Nigeria's National Assembly |
The House of
Representatives on Wednesday suspended Abdulmumin Jibrin, a lawmaker from Kano
at the centre of the unfolding budget padding scandal, for 180 legislative
days.
The
House seats three days in a week and this consequently means that Mr. Jibrin’s
suspension would last more than a year.
In
a motion recommended by House Ethics Committee chairman, Nicholas Ossai, and
adopted by the whole House, Mr. Jibrin will also not be able to hold any
position of responsibility for the span of the current National Assembly.
Mr.
Jibrin began stirring what experts now described as one
Africa’s biggest parliamentary scandals in recent memory on July 21, a day
after he was eased out as chairman of the powerful committee.
Although
the House was taking a two-month recess at the time, Mr. Jibrin remained resolute
in his quest to “end the massive corruption in the House.”
“My
resolve to champion this cause was borne out of patriotism and desire to
complement the present administration’s anti-corruption war from the
legislative front,” Mr. Jibrin said in an email to PREMIUM TIMES on August 21.
Mr.
Jibrin said the campaign had earned him “blackmail, propaganda and campaign of
calumny” from Mr. Dogara, lawmakers loyal to him and their proxies.
The
assault had been largely targeted at the Speaker of the House, Yakubu Dogara,
and three other principal officers, whose resignation and prosecution he had
continued to demand.
Mr.
Dogara had announced the removal of Mr. Jibrin in a speech he
read in plenary on July 20, alleging budget fraud and serial betrayal of trust.
To
back his allegations against Mr. Dogara, Mr. Jibrin released damning documents to the media.
On
July 30, the State Security Service sealed the secretariat of the Appropriation Committee
in the National Assembly after Mr. Jibrin raised the alarm that Mr. Dogara had
allegedly concluded plans to cart away computers and destroy evidence.
Mr.
Jibrin also visited law enforcement agencies, including the EFCC, the SSS and
the police, where he said he personally submitted petitions detailing evidence
of fraudulent manipulation of budget by Mr. Dogara, his deputy Yusuf Lasun,
House Whip, Alhassan Doguwa, Minority Leader, Leo Ogor, and nine others.
After
several days of silence, Mr. Dogara succumbed to public demands for him to defend himself
and came out with blistering statements denying all the charges against him.
Mr.
Dogara took specific issue with the ‘budget padding’ catchphrase, saying it was
a strange term to use when describing the actions of the legislature.
He
also said lawmakers could not be probed by law enforcement agencies over
any infractions in the National Assembly, but later walked back this statement.
At
some point, the APC moved to contain the crisis, but its gag order lasted only a weekend.
Consequently,
lawmakers began openly criticising Mr. Jibrin for allegedly defacing the
National Assembly, dealing a major blow to his crusade.
Mr.
Jibrin’s isolation became even more pronounced after 10 principal officers of
the House released a statement backing Mr. Dogara and denouncing
Mr. Jibrin. Amongst them was Femi Gbajabiamila, the Majority Leader who many
thought would be reluctant to openly back Mr. Dogara.
The
development sparked speculation that Mr. Jibrin would be suspended upon
resumption of the House from recess.
The
House resumed on September 20 and a lawmaker loyal to Mr. Dogara moved a motion
the next day to have Mr. Jibrin probed for allegedly breaching the privileges
of the members.
Emmanuel
Orker-Jev, a lawmaker from Benue, proposed tough sanctions against Mr. Jibrin
for the damage his allegations have allegedly wrought on the House.
“The
image of the House has never been worse than this before. Hon. Jibrin was
reckless and the allegations were false. He knew that the allegations were false
and scandalous and he had no regards at all to whether the allegations were
true or false,” Mr. Orker-Jev said.
The
House subsequently assigned the matter to its Ethics and Privileges Committee
for further investigation and to report back within a week with its findings
and recommendations.
Mr.
Ossai, chairman of the committee, convened the first hearing on the matter
September 23, during which Mr. Orker-Jev submitted his allegations against Mr.
Jibrin.
Mr.
Jibrin received an invitation to appear before the committee on Monday. But
decided to boycott the hearing, even though his demand that the
sitting be thrown open to the public was met by Mr. Ossai. Mr. Jibrin also
asked his lawyer, Femi Falana, to seek discontinuation of committee’s activities
in court.
Mr.
Ossai said Mr. Jibrin’s failure to appear before his “properly and
constitutionally constituted committee” was, in effect, a defence.
Mr.
Jibrin had on Tuesday alleged subjudice saying the committee should not have
sat since the matter was in court.
Mr.
Jibrin’s suspension would see him banned from the premises of the National
Assembly in the course of the disciplinary action. He would also not receive
salaries or allowances.
Some
sympathisers of Mr. Jibrin saw his suspension as partisan, draconian and
counterproductive.
“This
show of partisanship and support for Mr. Dogara is condemnable and too severe,”
said a political analyst, Gbola Oba.
Mr.
Oba said Mr. Jibrin had suffered the same fate as Dino Melaye who was suspended
in 2010 for breach of members’ privilege. Mr. Melaye is now a senator
representing Kogi West.
“We
knew they would gang up against him as they did against Mr. Melaye,” Mr. Oba
said. “This clearly shows that the House has failed to move beyond its
counterproductive ways of suspending anyone who challenges the status quo.
“If the House were a
serious body, serious attention would be given to Mr. Jibrin’s claim so as to
foster a thriving democratic experiment within the country.”
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