How Senate Laws Were ‘amended’ For Saraki, Ekweremadu’s Elections – Clerk
The deputy clerk of the National
Assembly, Benedict Efeturi, confirmed to police investigators that the
senate’s standing orders used for the 2015 elections of Bukola Saraki
and Ike Ekweremadu as senate president and deputy respectively, was
different from the 2011 version which should have been in use at the
time, details of police investigation seen by PREMIUM TIMES show.
Mr.
Efeturi made the disclosure to the Criminal Investigation and
Intelligence Department of the Nigerian Police, which investigated
allegations that the rules were forged to help Messrs. Saraki and
Ekweremadu to their posts.
He however said the alteration, which
some senators denounced as illegal as lawmakers were not informed about,
was based on the directive of the former senate leadership, led by its
president, David Mark.
He said the amendment was done “by convention
and practice” and not be “procedure”, as previous versions of the rules
were amended by the same method.
Messrs. Saraki, Ekweremadu, Efeturi
and a former clerk of the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasuwa, have been
charged with forgery. They were arraigned on Monday before a High Court
in Abuja.
They deny wrongdoing. The senate president and his
deputy accuse President Muhammadu Buhari of bias, and argue that the
case is a violation of the independence of the legislature.
In
his statement to the police, Mr. Efeturi, who is also the Clerk of the
Senate, said the leadership of the seventh Senate under Mr. Mark ordered
the 2015 Standing Rules be amended “not necessarily by procedure” but
“by convention and practice”.
According to the report, he “stated
that the leadership of the National Assembly of the 7th Senate ordered
the 2015 Standing Rules as amended by their convention and practice. (He
stated) that the Senate Standing Orders 2003, 2007 and 2011 followed
the same procedure as that of 2015. He emphasized that in the
Parliament, amendment of the Standing Orders is by practice not
necessarily by procedure.
“He further stated that during the
ruling of the Senate President on the 24th of June 2015, that the Senate
Standing Orders of the Senate 2015 is authentic, final, relevant and
cannot be challenged. He attached a copy of the debates of the Senate on
Wednesday, the 24th of June where the Senate President ruled (that) the
Senate Standing Order 2015 as authentic Standing Orders of the 8th
Senate.”
“Fraudulent amendment”
Mr. Maikasuwa, who
conducted the elections of Messrs Saraki and Ekweremadu, said he did not
refer to any Senate Standing Rules, rather, he said he only performed
his duty using “normal procedures for the opening of a new parliament”.
He
said, according to the police report, “that before the election, he
called on the Deputy Clerk to the National Assembly who is also the
Clerk to the Senate to read out the guidelines for the election”.
He
denied knowledge of the existence or production of an amended Senate
Standing Rules 2015, saying he had no business in the daily activities
in the Senate.
He told the police Mr. Efeturi was “in better position to know of the 2015 Standing Orders as amended”.
The
report says a number of Senators, including Suleiman Hukunyi, Kabiru
Marafa, Ahmed Lawan, Abdullahi Gumel, Gbenga Ashafa, Robert Boroffice
and Abu Ibrahim, were invited during the investigation.
In their
separate statements, they said the seventh Senate did not amend the 2011
Standing Rules and thus, the amendment rules used for inauguration of
the eighth assembly was fraudulent since there was no compliance with
the requirements for amendment of Senate Rules.
Mr. Lawan, who
contested and lost the senate presidency to Mr. Saraki, said, “The
procedures for election into the two presiding offices are clearly
stipulated in Order 2 (2(i) of the Senate Standing Rules 2011. That
contrary to the provision of the above order, the Clerk to the National
Assembly introduced and used order 3(3) e (ii) of the purported 2015
Standing Order”.
The report also noted the submissions of some
former lawmakers like Ita Enang, who was chairman, Rules and Business in
the seventh senate. Mr. Enang, now President Buhari’s assistant on
senate matters, told the police that the previous Senate did not amend
the rules.
Mr. Ekweremadu accused the police of bias in its investigation.
His
spokesperson, Uche Anichukwu, told PREMIUM TIMES that only All
Progressives Congress Senators in the Unity Forum—a group opposed to the
election of Mr. Saraki – were invited for questioning. He queried the
basis for his arraignment as he was neither questioned nor indicted by
the police.
In the summary, the police’s CIID said the contents of
the 2015 Rules “are substantially different from the Senate Standing
Order 2011 as amended” and that “Sections 2(iv), 3(3)EI,ii,iii,G and H, 5
and 7 of the Rules are different in the two Orders”.
“The allusion
of the Clerk of the Senate to procedure of amending the Standing Orders
of the Parliament through ‘practice and not necessarily procedure’ is a
misplaced analogy and undemocratic because the Nigerian Senate has
clearly laid down without a proviso, the procedure to be adopted in
amending its standing orders as contained in the section 110 of 2011
Senate Standing Orders,” the police said.
It added that, “This
practice where some group of senators amend the Rules of the Senate
without following legal procedures is not only criminal but portends
danger for growing democracy”.
The reported, dated July 14, 2015, was
forwarded to the Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami,
to determine “if this conduct constitutes crime or should be treated as
an internal affairs of the Senate”.
Saraki, Ekweremadu not mentioned or indicted
In
the report, no complaint was raised against Mr. Saraki. He was not
indicted. Although Mr. Ekweremadu was also not expressly indicted by the
report, he was part of the seventh Senate leadership which Mr. Efeturi
said gave orders for the rules to be amended. Mr. Ekweremadu was deputy
senate president under Mr. Mark.
The criminal charges came about a year after the report was submitted to the Federal Government.
Mr.
Saraki and the three were arraigned before an Abuja High Court on
Monday, triggering a war of words between Mr. Saraki and President
Muhammadu Buhari.
“That is what infuriated the Senate,” Mr. Anichukwu
said. “How could you prosecute Saraki and Ekweremadu who were neither
questioned nor indicted in the Police report.”
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