9th August, 2018
PRESS
RELEASE:
SARAKI’S
CONTINUED STAY IN OFFICE IMMORAL
The Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC) has rejected the rationale for the continued retention of the
post of Senate president by Senator Bukola Saraki as explained at a world press
conference yesterday. Saraki argued at the event that he would remain in office
until the ruling party controls two-thirds of the membership of the red chamber.
Debunking Saraki’s position, the group posited that
the Senate president lost the moral right to remain in office the moment he
defected to the opposition party. Expatiating further, Akintola said, “Saraki’s
hypothesis is only workable if there is a working agreement between the ruling
party and the opposition. It will then be a coalition. Such coalition is formed
in advanced democracies in the interest of the nation. But the situation is
different here. The ruling party and the opposition are locked in a cut-throat
struggle characteristic of a bolekaja political culture.
“Saraki is
heating up the polity. It is a reflection of acute poverty of statesmanship in
the National Assembly (NASS). The Senate president knows very well that it is
the grass that suffers when two elephants fight but he does not seem to care.
Nigerians can whistle for their dinner as far as he is concerned. Our lawmakers
have turned the citizenry into pawns in their political chess game.
“We are not
interested in party politics because the difference between the two major
political parties is the difference between six and half a dozen. They can do
whatever they like to themselves as individuals and as politicians. But the
Nigerian ship of state is drifting courtesy of Saraki’s political gymnastics. We
can only single out a few individual leaders as the little choice in a whole
basket of rotten apples and President Muhammadu Buhari stands out as the gem in
the collection.
“Development
projects are being held up. 2018 budget was delayed for a monumental seven
month period. It has never happened before. It appears that the intention is to
shut down government and make the people suffer. The Senate president and his
supporters in the red chamber are not thinking of Nigeria and the poor masses.
They are holding Nigeria by the jugular.
“We plead with
these people to do a rethink. No country can make any progress in the absence
of political stability. So where is our patriotism? Where is our sense of
honour? Governments come and go but administration is a continuum. Regimes rise and fall but nations continue to develop.
Leaders emerge and go into oblivion but the people’s welfare move from one
level to the next. Opposition may be powerful but that must not be allowed to
affect projects, programmes and policies designed to improve the welfare of the
citizens.
“Even the theory of separation of powers does not
entertain the luxury of each arm of government working at cross-purposes. But
this is what has been happening since the inception of this administration.
Certain lawmakers loyal to the opposition manipulated legislative
technicalities to hijack leadership positions in the legislature. This was done
while pretending to belong to the ruling party.
“These usurped positions
were consistently used to obstruct the smooth running of government and to
armtwist the executive in the past three years. These same people eventually
decamped to the opposition party after sabotaging government’s efforts at
improving the lives of Nigerians. This is what Nigerians in particular and the
international community in general needs to understand about Nigeria’s peculiar
case at present. The world must know where the present NASS is coming from. Its
leadership emerged in highly controversial and questionable circumstances.
“Our concern as a human rights organization is not the
promotion of any political party but to articulate the extent to which the
actions or inactions of those to whom the fate of the citizenry was entrusted
impacted upon the lives of our people. Lawmakers have the right to belong to
political parties of their choice but they also have a duty to facilitate the
drafting of policies capable of raising the standard of living among the
citizens. Unfortunately for us in Nigeria the reverse has been the case in the
past three years. Instead of moving the country forward, the leadership of the NASS
has been a cog in the wheel of progress.
“MURIC strongly
believes that the Senate president has a moral obligation to resign his
position since he has decamped to the opposition party. This is more so
particularly in view of the fact that more evidence has emerged showing that he
cannot enjoy a smooth working relationship with the executive. Yesterday’s
siege on the NASS has proved beyond any reasonable doubt that there is no
mutual trust between the executive and the legislature. In saner climes, the
legislature may disagree with the executive but this is restricted to political
issues and developmental projects are not truncated”.
While rounding
off, the group argued that the leadership of the NASS has allowed political
differences to endanger the people’s welfare programmes. It therefore called on
the Senate president to show some level of patriotism. “He should allow peace
to reign so that Nigeria can make progress. The only way out is for him to resign
with immediate effect. We invite the international community to situate the
siege on the NASS within the context of the Nigerian condition. Conscienceless
power in the NASS is subjugating the executive’s powerless conscience via the
bastardisation of the true principles of democracy”.
Professor
Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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