- Yusuf Oketola
Crisis rocking the camp of the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, may be far from over, as more lawmakers and a coalition of civil society demand his immediate resignation.
Akpabio is being accused of creating a pseudo impeachment plot to pit senators against President Bola Tinubu.
The lawmakers and civil society organisations (CSOs) are angered by the damage being done to them by what they called imaginary impeachment plot targeted at pitting senators against President Tinubu.
They expressed worries that instead of creating a synergy between the executive and the legislature for meaningful national development, Akpabio had created an imaginary war between both arms of government.
At least,16 former governors across political parties in the northern and southern parts of the country have become bitter about what, according to them, was an “ingenious and unpatriotic survival plot by Akpabio and a few senators.”
A pro-democracy group and National Assembly Watch Group, Coalition for Parliamentary Democracy (CPD), yesterday, asked Akpabio to step down from his position, having admitted that he has fallen out of favour with his colleagues in the legislative chamber.
READ: Exposed: Real Reasons Some Senators Are Plotting Akpabio’s Ouster
A message circulated among northern senators last Saturday by Elisha Ishaku Abbo had hinted that loyalists of Akpabio, sponsored the news report about the rumoured planned impeachment of the Senate president to set northern lawmakers against President Tinubu.
“I woke up today to see over 10 mainstream Nigerian newspapers, all carrying news of a plan to impeach Akpabio by senators from northern Nigeria. The newspaper went ahead to mention Abdulaziz Yari, Aminu Tambuwal, and Mohammed Onawo, among others, as the senators behind the move.
“As a northern senator and an official of the Northern Senators’ Forum, I make bold to say that this news is deliberately planted and syndicated by the Akpabio camp just to set President Tinubu against the North.”
He called on Akpabio to call his camp to order, adding that “the seed of discord and deep ethno – religious division they are sowing will not augur well for the country. Why the North? Why in Saudi Arabia?
“If Akpabio and his camp wanted a united Senate just like Ahmed Lawal, they could have known exactly what to do during Senate Standing Committees allocation and supplementary budget resources allocation.”
The lawmaker claimed that “the camp of the Senate president continued to treat the Senate as a conquered territory where the winner goes home with the spoils of war. A classical example of a winner takes all.
“How do you explain a situation where out of Category A Committees only two went to his perceived rivals? How will you explain a Senate where 83.1 per cent of those made Chairmen of Category A Committees are also vice chairmen of Category A? How do you explain a third time senator denied the chairmanship of a committee? How do you explain that the leadership of the Senate are all vice chairman of Category A Committees?”
CPD, which was reacting to claims from Akpabio’s office that “one South South governor” was behind the impeachment threat to remove him from office, counselled Akpabio to stop pointing fingers and rather come clean on why his colleagues wanted him ousted as Senate president.
In a statement by its National Coordinator, Menike Johnson, CPD accused Akpabio of seeking to heat up the polity by pointing fingers whereas his colleagues had clearly adduced that his “failure to fit into the duties of a presiding officer and providing a transparent and credible leadership as reason for their decision to move against him.”
Insisting the nation needed a stable and united National Assembly at this critical time, CDP said Nigerians cannot afford to take a Senate that is plagued by an unstable leadership which does not command the loyalty of the lawmakers CPD said instead of answering his colleagues, the embattled Senate president “is resorting to a face-saving measure of accusing a state governor; a very dangerous and unstatesmanlike venture that is capable of triggering crisis in the polity.
“As parliamentary watchers, we believe Akpabio should face the issues raised by his colleagues, including allegations of lack of transparency, violation of elementary rudiments, conventions and processes of presiding over the Senate, diminishing the integrity of the Senate on financial matters and claims of preferentialism in the management of the Senate.
“The attempt to overheat the polity by blaming external individuals is therefore a self-indicating measure that does not provide the much-expected answers to the very critical issue of leadership failure raised by senators against the embattled Senate president.
“Having admitted that he has lost favour with his colleagues; and having no answers to the very serious issues raised by the senators which borders on leadership failure, we counsel Akpabio to save the nation further trouble by stepping down as Senate president.
“Our nation is in a very critical moment and Nigerians cannot afford a Senate that is plagued by an unstable leadership which does not command the loyalty of the lawmakers.”
Yusuf Oketola is a trained journalist with over five years of experience in the media industry. He has worked for both print and online medium. He is a thorough-bred professional with an eye of hindsight on issues bothering on social justice, purposeful leadership, and a society where the leaders charge and work for the prosperity of the people.