Saturday 22 November 2014

NLC, Tinubu, others blast FG, police for N’Assembly attack

Some prominent Nigerians and concerned stakeholders on Friday condemned Thursday’s invasion of the National Assembly in Abuja by the police.
They described the action as shameful, disgusting, barbaric and below the conduct expected of the police.
The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Mr. Abdulwahed Omar, and his Trade Union Congress’ counterpart, Mr. Bala Kaigama, faulted the invasion and asked the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Suleiman Abba, to resign from office with immediate effect.
Omar particularly faulted the explanation by the police authorities that they mobilised to the National Assembly in order to prevent thugs from gaining access to the complex. Continue..

The Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Emmanuel Ojukwu, had said that the police only mobilised to the complex to prevent thugs from gaining access to the place.
But the NLC boss said the police went to the National Assembly to do “private jobs rather than their constitutional responsibilities.”
“We find the explanation by the police for their conduct, spurious and puerile and not worthy of response,” he said, adding that the House of Representatives Speaker, Mr. Aminu Tambuwal, who he said was the target of the police action, should be accorded the privileges of the office he occupies.
Kaigama flayed the police for preventing Tambuwal from gaining access to the House, describing it as a “feat” that could not be allowed to happen in other climes.
Similarly, the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties condemned the invasion, saying it was a reminder of the violent military regime in Nigeria during which many prominent citizens fled the country to escape being killed or maimed by the agents of government.
In a statement issued on Friday afternoon after its emergency meeting in Abuja, the CNPP said it had yet to come to terms with the violence and rascality of the police as evidenced by the desecration of the National Assembly.
The statement, signed by the CNPP National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Osita Okechukwu, read, “We have yet to understand the motive behind the violence unleashed by the police on members of the House of Representatives in utter violation of the core mandate of the police to protect and defend the people and the laws of the land.
“We wish to warn those who wittingly and unwittingly discredit and abuse the nation’s hard won democracy to desist forthwith from such ignoble act.”
The CNPP, however, called on President Goodluck Jonathan to sack the Inspector-General of Police for his failure to call his men to order.
“In the collective interest of the country and its fledgling democracy, we call on the President to sack the IGP so as to absolve himself from the insinuations gaining ground that the new police chief is his attack-dog,” the CNPP added.
The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, blamed the National Assembly invasion on the President.
Tinubu said that “no commissioner of police will ever embark on such an action without the clearance of the Inspector-General of Police and no IGP will order his men out here without approval by the Presidency. Nigerians know where the buck stops.”
He particularly asked Nigerians to hold Jonathan responsible for the invasion.
In a statement issued by his media office, the APC chieftain said, “The Jonathan Presidency must take full responsibility for the attack on the leadership of the National Assembly.
“This government cannot claim to be unaware of what the police would do. This gangster’s antic occurred almost at their doorstep. The Jonathan Presidency can no longer play ignorant regarding the noxious things done for partisan ends.
“Instead of seriously treating Boko Haram’s incursion against our internal security, the President’s men decided to turn the event into a partisan and embarrassing circus. Perhaps they saw this as a birthday present to the President. But it is nothing but brigandage masquerading as governance. What this Presidency does not realise is how terribly it has exposed its pettiness and dictatorial penchant for elevating narrow political interests above the fate of the nation.”
A Professor of Law and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Itse Sagay, asked those behind the invasion to have a rethink in order to prevent the whole system from crashing.
Sagay said, “Obviously, this is a major assault on our democracy. The National Assembly is the number one institution of democracy, so anyone who attacks the legislature is attacking the very source of the nation’s democracy.
“What happened today is very serious and when you couple it with what is happening in Ekiti State, where Governor Ayodele Fayose has sent seven people to take over the House of Assembly as against the constitutional provisions, then you can see that our democracy is heading towards destruction. So this is a very critical moment for Nigeria and I just hope that the people who are behind all these things would think again before they make this whole country crash on all of us.”
The pan-Yoruba organisation, the Afenifere Renewal Group, has warned the Federal Government against the use of state security agencies for political interests.
In a statement made available to Saturday PUNCH, ARG’s Programme Officer, Mr. Segun Balogun, quoted the group’s Chairman, Mr. Wale Oshun, as saying that Thursday’s blockade of the National Assembly by security operatives was a “brazen attack on the legislature and Nigerians.”
Oshun said, “There appears to be an implicit intent to disintegrate this country and it appears that this is being perpetrated with the use of tax-payer-funded security agencies.
“It means we are deceiving ourselves if we believe we are under a democratic regime. An attack on the legislature is an attempt to shut down democracy and return Nigeria to autocratic rule.”
Oshun urged the government to allow institutions to “function in support of good governance” or put the “nation on the brink of collapse.”
He said, “We have recently experienced abuses of the judiciary. Now it appears the next step is the abuse of the legislature. The question is which arm of the government is next? ARG needs to warn that where institutions fail to function in support of good governance, then such a nation is on the brink of collapse.
The ruling Peoples Democratic Party wants the IGP to unravel the circumstances surrounding the development within the next 72 hours.
The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh in a statement on Friday, said the “sanctity of the National Assembly as an arm of government and citadel of democracy must be upheld at all times adding that the matter should not be shrouded in controversy, sinister plots and mundane accusations.
The statement said, “While we acknowledge that due to the security challenges in the country, the security agencies are within their constitutional powers to search individuals and ensure that only responsible and duly accredited persons gain entrance into the National Assembly complex, we wish to state in strongest possible terms that the PDP is fully with the President in not condoning any act that might indicate that the police went beyond their bounds in the incident.”
But the police said their presence at the National Assembly on Thursday was to stop thugs and “never-do-wells” who besieged the premises and assaulted policemen on lawful duty.
The police said they had arrested seven hoodlums that assaulted and broke the leg of the aide-de-camp to the Senate President, David Mark, during the scuffle at the National Assembly, stressing that the suspects would be dealt with.
Ojukwu, who addressed journalists at the Force Headquarters in Abuja on Friday, however, declined to identify the suspects.
Ojukwu stressed that the police acted professionally by preventing the members of the House of Representatives from accessing their chambers on account of their “dishonourable conduct,” noting that “lawmakers do not just jump over fences and walls.”
He said, “The National Assembly is a national asset and heritage and the Police will not allow anyone to attack it. All the senators that entered the premises were checked, including the Senate President himself, but on the House of Representatives’ side, as the Speaker was entering, he came with many never-do-wells, thugs, those that confirmed our intelligence that there was going to be trouble at the National Assembly.
“They refused to be checked, they refused to be screened. Some of us may have seen on the (television) screen how some of them were shaking the gates, destroying government property. This matter is currently under investigation and anyone who is found to have broken the rule will be dealt with.”

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