THE polarisation in the Senate over former Rivers State Governor
Chibuike Amaechi deepened yesterday as Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
members of the Upper Chamber protested the decision to go ahead with his
screening.
Amaechi
Daramola
Unlike the screening of other nominees during which senators
irrespective of their parties took part in questioning the nominees, the
PDP senators refrained from asking Amaechi any questions as a sign of
their protest.
Senate Minority Leader, Godswill Akpabio, citing the Standing Order
43 of the Senate Rules told his colleagues from the All Progressives
Congress (APC) that since the Senate has decided to screen Amaechi
without debating the report of the Ethics, Privileges and Public
Petitions Committee, which investigated the petition submitted against
the nominee, PDP senators had resolved not to ask the nominee any
question.
Reacting, the Senate Majority Leader, Ali Ndume who capitalised on
the PDP’s strange refusal to ask questions, challenged Akpabio and PDP
senators’ decision, stressing that what it meant was that the nominee
could as well be asked to bow and go.
He said: “As a majority leader, it is my responsibility to market
this nominee for the confirmation of the Senate. If these people have
decided not to ask any question, my job is made easier.”
There were loud protests at Ndume’s choice of words did not go down
well with his colleagues in PDP as he referred to them as ‘these
people.’
They insisted that he tenders apology and retract the statement.
It took the intervention of the Senate President Bukola Saraki, who
explained to the opposition senators that Ndume has retracted his
language, to douse the near-rowdy session on the floor.
Osholi
The Senate had met in closed-door session before opening the plenary
when the Chairman of the Ethics Committee, Sam Anyanwu, laid the report
of his committee regarding the nomination of Amaechi on the mace table.
The report was, however, not debated as the Senate simply went ahead
to screen Amaechi, who took advantage of the exercise to list some of
the achievements he said he had recorded for Nigeria.
He claimed his administration in Rivers State was the first to
institutionalise the system of due process in public procurement, giving
the impression to the Senate that his appointment as minister would be a
credit to the war against corruption for which he said the President
Muhammadu Buhari administration was voted into power.
He also declared that he had neither ever taken nor offered a bribe to anyone in his life.
A significantly interesting aspect of the exercise came up when
Amaechi’s declaration that former President Goodluck Jonathan was voted
out because he was not suitable enough to lead the efforts to ensure the
growth and development of Nigeria was greeted with near-absolute
silence in the chamber.
And there was the need to fight corruption and the only way to fight
that corruption is to put a new government. And we had to get a signpost
candidate. The signpost candidate is a man who the Nigerian public has
seen as an incorruptible president.
“And that was why the party had to put President Buhari forward. And we
thought that there was a need to do things differently. I thought that
as good as the former President may have been, I don’t think he was
suitable enough for the growth and development of Nigeria. So, we need
to offer opportunity to somebody we believe is better than the former
President,” he said.
Amaechi canvassed the principle of fairness in the distribution of
national wealth particularly to the benefit of the oil producing states,
noting that it would help in reducing militancy in the Niger Delta.
Mustapha
He said: “In my former view, I believed that the resources are in the
Niger Delta and their fair share is necessary, that is why there is
militancy. I believe that if you do not address social justice the
country will not be the same.
“On the East-West road, it is not just for the Niger Delta, it will lead
to economic prosperity for Nigeria. If I become the minister of Niger
Delta, that will be first road that I will address,” Amaechi said.
Giving his views on employment generation, the nominee said:” When
you deal with the issue of massive unemployment, you deal with the
change in the economic mantra. The mono-economic situation that we have
cannot survive.
“For me, I agree with the President that there is the need to invest in
agriculture. If we invest in agriculture and technology, you will hire
as many workers as possible.
In the course of campaign, I discovered that in Borno, we saw water
melon that grew naturally. If you plant just 100,000 hectares of water
melon in Borno, you can be sure to engage more than 30,000 workers.
We must diversify the economy. Mining is another area that God has
blessed us. And we need to invest hugely on Education. We did that in
Rivers State. For four, five, six years, our budget was highest in
Education. So, if this happens, we will employ quite a number of
workers.
“We must also improve on the social rights of the people. If you improve on the social rights of the people there will be peace.
“You must have power and we do not need rocket science to solve the power supply challenge.
Lokpobiri
We should just look at what the problems are, remove corruption and
invest in power. The reason why most people don’t invest in Nigeria is
that the cost of production by far outweighs the benefits you will make
from your business.
“So, I usually say that a Nigerian is a government of his own. He hires
his own security, digs his own borehole, hires his own generator. So,
what is government providing? Amaechi asked.
Amaechi also told the Senate that though he has never taken bribe, corruption goes beyond monetary gratification.
His words: “Corruption is very difficult to define. I have never
taken bribe in my life but if they send a girl to you and you sleep with
the girl and do her favour, you are corrupt.
“Corruption is a very wide concept. If people are contesting for a
position and you offer your son, brother or sister an opportunity to
hold that position, probably the person is not qualified, you are
corrupt. So, it is difficult for me to define corruption.”
Other nominees screened include Heineken Lokpobiri, Cladius Omoleye Daramola, Baba Shehuri Mustapha and Ocholi E. James.