THERE were indications, on Sunday, of an
imminent clash between the Presidency and the Senate over an alleged
attempt by the Presidency to rubbish the senate president.
Pro-Saraki senators are accusing the
Presidency of instigating the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of
Finance, Mrs. Anastacia Nwaobia, not to honour an invitation by the
upper chamber.
Nwaobia had communicated to the Senate
that she could not honour its invitation without an approval by her
supervisors to do so but the Saraki loyalists said the Senate had the
constitutional power to invite Nwaobia and that her refusal constituted
an affront to the legitimacy of the senate president.
The
Saraki loyalists’ belief apparently rested on the alleged
‘non-acceptance’ of his presidency by the All Progressives Congress and
President Muhammadu Buhari.
“It will not augur well for our
democracy if the Presidency will not allow civil servants to do their
jobs. We should not carry the crisis in the APC to the Senate,” a
pro-Saraki senator told one of our correspondents in Abuja on Sunday.
Both Saraki and the Speaker of the House
of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, had spurned the party’s directive on
who to lead the National Assembly and had ridden on the back of an
alleged alliance with the opposition Peoples Democratic Party members to
clinch the leadership posts in both chambers.
The APC had preferred Ahmad Lawan, a Senator from Yobe State, as the president of the Senate.
The Lawan group in the Senate on Sunday
said it supported Nwaobia because Saraki was said to lack both
legitimacy and the moral right to invite the permanent secretary
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