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BusinessDay 22 Aug 2018

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18 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556 Wednesday <strong>22</strong> <strong>Aug</strong>ust <strong>2018</strong><br />

Politics<br />

& Policy<br />

2019: Buhari, Saraki naked fight: Who blinks first?<br />

INNOCENT ODOH, Abuja<br />

The disturbing war of<br />

words and the battle of<br />

wits between President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari<br />

led-Presidency backed<br />

by the leadership of the ruling All<br />

Progressives Congress (APC) led<br />

by Adams Oshiomhole, is in grim<br />

battle against the leadership of the<br />

National Assembly led by President<br />

of the Senate, Bukola Saraki.<br />

The political hostility has intensified<br />

barely six months to the 2019<br />

general elections and the crisis has<br />

not shown a sign of abetting, judging<br />

by the hardening of positions<br />

of the principal belligerents and<br />

their acolytes.<br />

This crisis is traceable to the<br />

circumstances that led to the emergence<br />

of Saraki as the President of<br />

the Senate in June 2015, where Saraki’s<br />

maneuvers and deft political<br />

calculations and alliance with the<br />

People’s Democratic Party (PDP)<br />

fetched him the coveted seat of the<br />

President of the Senate against the<br />

wishes of some APC bigwigs.<br />

Saraki then came under a flurry<br />

of corruption allegations, ranging<br />

from forging the Senate rules to his<br />

advantage, to the alleged false asset<br />

declaration. He was dragged before<br />

the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT)<br />

and was docked. The Buhari government<br />

probably sensing it would not<br />

make any headway in its quest to indict<br />

Saraki on account of the Senate<br />

rule withdrew the case. It however,<br />

continued to pursue that of false<br />

asset declaration until the Supreme<br />

Court ruled in July, <strong>2018</strong> that Saraki<br />

had no case to answer at the tribunal.<br />

Then the police started their own<br />

version and fingered Saraki as an<br />

alleged facilitator of the deadly Offa<br />

robbery incident, which left over 30<br />

people dead including a pregnant<br />

woman and some policemen. Even<br />

as the police are still investigating the<br />

matter, it appears there was no clear<br />

evidence directly linking the President<br />

of the Senate to the incident.<br />

The Presidency and the APC<br />

leadership then devised new ways<br />

to harm the integrity of Saraki and<br />

to undermine his leadership through<br />

plots to impeach and remove him<br />

from office. The plot was said to have<br />

been hatched by the party and the<br />

police but the execution was horribly<br />

implemented on July 24, when<br />

the alleged plot by the police to cage<br />

Saraki in his residence to stop him<br />

from presiding over the defection of<br />

some APC federal lawmakers failed.<br />

How the President of the Senate<br />

Buhari<br />

beat the security phalanx mounted<br />

to barricade his movement remains<br />

a mystery, but it was a big blow to<br />

the APC as the Kwara lawmaker<br />

emerged in the National Assembly<br />

to read a list of 14 Senators, who<br />

defected from the ruling party to<br />

the PDP, even as similar scenario<br />

was replicated on the same day (July<br />

24) in the House of Representatives<br />

where 37 members defected to the<br />

PDP and other parties. Barely a<br />

week later, Saraki in company of the<br />

Governor of Kwara state, Abdulfatah<br />

Ahmed, announced his defection to<br />

the PDP, an event that strengthened<br />

the APC wild indignation against<br />

him.<br />

Again, Saraki escaped another<br />

impeachment plot on <strong>Aug</strong>ust7,<br />

when hooded and well-armed men<br />

of the Directorate of the Security<br />

Service (DSS) invaded the National<br />

Assembly on the orders of the sacked<br />

DSS Director General, Lawal Daura,<br />

allegedly in cahoot with the APC<br />

leadership to instigate the impeachment<br />

of Saraki. The plan failed but<br />

since then neither the Presidency<br />

nor the APC leadership has given up<br />

hope to chase Saraki out of his seat<br />

as he has refused to yield their call<br />

for resignation.<br />

The Presidency commenced a<br />

new wave of the war on Sunday <strong>Aug</strong>ust<br />

19. In a statement signed by the<br />

Senior Special Assistant to the President<br />

on Media and Publicity, Malam<br />

Garba Shehu, the President said<br />

Bukola Saraki and the National Assembly<br />

should be held responsible<br />

for the delay in passing the supplementary<br />

budget for the Independent<br />

National Electoral Commission,<br />

INEC, for 2019 general elections.<br />

The Presidency noted that President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari reluctantly<br />

signed the <strong>2018</strong> budget into<br />

law after it had been distorted by the<br />

National Assembly stressing that the<br />

National Assembly delayed the <strong>2018</strong><br />

budget that was submitted on No-<br />

Saraki<br />

vember last year for seven months.<br />

It added that there was no way a<br />

supplementary budget could have<br />

been submitted without the passage<br />

of the main budget.<br />

The statement titled, “Senator<br />

Saraki, look at mirrow, it’s your face<br />

that’s in it”, the presidency absolved<br />

President Buhari from any blame in<br />

the supplementary budget delay.<br />

The statement read this, “The Presidency<br />

wishes to respond to the false<br />

accusations by Senator Bukola Saraki<br />

who alleged that President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari is to blame for the delay<br />

in approving the supplementary<br />

budget for INEC.<br />

“On the contrary, the Senate<br />

President should look into the mirror<br />

and what he will see is his own face.<br />

He is solely to be held responsible for<br />

deliberately driving the nation to this<br />

cliff edge as far as the preparations<br />

for next elections are concerned.<br />

“It is not true that INEC submitted<br />

their draft budget to the<br />

Presidency in February. No, it came<br />

much later but even then, this is<br />

not the real issue. The fact that<br />

their proposals came well after the<br />

President had laid his budget for<br />

the year <strong>2018</strong> before the National<br />

Assembly meant that their own will<br />

be sent as supplementary budget.<br />

This was clearly stated to them by<br />

the Minister of Budget and National<br />

Planning.<br />

“A supplementary budget cannot<br />

be submitted until the main budget<br />

is passed, and so the delay in passing<br />

the main budget was the reason<br />

for the delay. The National Assembly<br />

passed the <strong>2018</strong> budget seven<br />

months after the document was<br />

submitted to the National Assembly<br />

by President Buhari.<br />

“Unless someone has forgotten,<br />

the budget was submitted to the<br />

National Assembly and it took the<br />

Saraki-led National Assembly seven<br />

months to release it. There is no way<br />

President Buhari could have submit-<br />

ted a supplementary budget while<br />

the main one was still pending. It is<br />

never done. “Because Saraki did not<br />

return the main budget, we could not<br />

have submitted the supplementary<br />

one.<br />

“After the long delays, the President<br />

was pained to sign the much<br />

distorted, butchered and debauched<br />

document. In giving his assent,<br />

President Buhari said that he was<br />

compelled to sign the budget so as<br />

not to keep the economy continuously<br />

on a standstill.<br />

“In his words: “When I submitted<br />

the <strong>2018</strong> Budget proposals to the<br />

National Assembly on 7th November<br />

2017, I had hoped that the usual<br />

legislative review process would be<br />

quick, so as to move Nigeria towards<br />

a predictable January-December<br />

financial year.”<br />

“It is also worthy of note that this is<br />

the first time in Nigeria’s history that<br />

a government would bring together<br />

the cost of an election in one budget,<br />

with each agency involved invited to<br />

defend their portion of the budget<br />

before the National Assembly.<br />

“It is all part of the transparency<br />

that this government is known for.<br />

In the past, governments would<br />

approve INEC budgets and funding<br />

without a breakdown, often using<br />

ways and means to fund it not so<br />

under President Buhari,” the statement<br />

said.<br />

However, Saraki’s media team<br />

through Olu Onemola, the Special<br />

Assistant on New Media to the<br />

President of the Senate on Sunday<br />

replied the Presidency, saying that<br />

Buhari’s statement is ‘conscientious<br />

ignorance’ on full display.<br />

Onemola stated that despite the<br />

unforced errors on the part of the<br />

Executive, which failed to submit the<br />

general elections budget on time, the<br />

relevant committees of the National<br />

Assembly are still working assiduously<br />

to ensure that due process is<br />

followed in approving the President’s<br />

request.<br />

The Saraki media aide quoted the<br />

famous ‘Letter from Birmingham<br />

Jail’ of the much respected the Reverend<br />

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. which<br />

stated that “Nothing in all the world<br />

is more dangerous than sincere ignorance<br />

and conscientious stupidity.”<br />

“It is necessary to begin this response<br />

to the Buhari Media Organization’s<br />

statement about the Senate<br />

President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola<br />

Saraki, by reminding us of this fact.<br />

This is because the statement issued<br />

in Abuja on Friday, <strong>Aug</strong>ust 17th, by<br />

the organization, is a careful and<br />

deliberate example of conscientious<br />

ignorance on full display.<br />

“By now, the Nigerian people are<br />

aware that the Executive branch<br />

could have submitted INEC’s 2019<br />

Election budget at the time it submitted<br />

the <strong>2018</strong> appropriations proposal<br />

last year. Furthermore, the Executive<br />

had from January till June this year to<br />

submit the budget request. However,<br />

due to a perceived lack of foresight,<br />

display of usual tardiness or an attempt<br />

to ensure that due process<br />

would not be followed, this request<br />

was submitted only a few days before<br />

the statutory National Assembly annual<br />

recess.<br />

“Regardless of this unforced error<br />

on the part of the Executive, the<br />

National Assembly has continued its<br />

work on this budget. As it stands: the<br />

relevant Senate and House Committees<br />

have held individual budgetary<br />

hearings with the INEC Chairman<br />

and all his Commissioners on this<br />

budget. They have also held followup<br />

Joint Committee meetings to<br />

carefully scrutinize the provisions<br />

of the budget.<br />

“Furthermore, the Joint Committees<br />

are now scheduled to meet on<br />

Monday when they are expected to<br />

come up with a Committee report<br />

that will be sent to the Appropriations<br />

Committee, which will spell out<br />

how to source the President’s virement<br />

request through the concerned<br />

MDAs,” the statement said.<br />

Saraki’s media aide also noted<br />

that any person or organization<br />

that is conversant with legislative<br />

due process would know that it is<br />

only after the Appropriations Committee<br />

has worked on the budget<br />

details that a plenary sitting is<br />

required to adopt the final report.<br />

He said that the President of the<br />

Senate, the Senate and the entire<br />

National Assembly, are committed<br />

to ensuring that the 2019 elections<br />

receive all necessary funding<br />

stressing however, that this should<br />

not be at the expense of due process<br />

and stated guidelines.<br />

…Senators denounce APC, back Saraki<br />

In their reactions the chairman,<br />

Senate Committee on Navy,<br />

Senator Isah Hamma Misau<br />

and his counterpart in the<br />

Committee on Banking, Finance<br />

and Other Financial Institutions,<br />

Senator Rafiu Adebayo Ibrahim<br />

have advised the All Progressives<br />

Congress (APC) and its leaders its<br />

incessant attempts at looking for<br />

scapegoats for the failure to fulfill<br />

their promises to the electorate by<br />

constantly blaming the President of<br />

the Senate Bukola Saraki.<br />

Misau and Rafiu in a joint statement<br />

at the weekend stated that<br />

the APC leaders have continued<br />

to whine about what Saraki did or<br />

did not do to ensure the Buhari<br />

government failed without caring<br />

whether it was reasonable to believe<br />

that one single individual who<br />

had been continuously assailed by<br />

the government would at the same<br />

time be in a position to ground the<br />

government.<br />

“APC leaders are being clever by<br />

half. They have spent most of the<br />

last 38 months harassing Saraki and<br />

sponsoring media attacks against<br />

him. Now that the man has been<br />

vindicated by the courts and he has<br />

decided to leave their party, they<br />

have devised another propaganda<br />

stunt to start heaping the blames<br />

of their failure to bring positive<br />

change to Nigeria on Saraki.<br />

“For three years of the APC<br />

administration, former President<br />

Goodluck Jonathan was the scapegoat<br />

they blamed. Now that it<br />

dawned on them that nobody is<br />

listening to that tale by moonlight<br />

again, their propaganda machinery<br />

has shifted focus to Saraki as<br />

the new man to blame. These are<br />

characters who cannot take responsibility<br />

for their inability to provide<br />

good governance as they promised.<br />

“Must these people blame<br />

somebody all the time? Were they<br />

elected to bring in positive change<br />

or to shift blames? It is irresponsible<br />

for people invested with<br />

popular mandate to always look<br />

for somebody to be held responsible<br />

for their failure to fulfill their<br />

promises and give expression to the<br />

mandate they were given.<br />

“Instead of concentrating on<br />

how to use the next six months before<br />

the general elections to hasten<br />

the completion of infrastructure<br />

projects, enunciation of policies and<br />

initiation of programmes which can<br />

improve the standard of living of the<br />

people and ameliorate the consistent<br />

failure of the last three years,<br />

the APC is now led by demagogues<br />

who seem not to care if they bring<br />

the entire country down.<br />

“The new leadership of the APC<br />

has continued to advertise the inability<br />

of the party to manage victory,<br />

their penchant for violence as<br />

a way of saving their faces and their<br />

lack of the much needed temperament<br />

to wield together a country<br />

with diverse culture, ethnicity and<br />

religion like Nigeria.

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