Senate panel presents Buhari’s impeachment report today …grills IG on Melaye
Leke Baiyewu, Abuja
The Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim
Idris, is expected to appear before the Senate on Wednesday (today). He
will be grilled by the lawmakers on the arrest, detention and
hospitalisation of Senator Dino Melaye.
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The appearance will be broadcast live on Nigerian Television Authority.
The upper chamber of the National
Assembly had last Wednesday summoned the police boss to brief senators
the next day on Melaye’s case and the killings by armed herdsmen and
militias across the country.
Idris however shunned the invitation,
choosing to accompany President Muhammadu Buhari who was on a two-day
visit to Bauchi State instead.
The lawmakers had declined to engage his representative, the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (Operations), Mr. Joshak Habila.
Miffed by his non-appearance, the Senate had resolved to reschedule the IG’s address to today.
In another development, the Senate
Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters is expected to
present its report on Wednesday (today) on President Muhammadu Buhari’s
approval of the payment of $496m out of the Excess Crude Account for the
purchase of military aircraft.
The 12 Super Tucano aircraft ordered from the United States will be delivered in 2020.
The Senate had on Thursday resolved to refer the matter to the committee for legal advice, when lawmakers became divided on it.
The panel was given the mandate to
investigate the circumstances surrounding the arms deal and whether the
President violated the constitution or not.
Most of the lawmakers who spoke on the
withdrawal and spending pointed out that the President had breached
Section 80 of the 1999 Constitution, while a few disagreed.
Senator Mathew Uroghide, who is the
Chairman of the Committee on Public Accounts, had specifically urged the
President of the Senate, Bukola Saraki, to allow the chamber to invoke
Section 143 of the 1999 Constitution against the President.
Uroghide had said, “There are serious
consequences for the violation of our constitution. As a consequence,
the only thing that we can draw from on this is that we call on you
(Saraki) to invoke Section 143 of the 1999 Constitution. What it means
is that this matter does not need to be investigated; it is clear that
this offence has been committed by Mr. President.
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“I want the Senate to resolve that what
the President has done is procedurally wrong and it is a violation of
our constitution. It must be condemned and, of course, the consequences
that are contained in the constitution – in Section 143 – should be
invoked.”
Saraki had last Wednesday read a letter
from Buhari in which the President admitted that the money had been
withdrawn and paid to the US ahead of legislative approval. This, Buhari
said, was done to beat the deadline for the arms deal.
The President recalled that due to the
“security emergencies” in the country, which was discussed with state
governors, the National Economic Council on December 14, 2017, approved
that up to $1bn be released and utilised from the Excess Crude Account
to address the situation.
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