of panels/
committees; setting up of ill-conceived, “nebulous” groups like TAN for
re-election campaign outside the Electoral Act; failure to establish and
inaugurate the Nigeria Police Council; illegal deployment of Armed Forces and
sowing seed of hatred and turning one part of the country against the other.”
Though the list of signatories was obtained by our correspondent, the
senators pleaded against its publication until what they described as
“auspicious time”.
Although 63 senators were reported to have backed the impeachment move,
the document shows that 16 signed.
A principal officer in the Senate, who pleaded not to be named because
of the “sensitivity” of the matter, said: “We are embarking on signatures drive
as I am talking to you. Senators are vetting the allegations before appending
signatures.
“We have secured the consent of more than 63 senators who are expected
to sign up in the next few days. And the senators are from both the PDP and the
APC.”
The “weighty” allegations have forced some PDP senators to regroup
against pro-impeachment ones.
The allegations read in part: “The President as the Head of government
has worked to undermine the effective performance of other arms of government,
especially the legislature, by constantly frustrating peaceful and harmonious
co-existence among other arms of government. In performing their constitutional
responsibility of lawmaking, the legislature passes bills to be assented to by
the President before they become laws of the federation.
“The President has consistently and consciously failed to sign bills and
motions passed on to him by the parliament, thereby making the position of the
legislative arm of government untenable. At the last count, the President has
refused to assent to about 120 bills passed by the current National Assembly.
He has not sent any communication as to their rejection as stipulated in Section
58 (1) (4) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended). Motions and other legislative
instruments have suffered similar, if not worse, fate.
The senators have also decided to hold the President liable for
allegedly not doing enough to address the Boko Haram insurgency and communal
conflicts.
The Notice of Impeachment states: “The President, as Commander-In-Chief
of the Armed Forces and Chief Security Officer of the nation, has failed to
ensure the protection of lives and properties. Mindless carnage by the Boko Haram
insurgents, especially in the Northeast, recurrent violence in states like
Taraba, Adamawa, Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa etc are manifest examples of how the
President has failed to exert the enormous powers inherent in his office.
“This total failure of leadership has not only served to threaten the
corporate existence of the country, it has taken an untoward toll on the
development and progress of the nation.
“The President has in an unprecedented manner reduced the Office of the
President to an object of ridicule both locally and in the eyes of the
international community, thereby reducing both the country and our hitherto
respected Armed Forces into laughing stock.
“As we speak, over 200 of our female children have been abducted for
over five months while some parts of our territorial space had been overtaken
by the unrelenting insurgents. Yet, the President and Commander-In-Chief of the
Armed Forces has displayed acute sense of cluelessness on how to tackle the
security challenges.
“The general impression out there is that the President is thoroughly
overwhelmed and, therefore, incapable of inspiring our gallant men and women of
the Armed Forces who are daily killed and maimed owing largely to the
incompetence of their Commander-In-Chief.
“Just recently, a large number of our troops ran to safety in
neighbouring Cameroon in the face of massive onslaught from the insurgents. The
fact that our renowned military had to find succour with our little brother
next door is the greatest indictment yet on the capability of the
Commander-In-Chief to rally his men and boost their morale.
“For unduly politicising the security situation, the President has shown
beyond all measure of doubt that he has neither the courage nor the sense of
judgement to tackle the issue headlong. Evidence abounds to show that the
President and his handlers by living in denial as to the abduction of Chibok
girls, gave the insurgents more than three weeks head start
They accused Jonathan of abdicating his responsibility through the
concession of waterways security and protection of oil installations to a
private firm.
“The President, in his capacity as Head of State has woefully abdicated
state responsibilities and severely undermined the capacity of our security
agencies by passing a “vote of no confidence” on the Nigeria Police and Armed
Forces to protect our strategic and vital infrastructures, like the pipelines.
“A case of this failure was the award of non-appropriated Oil Facility
Protection Contract worth N3.6b to a private firm (Oil Facilities Surveillance
Limited) controlled by ex militants,” the document claimed.
The senators also alleged that the President had failed to address
corruption.
The senators added: “The President as the Head of State is under
obligation to abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power as envisaged by
Section 15 (5) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended). Since his assumption of
office, corruption in Nigeria has assumed frightening proportion. For the first
time in our history, corruption is almost elevated to a state craft where known
corrupt Nigerians are either friends or employees of the government headed by
the President.
“ From Stella Oduah (Minister of Aviation) to AbdulRasheed Maina of the
pension scam, to how the Petroleum Minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has
refused to account for $10.8billion missing from the Federation Account or how
she allegedly squandered N10billion to fly private jets in two years or even
how the NNPC under her watch managed to pay subsidy monies to kerosene
marketers for three years without appropriation, thereby contravening Section
80 (1)-(4) of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as
amended), it has been a season of unbridled corruption.
“All of the names mentioned above are close friends and supporters of
the government and have been seen hobnobbing with the President in public even
when facing charges of abuse of office and corruption.”
They also accused Jonathan of allegedly sowing the seed of hatred and
turning one part of the country against the other.
The document said: “As the de facto President, instead of working
to unite the country by advocating true nationalism and patriotism, the
President has sought to take advantage of our religious and ethnic differences
through divisive and sectarian policies and politics. By continually, through
his innuendos and body language, suggesting that a particular section or group
of people of a particular faith or ethnicity is an enemy of the country, the
President has consciously sowed the seed of hatred and turned one part of the
country against the other.
“For threatening the fragile peace and unity of the nation by his
unprecedented clannishness and cronyism, the President has acted in ways
unbecoming of a President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“Failing to foster a sense of belonging and involvement among the
various people of the federation, to the end that loyalty to the nation shall
override sectional loyalties, the President has violated Sections 15 (2), (3)
(a) and (b) and (4) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
(as amended).
“For failing to establish and inaugurate the Nigeria Police Council as
envisaged by the Constitution, the President swore on oath to uphold and
defend, he has breached/violated the extant provisions of Section 153 (1) of
the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).
Section 217 (2) (c) of the Constitution said, ‘the Federation shall,
subject to an Act of the National Assembly made in that behalf, equip and
maintain the armed forces as may be considered adequate and effective for the
purpose of – suppressing insurrection and acting in aid of civil authorities to
restore order when called upon to do so by the President, but subject to such
conditions as may be prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly. Therefore
the powers vested on the President by virtue of the combined effects of
Sections 217 (2) (c) and 218 (1) to determine the operational use of the Armed
Forces of the Federation, are not absolute and in fact subject to the
supervising authority of the National Assembly as expressly stipulated by the
Constitution. Section 218 (4) clearly states that, ‘the National Assembly shall
have power to make laws for the regulations of – (a) the powers exercisable by
the President as Commander –in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the
Federation; and (b) the appointment, promotion and disciplinary control of
members of the armed forces of the Federation.’
A senator, who is a die-hard loyalist of the President, said: “There is
nothing like the impeachment process against President Goodluck Jonathan. Some
senators are just playing to the gallery.
“Even if they attempt to serve a notice of impeachment, they cannot get
the required one-third of members of the National Assembly to push it through.
Those of us in PDP will never allow the tyranny of the minority to take place
in the National Assembly.”
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Nass
Gbaaam!! I agree with the Honourable Senator!
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