Hehehe....The Senate will start receiving petitions against President Muhammadu Buhari’s ministerial nominees on Tuesday.
The Chairman, Senate Committee on Ethics
and Public Petitions, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, told one of our
correspondents on Friday in Abuja that the committee would give the
petitions prompt attention once they were presented.
He said as of Friday, no member of the public had formally submitted any petition against any of the ministerial nominees.
Buhari sent the list containing the names of the ministerial nominees to the senate on Wednesday for screening.
But Anyanwu noted that the committee
might start receiving petitions as from Tuesday when the list would have
been officially unveiled by the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki.
He said, “We have not been receiving
petitions from members of the public obviously because the list of
ministerial nominees has not been officially unveiled by the senate
president.
“I think the petitions will start coming in as from next Tuesday after Nigerians would have known the nominees.”
Meanwhile, investigations by us
revealed that some Peoples Democratic Party-controlled states have been
warming up to oppose the clearance of any All Progressives Congress
member that would make the list from their states.
Apart from this, some aggrieved members
of the APC in some states were also said to have threatened to write
petitions against any nominee that is not confirmed by the state chapter
of the party as a member.
It was gathered that the Rivers State
Government and the state chapter of the party had concluded plans to
oppose a former governor of the state, Rotimi Amaechi, if he was
nominated.
It was learnt that the state government might instruct senators from the state to oppose Amaechi’s nomination.
But when contacted, the state government
and the PDP said they would prefer to keep mum on the report that
Amaechi’s name was on the ministerial list.
The Media Assistant to the State
Governor, Mr. Simeon Nwakaudu, said the state government would take a
position after the senate must have read out the list on Tuesday.
Nwakaudu explained that everything about
the content of the ministerial list would be mere speculation until it
is read out by the National Assembly.
“Let the list be read first; if the list comes out, we will formerly take a position,” he said.
Similarly, the State PDP Deputy
Publicity Secretary, Mr. Samuel Nwanosike, said the party would be
thorough in its position on whether Amaechi’s name appeared on the list
or not, but would have to wait until the Senate read out the list on
Tuesday.
“When the Senate reads out the list, we
will react. We are always thorough when we take a position on an issue.
They said it is the Senate that will disclose the content of the list
and that will be on Tuesday. We are waiting for them to do that,”
Nwanosike added.
Besides Amaechi, those who were reported
to be on the ministerial list included a former Lagos State Governor,
Babatunde Fashola; his Ekiti State counterpart, Dr. Kayode Fayemi; a
former Governor of Anambra State, Chris Ngige; and a one-time Governor
of Abia State, Ogbonaya Onu and an ex- former finance commissioner in
Ogun State, Kunle Adeosun.
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and former
National Legal Adviser to the defunct Congress for Progressives Change,
Malami Abubakar; a former governorship candidate of the APC in Taraba
State, Aisha Alhassan; and a special adviser to the Secretary-General of
the United Nations, Amina Mohammed, also made the ministerial list.
However, the founder, Engineer Sunday
Adebayo Babalola Foundation, Mr. Sunday Babalola, and the Director of
International Women Communication, Hajia Goroso Limota, urged the senate
to thoroughly screen the nominees.
While Babalola spoke at Omu Aran, Kwara
State on Friday during the inauguration of N2m scholarship to some
students in secondary and tertiary institutions from Omu-Aran, Limota
spoke in an interview with one of our correspondents in Ilorin, the
Kwara State capital, during the inauguration of the sustainable
development goals among grassroots women.
Babalola cautioned against using
religion, gender, tribe and other sentiments, instead of competence and
merit, as yardstick for screening the nominees.
Limota urged the senate to reject the list if it did not contain at least 35 per cent of women.
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