*Orders probe
into Senate invasion by hoodlums
• Meets with
Saraki, Dogara on Melaye, 2019 budget
President
Muhammadu Buhari will today begin a four-day trip to the United Kingdom. In the
course of a technical stopover for aircraft maintenance in London on his way
back from Washington, last week, the president had had a meeting with his
doctor and had been requested to return. A statement by Senior Special
Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, last night, said Buhari would be
back in Nigeria Saturday, May 12.
The President,
meanwhile, has expressed displeasure over the recent invasion of the National
Assembly by armed persons, vowing to investigate the matter.Senate President
Bukola Saraki disclosed this to State House correspondents, yesterday, after a
closed-door meeting with Buhari. Buhari had been out of the country during
the April 19, 2018 incident when thugs stormed the Senate chamber and made away
with the mace.
Saraki, who
was with the Speaker of the House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara, said issues
on Senator Dino Melaye’s arrest by the police were also discussed at the
meeting. He said he and the speaker were in Aso Rock at the instance of the
president, who briefed them on his trip to the United States, and on the
budget.
“We talked
about the invasion of the National Assembly. He (Buhari) showed great concern
and said action will be taken to investigate it. Of course, he sees it as an
embarrassment to the country. And there will be a proper investigation, because
it is something that is not just about the National Assembly; it is about the
country,” Saraki said.
The Senate
president also fielded questions on the appropriation bill before the National
Assembly, saying: “If there should be any delay, the passage would not exceed
next week.”
Dogara
condemned the police arraignment of Melaye on a wheelchair. “Anything that
happens to one of our members or any member of the National Assembly is of
concern to us. And there is no way we can have this kind of meeting without
raising that. This is a civilian administration. It is a democracy and it is
imperative and very, very important that all institutions of democracy operate
within the ambit of the rule of law,” he said.
According to
the speaker, “There is nowhere, I have said it before, that police will behave
in a democracy like a clan of tribesmen, like upgraded barbarians. So, there is
need for us to act with civility. We are not saying that anybody should be
protected and defended. Once you have committed an offence, our law says you
should answer for it. But you just have to utilise the provision of the
constitution; the rule of law, as this administration of President Muhammadu
Buhari has overemphasised, in order to bring people to book.
“But a
situation where people are wheeled to court, that doesn’t give a good image of
our democracy. I have not seen a democracy where people are wheeled to court.
They are not in the proper frame of mind and they are forced to undergo trial.
Whatever it is, even if Dino is pretending, as some have said in some section
of the media, he cannot pretend forever.
“He is
there. He will not run away. He is a senator, and he can be tried any time he
is in a proper frame of mind. As a lawyer, I can tell you, any judge that
assesses an accused person (that is) not in a proper frame of mind, even if the
accused person pleads guilty, he is duty bound by law not to record a plea of
guilty, if he is not satisfied about the soundness of the mind of the accused.
So, the emphasis is there. And I believe the president, being a listening
president, will definitely take steps and do something about it.”
Saraki said
further that the visit by the leadership of the two chambers of the National
Assembly would help to heal the strained relationship between the legislature
and the executive.“We at the National Assembly have always been ready to give
all our support to the executive and we will continue to work along those
lines. As I said, in the presidential system that we operate, we sometimes have
the responsibility to check the excesses of the executive. So, there will
always be times when we will disagree. But, by and large, we will always work
for the interest of Nigerians and always keep on moving on,” he added.
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