Earlier on we made you know that the Senate had today resumed from recess by publishing Senate president Bukola Saraki's welcome speech to the senators. If you missed that, click here. Well the senators have also passed a vote of confidence on President Bukola Saraki who is currently facing criminal charges.
Nigerian
senators on Tuesday passed a vote of confidence on the senate president, Bukola
Saraki, seeking to shore up support for the embattled leader who is facing
corruption charges.
Mr. Saraki was arraigned last week before the Code of Conduct
Tribunal on a 13-count charge of alleged corruption and false declaration of
assets.
He denied wrongdoing and said the trial was politically
motivated.
The senate met Tuesday for the first time since Mr. Saraki
appeared before the tribunal, and 83 senators co-sponsored a motion to give him
a “vote of confidence”.
David Umar, Niger East, who read the motion, initially said it
was sponsored by 84 Senators; nevertheless, the Chairman Senate Committee on
Business and Rules, Babajide Omowarare, Osun East, asked that his name be
removed from the list.
“Ordinarily by virtue of my position as the Chairman, Committee
on Business and Rules, I should have seen this motion before now,” Mr.
Omoworare said.
“But it comes as matter of urgent public importance. My name is
listed as number eleven. Let me say that I don’t know how my name got into the
list. I therefore say I am not part of it.”
Mr. Umar said the Nigerian Constitution guaranteed separation of
powers.
He condemned the “ongoing unwarranted media embarrassment of the
Senate and the Senate leadership”.
He urged Nigerians not allow themselves to be used to harass or
intimidate the Senate leadership.
Supporting the motion, Sani Yerima, from Zamfara State, said “we
shall continue to support our leaders”.
According to him, the lawmakers’ right to choose their
leadership should be respected.
He added that “anybody outside this chamber who wants to control
the Senate should go and sleep”.
Although the motion was passed with voice vote, Mr. Saraki was
not left unchallenged as Kabir Marafa (Zamfara state), a staunch opponent of
the embattled senate president, disrupted the session, asking that the motion
be quashed.
He criticised the motion, arguing it should not be entertained
in the first place as its subject was pending in court.
He engaged Mr. Saraki in a heated argument.
However, Gbenga Ashafa and Sola Adeyeye saved the legislative
body from what was going to be a rancorous session.
They intervened and guided the irked Mr. Marafa out of the
chamber.
Earlier, Mr. Saraki had said he was being tried because of his
emergence as the Senate President, reiterating his position before the Code of
Conduct Tribunal last week.

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