Indications emerged yesterday evening that some ministerial nominees may
not given be a clean bill, as the Senate begins screening today. This
is even as President Muhammadu Buhari forwarded the second list of 15
names to the Senate in a sealed envelope.
Sources said the list may include the names of Chief Festus Odimegwu,
Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Prof. Barth Nnaji, Chief Ike Emenike, Alhaji
Mohammed Bello and Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN).
Others are: Isaac Adewale, Anthony Anwula, Dan Ali, Okechukwu Enilamah, Cladius Daramola, Heineken Lokpobiri and James Ocholi.
The Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari, the Senior Special
Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate),
Senator Ita Enang and his colleague in the House of Representatives,
Abdurahman Sumaila, submitted the list to Senate President Bukola Saraki
in his office around 4:24pm yesterday.
Special Adviser to the Senate President on Media, Alhaji Yusuph
Olaniyonu, who confirmed this, explained that Saraki would not open the
envelope until today during plenary when he was expected to read the
list before his colleagues.
Meanwhile, the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public
Petitions also postponed the ongoing investigation on the petitions
submitted against the nomination of the former Rivers State governor
Rotimi Amaechi and Mrs. Amina Mohammed.
Chairman of the committee, Samuel Anyanwu, explained that since the case
is already pending before a court, it is in their rule not to
entertain any matter before the court since it would be subjudice.
Mohammed who appeared before the panel, urged the committee to disregard
the allegations: “I was brought up in Kaduna. My father lived there
but I have no connection with Kaduna State. I am indigene of Gombe
State and the assumption is that I would be representing Gombe in the
cabinet.”
Anyanwu: “We just received only two petitions. One that concerns Rotimi
Amaechi and the other one that concerns Amina Mohammed. So far, we have
treated the two petitions and the committee is about putting down our
report, which might be ready tomorrow (today) and if we cannot conclude
it tomorrow, then we will move to the next day. “What we are saying is
that we have a petition against Amaechi. And there is a letter from his
lawyer that they have a pending case in the court. We also received a
White Paper indicting him and we also received a Federal High Court
judgement that says that Amaechi cannot stop the judicial commission
from investigating him. He went to Appeal Court and the matter is
pending in Appeal Court. And in our Senate Rule, once a matter is in
court, we will not dwell into it. But what we are going to do is to
package the documents, look at their natures and be able to do our
report and send to the Senate by tomorrow or next.
In another development, Special Adviser to the President on Media and
Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said Buhari has no intention to be Minister
of Petroleum Resources but would only supervise the ministry.
He said in a television interview: “He is not going to be designated as
minister but will supervise the ministry. When former President Olusegun
Obasanjo while in office supervised that ministry for six years, was he
called a petroleum minister? No, he was not.”
“The president is going to supervise and maybe, he would have Minister
of State to work along with him. I dare say, he has all it takes to
supervise that ministry having been oil minister for three and a half
years in the past.
Buhari would respect the constitution. And the constitution says
ministers must be appointed from each state and that means there must be
minimum of 36 ministers. He would respect that.
Adesina added that the age of the ministerial nominees does not matter
to the president: “These people who have been nominated are qualified
and are Nigerians. Talking of age, there is a saying that ‘age does not
matter. It does not mind, if you don’t mind it.’ I don’t think that age
is an issue. ”
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