Abuja - The Senate may have to wield the big stick on Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello with the consequent declaration of her seat vacant if she continues to shun the attendance of proceedings of the upper chamber.This follows her continuous absence from the Senate sessions since her case with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) which has charged the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health to court over her alleged involvement in the N300 million fraud at the Ministry of Health.The Senate spokesman and chairman of its Committee on Information and Media, Senator Ayogu Eze, disclosed this on Tuesday during the weekly press briefing by the Senate. Senator Eze, who admitted that Obasanjo-Bello’s case was beyond the jurisdiction of the Senate, the case having already been taken to court for adjudication, said the Senate was, however, worried over the continued absence of the legislator at the proceedings of the House, a development which he said contravened the provisions of the 1999 Constitution. Senator Eze, who also said that the Senate could not account for her now, stated that the Senate was expected to sit for a minimum of 181 days in a year, and the constitution made it mandatory for a senator to attend two-thirds of that 181 days, failure of which an interested party from her constituency could notify the National Assembly leadership. Giving details of the procedure, Eze said: “Attendance at sittings of the Senate is voluntary. Every member is subject to the rules and law of Nigeria. The Senate is expected to do a minimum of 181 days in a year and by law, it is also mandatory and a senator is expected to do two-thirds of that 181 to qualify to continue in the chamber.” According to Senator Eze, “it is not the responsibility of the leadership or members of the Senate to fish around for a senator who is not coming. What happens when a senator is absent for considerable number of times is that an interested party or member of the constituency of the senator concerned notifies the National Assembly leadership or the Senate that well, so and so, and so, so, person has been absent from the Senate for so and so period and I think that constitutionally, his or her membership of the National Assembly has lapsed. “If the records of her attendance are checked and the person has not attained the constitutional period required for his or her membership to continue, there is no other procedure required except to write to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The Senate President is expected to write INEC to say that so, so and so person has not met the constitutional requirement, therefore conduct election to fill the vacancy. That is what the law says.” Click here to read the rest of the story from the Tribune
OBJ’s daughter ultimatum - Show up or lose your senate seat
May 14th, 2008, 12:15 am · No Comments
Tags: Features · Governance · In Case You Missed It · Nigeria · Politics · corruption · law
Public Offers - CBN, SEC meets to review bank’s illegal practice of withholding share certificates
May 9th, 2008, 12:21 am · No Comments
Abuja - Following complaints by subscribers who participated in the public offers embarked upon by banks in the country and their inability to access their share certificates, months after the exercise had been concluded, the Central Bank of Nigeria [CBN] and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) will meet next week to sort out the problem.
Tags: Features
Obasanjo, Atiku ready for Power Probe
May 8th, 2008, 11:20 pm · No Comments
Abuja - The immediate past president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and his estranged former vice president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, are set to appear before the House of Representatives Committee probing the contracts in the power sector.
Obasanjo and Atiku have both separately resolved to appear before the panel in order to clear their names. Atiku conveyed his readiness to appear before the panel through a letter to the Chairman of the House Committee on Power and Steel, Hon. Ndudi Elumelu, dated May 7, 2008 and signed on his behalf by Abdullahi Nyanko.
Tags: Governance · Nigeria · corruption · law
British Airways loses in court - ordered to pay N2.1 million to Nigerian passenger
May 3rd, 2008, 12:47 am · No Comments
Lagos - British Airways appears to be losing the battle to fight the will of the Nigerian people fighting it either to recover their lost luggages or to enforce their fundamental human rights against maltreatment or negligence by the airline. The airline has been ordered by a Federal High Court in Lagos to pay ₤9, 000 (N2.1 million) to a Nigerian passenger, Mr. Emeka Ngige (SAN), being value of the contents of his luggage lost in transit aboard the airways while returning to Lagos from London.
Tags: Features · Immigration · Nigeria · law · travel
Colonel Tunde Akogun - House of Rep Majority Leader’s election nullified by tribunal
May 3rd, 2008, 12:19 am · No Comments
Akure (Ondo) - The election of the Nigeria Federal House of Representatives’ Majority Leader, and member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Colonel Tunde Akogun (Rtd), representing Akoko-Edo Federal constituency of Ondo State, has been nullified by the Edo State Elections Petition Tribunal headed by Justice Elizabeth Iliya.
The tribunal also ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct fresh elections in the constituency within the next 90 days.
The tribunal said it nullified the election because of irregularities and the absence of voting in several points in the Akoko-Edo Federal Constituency.
Tags: Features
