I read with great amuzement that Attorney-General of the Federation,
Mallam Abubakar Malami has once again been summoned by the Nigerian
Senate
to appear before it on Thursday 30th June, 2016, through its
committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, for instituting a
forgery case against the presiding officers of the Upper Chamber, and
two top management staff of the National Assembly.
The invitation is unbecoming and a flagrant abuse of Separation of Powers under our known laws.
For the records, the is also prejudicial. With a very strong caveat,
members of Nigerian parliament should come out of their infantile view
point and know when to cross the line.
I wonder why Senator David Umaru led Committee would have allowed itself
to be used to cause infraction on matters that are purely beyond the
Senate and presently being prosecuted in the court of competent
jurisdiction.
Although the power of Senate to conduct investigation is broad and inherent in the legislative process.
But broad and inherent as this power of inquiry, it is with limitation
as the Senate cannot constitutes itself into the police or a trial
court.
Investigation conducted solely for the personal aggrandizement of the
investigators or to “punish” those investigated is indefensible and
cannot stand.
In GUARDIAN NEWSPAPERS LTD V. ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE FEDERATION (1999) 9
NWLR (Pt. 618) 187 at PP 249-250 the Supreme Court spelt out the
oversight and investigative function of legislators and its limitation
by holding that the legislative’s power to investigate is not absolute
as it has some legal impediments.
In TONY MOMOH V. SENATE OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY (1982) NCLR, 105, the
Court of Appeal clearly held that section 82 of the 1979 constitution
(akin to section 88 of the 1999 constitution) is not designed to enable
the legislature usurp the general investigating functions of the
executive nor the adjudicative functions of the judiciary. Any
invitations by the legislature to any person outside the purpose defined
by section 82(2) that is now 88(2) of the 1999 constitution is invalid.
Also in OBAYUWANA V. ALLI & ORS (1983) 12 SC147 at 191-192, EL-RUFAI
V. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES (2003)12 WRN I (SC) it was held that the
power of investigation by the legislature cannot be invoked to apply to
issues that are outside the purview of the legislature in the exercise
of the power to make law.
Today in Nigeria, it is an open secret that the Senate’s oversight power has attracted some level of abuse.
Not only that lawmakers see the function as a way of enriching
themselves and aiding personal aims. They also use same to intimidate
and harass their foes to bow to pressure.
The case involving the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, his
deputy, Senate Ike Ekeremadu and two others is well known and for those
who may not know, Abubakar Malami, SAN the Honourable Attorney General
of the Federation is perfectly in order with his conducts and actions on
the matter.
Senator Saraki, Ekweremadu and others have been summoned and docked
before Justice Yusuf Haliru over their alleged complicity in forgery of
the Senate Standing Rules, 2015. Though they pleaded not guilty to the
two-count charge preferred against them by the federal government.
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