In a report by Punch,the Federal Government might have
shortlisted four national commissioners to take over from Prof. Attahiru
Jega as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission.
Jega might be asked to hand over to one of the commissioners in
INEC and also proceed on a three-month terminal leave.
During a presidential media chat on
February 11, President Goodluck Jonathan had reassured Nigerians that he
had no plan to remove the INEC chairman from office. The President’s
reassurance came at a time when speculation was rife that government had
perfected plans to remove Jega. But some stakeholders who spoke after
the interview had dismissed the President’s reassurances as needless,
adding that the laws of the land do not confer on the president powers
to remove the INEC chairman.
Speaking at a press conference on Friday,
the Supervising Minister of Information, Mr. Edem Duke, had also said
the President had no plan to sack Jega.
“On the issue of the INEC chairman, I align myself with what the President said that he has no plan to sack the INEC chairman.
“That is not to say that if it is time
for the INEC chairman to naturally exit his office, then the natural
course of things will not take place.
“It is like saying a civil servant has
done 35 years or achieved the age of 60; we now begin to say that he
must not retire or he must retire,” Duke had said.
However, the minster drew parallels
between Jega’s conditions of service and those of civil servants,
reigniting speculation that the Presidency might go ahead with the plan
to remove Jega.
Earlier, there had been reports that
Prof. Femi Mimiko, brother of the Governor of Ondo State, Olusegun
Mimiko, had been pencilled in for the position but investigations by our
correspondents showed that the former Vice Chancellor of Adekunle
Ajasin University, Ondo State was no longer in contention.
Sources said the national commissioners
that might take over from Jega could come from a list made up of Dr.
Mohammed Wali from Sokoto State, Mrs. Amina Zakari from Jigawa State,
Colonel Mohammed Kurmi Hammanga (rtd.) from Adamawa State and Dr.
Ishmael Igbani from Rivers State.
It was learnt that the person that would take over would act as chairman till June 30 when the tenure of Jega would expire.
The Federal Government, it was learnt,
had decided against appointing an ‘outsider’ because preparations for
the elections had reached an advanced stage.
Investigations further showed that the FG
had yet to decide on whether to appoint the acting chairman from the
North-West, where Jega hails from or to take the post to another zone.
It was learnt that Wali and Zakari were shortlisted because they hailed from the North-West.
Igbani and Hammanga were included on the
list because of the argument among some top government officials that
the INEC chairmanship should not be subjected to the principle of
zoning.
A top Federal Government official, who confided in SUNDAY PUNCH
on Saturday, said, “None of the commissioners have been informed
because the government has not decided whether to retain the post in the
North-West or take it to another zone.
“The terminal leave letter that the All
Progressives Congress senators were talking about has not been written,
but I cannot deny the fact that government wants Jega to proceed on
terminal leave.
“Anytime the letter is written and Jega gets it, it will contain the name of the person he will hand over to.”
It was learnt that the government
officials, who advocated that one of the INEC commissioners should be
appointed, argued that with less than three weeks to the elections,
getting Jega’s replacement from outside of the commission could be
complicated.
A top government official, who is privy
to the discussions in government circles in relating to Jega’s fate,
said, “Time is of the essence. The truth is, if you bring someone from
outside, he or she will need time to understand the place and know what
is happening. It will be difficult for such a person to fully understand
what is on the ground.
“However, if we get someone who is
already within the system, it will be easier for the person to identify
areas where errors were made and correct them within the time left.
“There are also those who are making a
case for a neutral person. This set of people argue that after all, Jega
himself was brought in from outside and he did a good job of the 2011
elections.”
Several calls and a text message to the
Special Assistant (Media and Communications) to the Secretary to the
Government of the Federation, Mr. Sam Nwaobasi, were not replied.
Reports have said Jega’s terminal leave letter was written by the SGF.
Also, attempts to reach the Special
Adviser to the President on Political Matters Prof. Rufai Alkali and the
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin
Okupe were unsuccessful. Calls to their mobile phone indicated that it
was unreachable. A response to text messages sent to them were still
being awaited as of the time of filing this report.
Similarly, the Special Adviser to the
President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, could not be reached
as his telephone lines were not connecting.
Explain why you don’t want Jega sacked, PDP tells APC
Meanwhile, the Peoples Democratic Party
has challenged the APC to explain its link with the Chairman of the
Independent National Electoral Commission.
The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Mr.
Olisa Metuh, in a statement in Abuja on Saturday, said it was more than
curious that the APC had allegedly continued to fabricate stories and
show undue interest in Jega.
He said, “Undoubtedly, the frenzy,
hysteria and spate with which the APC has been inventing stories
regarding Prof. Jega’s stay in office even when nothing suggests that
such was on the table, raise a lot of issues.
“We ask, is there any underlining issue
or arrangement between the APC and Prof. Jega which the opposition is
hell-bent on protecting and informing its anxiety and apprehension
towards his stay in office?
“While it is noted that the APC is a
party of one week, one lie, we in the PDP look beneath the surface to
the deeper issues propelling the lies.
“We therefore challenge the APC to come
clean and tell Nigerians the real reason behind their false alarms and
uncontrolled nervousness regarding Prof. Jega ahead of the 2015 general
elections.
“Finally, we wish to remind the
leadership of INEC that Nigerians are monitoring its activities and
series of unfolding political events ahead of the elections, and will
not accept anything less than the conduct of credible, free and fair
general elections come March 28 and April 11, 2015.”
Reacting to these, the APC said President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP are not interested in the 2015 elections.
National Publicity Secretary of the party, Mr. Lai Mohammed, who is in London on an official
assignment said, “The plain truth is President Jonathan and the PDP
don’t want elections at all.
“If Jega is removed, his successor will
simply claim that as a new helmsman, he should be given more time to
prepare for the elections. Therefore we don’t want Jega removed because
we don’t want elections postponed again. There is no other ulterior
motive.
“Is it not strange that President
Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP who appointed Prof. Jega and praised his
handling of all elections since he came on board as transparent is now
suddenly afraid of him and want him out by all means.”
Alleged terminal leave, illegal —Falana, Ubani
In their separate reactions, rights
lawyers, including Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), insisted that President
Goodluck Jonathan lacked the power to either sack Jega, or send him on a
terminal leave. A former chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr.
Monday Ubani, and Mr. Malachy Ugwummadu, also spoke to Punch in separate interviews.
They cited provisions of Section 158 of
the constitution as providing that the INEC Chairman could only be
sacked with the approval of two-third majority of the members of the
Senate.
Falana also explained that Section 155 of
the constitution conferred independence on the INEC chairman with
immunity from any directive or influence from any person or authority.
The senior advocate said, “At his last
presidential chat, the president gave the erroneous impression that he
could hire and fire the chairman of INEC. With profound respect, that is
not correct.
“By virtue of Section 155 of the
constitution, the INEC chairman has a renewable five-year tenure. The
appointment and removal has to be by the resolution of no less than a
two-third majority of the Senate.
“Before the resolution is passed, the
President will need to address the Senate and justify the reasons on the
need to remove the INEC chairman on account of his inability to
discharge his duties.
“On the issue of sending Jega on terminal
leave, the President has no power to do that because once appointed,
the INEC chairman is not subject to the control or directive of any
power or authority by virtue of Section 158 of the constitution.”
On his part, Ugwummadu, said beyond the
constitutional provisions conferring immunity against undue influence on
the INEC chairman, Nigerians were paying close attention to any plot to
remove the INEC boss.
He said, “The idea of sacking Prof.
Attahiru Jega has been making the rounds and should be watched carefully
just as we have remained circumspect regarding the further shift of the
elections.”
Ubani threatened to personally lead a
“nationwide crusade” against the President should there be any attempt
by his administration to remove Jega, having earlier publicly promised
that he (President Jonathan) had no such intention.
In the same vein, the President, Nigeria
Voters Assembly, Mashood Erubami, the Nigeria Voters Assembly condemned
the alleged move to ask Jega to go on terminal leave.
The group in a release signed by its
President, Mr. Mashood Erubami, strongly warned that the removal of Jega
would show that the Federal Government had a hidden agenda.
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