•Tenure of Olonisakin, others ends July 13 •Lawyers say Osinbajo
can make fresh appointments •DHQ announces nationwide route match
There is uncertainty in
the military over who will appoint new service chiefs ahead of the July 13 when
their tenure ends.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Gabriel Olonisakin; Chief of Army Staff,
Lt. General Tukur Buratai; Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ibok Ete-Ibas;
and the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar are expected to quit
the military by July 13.
President
Muhammadu Buhari, who is the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces vested with
the responsibility of appointing service chiefs has been on medical vacation
for about two months.
Before
undertaking the foreign medical trip, the president transmitted a formal
handover letter to the National Assembly, not only intimating it of his
mission, but also transferring power to his deputy, Yemi Osinbajo.
But
Buhari, in the letter, only said the vice president would stand in as
coordinating president, an appellation that drew different interpretations,
with some people arguing that Osinbajo has limitation in his new role.
In
an interview in Abuja, constitutional lawyer and human rights activist, Chief
Mike Ozhekome (SAN) said the acting president is standing in for his boss and
as such, can perform every necessary function of the office of the president.
Ozhekome
said: “An acting president comes into being under Section 145 of the 1999
Constitution, after the president transfers a letter to the National Assembly
that he would be proceeding on vacation for any reason however. Until he
transfers another letter of resumption of office back to the National Assembly,
he ceases to be president.”
The
senior advocate noted that in the absence of the president, the acting
president assumes the full powers of the president in all ramifications without
let or hindrance.
“He
can sign budgets, declare war and deploy armed forces to defend Nigeria,
subject to the checks and balances imposed by the constitution.
“This
means he can appoint, hire and fire any member of the armed forces. The
president at this time has no say, because there can’t be two obas, emirs or
ezes in one palace at the same time,” he declared.
Odein
Henry Ajumogobia (SAN) said Section 130 (2) of the Constitution expressly
describes the president as commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of the
Federation (among other things). According to him, the Armed Forces Act under
Section 23(3) also uses the phrase president, commander-in-chief of the armed
forces, meaning that the occupier of the office can appoint service chiefs.
But
Barrister Joy Owelle advised the acting president to ask Buhari for his
nominees as service chiefs and just make the pronouncement. “That way”,
according to her, “lawyers will be happy, the cabal in Aso Rock villa will be
happy and we move on.”
Another
lawyer Mark Olajide queried what the circumstance would be if the vice
president, who is the acting president is not able to communicate with the
president due to certain circumstances before or after the expiry date of the
service chiefs. He raised the suspicion that it might end up being ‘Baba says
this, Baba says that’ (by which he means the president’s name could be
dropped.)
His
words: “We have passed through this route before. If the acting president can
do all that the president can do, then why is he not sitting on the ‘throne’
(the president’s seat), to chair the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting?”
Dennis
Okechukwu, also a lawyer, said the acting president is being prudent so that he
would not be accused of trying to unseat his boss.
“If
the acting president is not sitting on the ‘throne’ while chairing FEC meeting,
I think he’s just being prudent so as not to be seen to be itching to unseat
his boss. That doesn’t mean that he can’t exercise the president’s powers as
enabled by the constitution,” he said.
President
Buhari appointed the chief of defence staff and the service chiefs on July 13,
2015. By their appointment, the service chiefs have spent the mandatory two
years and should be on their way out any moment from now, unless the president
considers extending their tenure in office.
But
in the absence of the president, there has been scheming by senior military
officers on who takes over from them.
A
few weeks ago, the Nigeria Navy retired four rear admirals, five commodores,
four captains, two commanders and three lieutenant-commanders.
It
was learnt also that a number of officers have been retire from the service
purportedly ahead their disengagement dates.
The
same scenario is playing out in the air force, where r retirements do not
allegedly follow laid down rules.
As
the two years’ expiration of the service chiefs draws closer, incumbents are
lobbying to retain their appointments, while others are working to upstage
them.
Meanwhile,
as a way to douse tension, the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) yesterday announced
its maiden quarterly route march scheduled to begin on July 1 across the
country.
At
a press briefing in Abuja, Director of Defence Information (DDI), Maj.-Gen John
Enenche who made the announcement said the scheduled route march tagged
“Together We Are” comprises military, para-military and other security agencies
in Nigeria.
Enenche
said the objective of the exercise is to protect lives and property, ensure
unity and progress, support democracy, uphold the constitution and to defend
national interest in Nigeria.
“The
physical fitness of members of the security agency is germane to the
effectiveness of its members, especially in the face of contemporary security
challenges in the country.
“In
the same vein, group interaction through an exercise such as route march is an
enhancer of espirit de corps and harmony among members of the security and
response agencies,” he said.
He advised members of the public not to panic over the movement of troops and other security agencies in the course of the exercise across the country.
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