A
group, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, has described as a national
embarrassment the lawmakers who followed wife of Senate President Bukola
Saraki, Toyin, to the Economic and Financial Crime Commission’s office last
week.
The
wife of the Senate President was accompanied to the EFCC’s office in Abuja by
25 lawmakers.
According
to the Executive Chairman of the CACOL, Debo Adeniran, that the lawmakers
should abandon their constitutional duties to follow Mrs Saraki, who was being
investigated for corruption charges by the anti-corruption agency, is the
height of irresponsibility.
He
said, “These national lawmakers and supposed representatives of the Nigerian
people reportedly accompanied Mrs. Saraki, who had been invited by the
anti-corruption agency to come and answer to an allegation of corrupt practice,
in a show of solidarity with the accused. We are particularly disturbed and
miffed at what has been termed not only a show of shame and gross
irresponsibility but a clear anti-thesis of what their primary constitutional
duty is.
“One
cannot but wonder how far President (Muhammadu) Buhari would be able to go in
his avowed war against corruption in this country, if the very lawmakers who
are expected to give him the needed support through the provision of enabling
legal framework with which to successfully prosecute the war, are openly,
though tacitly, fraternising with corruption by turning themselves into
bodyguards of a suspected corruption criminal.”
The
CACOL boss accused the legislators of doing a job they were not elected to do.
He added that the lawmakers’ action presupposed that they wanted to intimidate
the EFCC in its task of tackling corruption.
“It’s
sad that they chose to abandon their statutory role of lawmaking while playing
the meddlesome interloper, thereby diminishing the exalted chambers they
represent,” the CACOL boss said.
He
likened the incident to what was witnessed during ex-President Olusegun
Obasanjo’s administration, when a Peoples Democratic Party chieftain, Bode
George, was accompanied by praise-singers, dressed in aso ebi to court
premises in solidarity with the accused each time he appeared in court to
answer to corruption charges.
He
noted that the legislators’ act was a clear indication that some lawmakers in
the National Assembly were “out to make the job of eradicating corruption, or,
at least, stemming it to the barest minimum, by Buhari’s administration more
complex and difficult than ever envisaged.”
Source:punchng
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