Facts have emerged concerning the despicable role the
Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa, played in the
emergence of Senator Bukola Saraki as president of the Senate on
Tuesday.
Eminent Nigerians, one of them Law professor
Itse Sagay, blamed Maikasuwa for the fraudulent emergence of Saraki as
Senate President.
Maikasuwa, who became Clerk of the
National Assembly on 16 August, 2010, was aware of the meeting All
Progressives Congress, APC, Senators were going to have with President
Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday morning but went ahead with the inauguration
of the 8th Senate.
Reports said he was informed on
phone about the meeting and advised to delay the inauguration to enable
the APC senators attend it but he ignored the request and pandered to
the wishes of the conspirators of what has been dubbed a coup by the
Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, by hastily allowing the election to go on, even without the senators forming a quorum.
Maikasuwa,
who formally took over from Mr Oluyemi Ogunyomi on 16 August, 2010, as
Clerk of the National Assembly, clearly betrayed his loyalty to Senator
David Mark, immediate past Senate President, whom he worked with for
almost six years, going by his conduct on Tuesday.
The
fraud hurriedly perpetrated by Maikasuwa and other conspirators has
been roundly condemned by eminent Nigerians. One of those who condmened
the entire process that led to the emergence of Saraki as Senate
President is Sagay who believes the election of Saraki and his deputy Ike Ekweremadu by some senators smacks of legislative impunity.
The Senior Advocate said in an interview on Television Continental (TVC) on Wednesday that the emergence of Saraki and Ekweremadu cannot pass for a victory for democracy but a victory for impunity, fraud, desperation and indiscipline.
According
to Sagay, “If you look at the moral point of view, that purported
election was fraudulent. When you purport to hold an election
deliberately in the absence of your opponent, knowing that he is absent,
and intending to win at any cost unopposed by ensuring that absence,
that constitutes fraud. Not only that, I think it’s an act of gross
indiscipline, not just against his party, but against the whole country
because we are all stakeholders in the electoral process, in who becomes
the Senate President and we all felt cheated because there was no
proper election.
“Again it’s also an act of gross
impunity. In effect, he was saying ‘I know my opponent is keenly
interested in contesting, I know my opponent is not here yet, and
therefore, I will rush an election in his absence in order to be certain
of victory at any cost.’ It’s absolutely unacceptable in a decent
democracy.”
He also said the Assembly Clerk, Maikasuwa,
is culpable. “To start with, there is an aspect of deceit in the whole
thing. That’s why I think it is also illegal and fraudulent. The APC
Senators were told that the President was going to have a meeting with
them and that they should all gather there (International Conference
Centre). Clearly, in such circumstances, the last thing they would think
of is that there would be an election in their absence. So, there was
fraud. Who was responsible? Somebody summoned that meeting.
“The Clerk of the National Assembly was fully aware that only PDP senators were
present in the Chambers. A sprinkling of APC members there were trying
to remind him and he ruled the person out of order. So, for me, that
gives the impression that the Clerk of the National Assembly was
involved in the conspiracy. That is the impression. What is more, even
if that did not happen, I will accuse him of involvement because he knew
without being told that only one party was present and that surely
cannot have been the spirit of the Constitution when it says that once
the proclamation has been made, members of Senate who have just been
elected would then appoint their officers.
“That’s not
what it intended. It didn’t intend that some people would be diverted
away and one party would then come there in their absence and
fraudulently elect somebody of their wish in the absence of the hapless
group that has been deceived out of the Assembly. Who do I blame? I
blame the clerk of the National Assembly, because he’s the person
responsible for all this. He might have been pressured and all that, but nothing would have happened if he did not participate in the conspiracy. So I blame him primarily.”
Sagay
further stated that there was no quorum for electing principal
officers. “There is the law, and there is the spirit of the law. If you
practice the law, or implement the law, or enforce the law without the
spirit, it is void. It’s just like a body which doesn’t have a soul or
spirit, that body is dead. The law says that a quorum is one-third, and
that when you are taking decisions, unless it is exceptionally stated,
generally when you are taking decisions, then a simple majority is all
that is required.
“Those are the dry letters of the
law. In this particular issue, we have a new Senate being proclaimed. We
have a Senate which has many parties. What has happened is that the
party that has the majority was somehow deceived out of the
premises and other people went behind and surreptitiously and
fraudulently purported to have Senate proceedings going on. That fraud
cannot be legitimate regardless of the technical words of the
Constitution, because the spirit is not there.”
He said
“Senator Saraki cannot enjoy any legitimacy because he is there by
fraud; he is there by impunity; he is there by the grossest act of
indiscipline of the worst type of political culture. So, he lacks
legitimacy. He may be sitting there now but nobody has any respect for
that seat as long as he sits there because he has brought shame on the
whole country. Now, as far as I am concerned, this people have a right
to go to court, because a fraudulent election cannot constitute a
legitimate basis for establishing Senate leadership. It was a fraudulent
election.
“What really happened yesterday (Tuesday),
in my view, is not a victory for democracy, but a victory for impunity, a
victory for fraud and a victory for political desperation and
indiscipline, and it must not stand. If we in this country are to go
with the new change brought by the fresh breath of air that is blowing
across the country, if we are to sustain it, then what happened
yesterday (Tuesday) must be swept away because it is contrary to the
fibre of the whole Nigeria.
“My opposition to his
sitting illegitimately in that office is not because of his (Saraki’s)
“baggage”; he may not be my first choice. But if he had won
legitimately, in a fair, square and equitable way, I would have no
objection. Yes, he has a huge baggage. Presently as far as I know, he’s
under investigation and possibly a lot of inquiry by the EFCC. The
matter has not been cleared.
“Normally, it would be
better for the first arm of government – that is what the legislature
is, and he is the third most senior political personality in the country
– for that person to have a clear table; not to have any baggage
hanging around his neck, because if you have a heavy baggage like that
hanging on your neck, and you’re presiding over such an important
establishment, then that establishment is also going to carry that heavy
weight of a burden along with you, and it will necessarily affect the
respect and intergrity which his decisions will have and the whole
process of operation of that institution will be impeded by that heavy
load.
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