A group which identified itself as Nigerians in Diaspora Monitoring
Group, has charged the Senate to immediately screen the immediate past
governor of Rivers State, Mr Rotimi Amaechi and not bend to the present
attempts by some individuals to blackmail the ministerial nominee.
While
observing that certain individuals and their paymasters have perfected
plans to damage Amaechi’s reputation as part of an on-going tussle in
Rivers State politics, the Diaspora group warned that they must not be
allowed to distort the national consensus for change.
In a
statement issued on its behalf on Friday by Comrade Philip Agbese, the
group noted that the Senate has screened former Lagos state governor,
Babatunde Fashola, his Ekiti state counterpart – Kayode Fayemi and
others who had held public offices at some point relying on conventions.
The
statement noted that applying different sets of rules for the screening
of candidates could amount to re-writing Nigeria’s laws to selectively
suit one group while leaving another group disadvantaged, warning that
such is unacceptable.
Agbese
wrote: “Amaechi as a former legislator and one time Rivers State House
of Assembly Speaker, should have ordinarily been allowed to take a bow
and go just like the Senators have done to many other nominees.
Unfortunately what we are seeing is a parliament that has increasingly
allowed itself to be arm-twisted by individuals with vested interests to
prolong what should have been a straightforward screening of the
nominee.
“This will amount to selective justice and negates the
principle of fair trial if the Senate decides to constitute itself into a
court of law by passing a guilty verdict on Amaechi on account of the
internal politics of Rivers state. The nation’s constituted courts have
not convicted him of any offence and the reports that some people seek
to act upon would still have to be tested at the law courts before they
will amount to convictions that could bar him from holding public
office.
“The Senate would be playing to the gallery if it fails to
understand the fundamental right of a citizen to remain innocent until
proven otherwise by a court of law. To many well-meaning Nigerians it
amounts to the highest level of double-stand and abuse of the concept of
separation of powers clearly defined in our constitution”.
“The
Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria must therefore not give her
ears to the voices of anti-democratic elements in Nigeria to
deliberately cause a stampede to the expected changes and reforms which
Nigerians are yearning for on daily basis”, he warned.
The group
added that, “the Senate must also realise that it neither has the
capacity nor the resources to dabble into the local affairs of each of
the nation’s 36 states and must not use Rivers state to set a precedence
that could come back to haunt Nigeria in future.”

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