SOME prominent lawyers, including Yusuf
Ali (SAN), and two civil rights organisations, Africa Network for
Environment and Economic Justice and the Foundation for Human Rights and
Advocacy on Thursday in Abuja faulted the presidential panel set up by
government to probe the controversial N255m car scandal involving the
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority and the Minister of Aviation, Ms.
Stella Oduah.
They also called on President Goodluck
Jonathan to sack Oduah and disband the three-man presidential panel set
up to investigate her.
They said the Presidential panel was a
cover-up like other panels adding that “it is a means of distracting the
anti-graft agencies prosecuting the minister.”
The Executive Director of ANEEJ, Rev.
David Ugolor and Director of FHRS, Olafaju Emmanuel told journalists
that the panel was a waste of time.
They said, “We condemn in its entirety
this step taken by President Goodluck Jonathan over the Minister of
Aviation’s profligacy and use of public funds to purchase two BMW
armoured cars. Setting up of a panel of inquiry by the President is a
clear move to cover up Stella Oduah who we all know is a close ally of
President Jonathan.
“We say this because in a country where
we have different anti-corruption agencies saddled with the
responsibility of trying cases such as this, what is the need for such a
panel?
“In 2005, when a Minister of Education,
Fabian Osuji was suspected to have gone to lobby members of the National
Assembly to influence the budgetary allocation of his ministry, he was
shown the way out without constituting any panel of inquiry.
“Over the years, panels have been the
easiest ways out of all forms of shoddiness in government and no panel
report has ever seen the light of the day. We have so many panel reports
begging for attention and implementation, yet on a clear case of
impunity in governance, the President is setting up a panel, what a
shame.”
The groups stated that with the facts on
ground, a clear case of corruption and misappropriation of public fund
had been established, adding that with such fact on ground, there was no
reason for the panel of inquiry.
“We know that spending public funds on
unbudgeted projects attracts three years in jail and a fine of N100,000
as the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences
Commission law stipulates, so why a panel rather than allowing the law
to take it is course if not for a cover-up?”
Meanwhile, more Nigerians have faulted
the arrest of some anti-Oduah protesters, describing the action of the
police as political.
A legal icon, Prof. Itse Sagay, (SAN),
and Ali, who is the Chairman, Anti-Corruption Commission, Nigerian Bar
Association, on Thursday condemned the arrest of 29 anti-Oduah’s
protesters.
The police arrested the Executive Director, Anti-Corruption Network, Mr. Dino Melaye and 28 others during the protest.
Melaye, who is a former member of the
House of Representatives, and the protesters were arrested by the
police in Abuja and taken away in a Toyota Hilux vehicle, marked NPS
21280 at about 1pm on Wednesday over a protest seeking for the removal
of the Minister of Aviation, Mrs. Stella Oduah over the scandal rocking
the aviation industry.
The police was said to have been led by
an Assistant Commissioner of Police in the Federal Capital Territory,
Mr. Sunday Olukoya.
Oduah was said to have allegedly made
the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority to buy two BMW bullet proof cars
worth ($1.6m) about N255m.
Melaye, however, was released on Thursday.
Ali said the arrest was unnecessary, adding that people have the right in a democracy to a peaceful protest.
He said the scandal rocking the aviation industry was making Nigeria a laughing stock before the international community.
He urged the President to intervene and
sack Oduah so as to convince Nigerians of the genuineness of his
anti-corruption crusade.
He also cautioned the police against
appearing as protecting only people in government to the detriment of
the generality of Nigerians.
“As long as the protest is peaceful,
there is nothing wrong with it. There should be freedom of expression.
Police should not be seen to be maintaining double standards. The police
should not see itself as the protector of people in government. It is
the protector of the Nigerian people.
“Police has no business arresting somebody who is organising a peaceful protest no matter who the person is.
“In other climes, this matter would not
even degenerate to protest either for or against. The concerned public
officer would have saved all of us the trouble by throwing in the towel.
But this is Nigeria where public officers no matter the level and
amount of scandals, hold on to their office.
“I think it is high time, our President
intervened. Afterall, he appointed the individual concerned and at least
to give some credibility to the touted fight of this government against
corruption. He should do what is right by advising her to step aside.
“I think what we lack in this country is
high voltage public morality. People in public offices do not feel they
have any moral obligations to our sensibilities. The whole world is
looking at us and laughing,” Ali said.
Sagay said the arrest was wrong and
advised the police to stop appearing to be political or against those
who were perceived to oppose government actions.
“Obviously I am condemning the arrest
because there should be freedom of movement and freedom to express
opinion. There is absolutely no justification for arresting him. The
right to protest is a right and not a privilege. But now if you are
suspected not to be in the good book of Aso Rock, you have no right at
all as far as the police are concerned. They deal with you outside the
law.
“This is what we have seen in recent
months that our police have become blatantly political. What they do now
is to clearly define themselves as belonging to the Aso Rock party. So,
anything that is approved by Aso Rock is fine, those people can
demonstrate.
“Anything the police think Aso Rock will
disapprove, they clamp down on them. So this is it, including the man
in Port Harcourt who is a pure politician but in uniform,” Sagay said.
However, President Jonathan may have
deliberately decided to keep the embattled minister, at bay during his
first day in Israel following the public outcry that has trailed the
minister’s decision to travel with the President despite her being
probed over the N255bn bulletproof vehicles bought for her by the
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority.
Jonathan is currently on Christian
pilgrimage and official trip to Israel. While he left the country on
Wednesday, Oduah travelled ahead of him under the explanation that she
was going to sign a Bilateral Air Service Agreement with Israel.
Curiously, the minister was
conspicuously missing in all the photographs of the President’s
activities in Israel so far released, copies of which our correspondent
sighted on Thursday.
Even the ones posted by the Special
Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, on
his Facebook page did not show the minister despite that they were taken
on the President’s arrival.
Abati posted a photograph of the
President receiving a banquet of flower from Miss Love Abdullahi at the
Tel Aviv International Airport on his arrival. The Nigerian Ambassador
to Israel, Ambassador David Obasa, some unidentified Nigerians and
security details were seen with the President.
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