By Carl Umegboro
PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari
transmitted a letter of notice to the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
for a medical vacation in the United Kingdom a moment ago. The construction of
the letter which contained among other terms, ‘coordinating’ has been subjected
to severe criticisms among the political class and finally down to the masses questioning
the rationale behind the use of such term in place of ‘acting’ as previously
used during Buhari’s earlier vacation. The
observation was raised by Senator Mao Ohuabunwa (PDP) representing Abia North senatorial
district at the Senate plenary when the letter was read, and vehemently
condemned the term, indicating his smell of a rat at the presidency. Since
then, other politicians alongside the masses particularly from the opposition have
continued to dwell on sundry insinuations pointing at gigantic skeletons in the
cupboards at the presidency.
Emphatically, the enabling
constitutional provision is clear on the matter. Section 145 of the 1999
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as amended, provides, “Whenever the President transmits to the
President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a
written declaration that he is proceeding on vacation or that he is otherwise
unable to discharge the functions of his office, until he transmits to them a
written declaration to the contrary such functions shall be discharged by the
Vice-President as Acting President.” Clearly, the above provision did not give
the President powers to recommend, appoint or make his Vice an Acting-President;
instead, it simply gives an outline on how powers can be transmitted from the
President to the Vice on temporary basis, especially while indisposed to
discharge duties temporarily. As a matter of fact, President Buhari needed not
to inform or be at peace with his Vice for the office of Acting-President to
come on board. As long as a letter is transmitted pursuant to Section 145 supra, it is immaterial if the letter mentioned
Vice President or not, and will be automatically incumbent on the Senate to
invoke or apply the constitutional provision as the office of the President makes
no room for vacuum.
By implication, the President does
not need to mention either ‘acting’ or ‘coordinating’ in his letter to the
Senate as long as the letter clearly pointed to vacation or short-term
unfitness. The constitution is supreme. It explicitly states that on such
situation, once a formal communication is transmitted to the upper chamber of
the National Assembly by the President, powers shifts to the Vice pending the
resumption accordingly. Thus, the needful is for the President to formally
transmit a correspondence on his vacation. To even use the word “acting’ in the
letter by the President is akin to a directive or directions to the Senate.
Incontrovertibly, the Senate knows that the legitimate step is to declare
Professor Yemi Osinbajo as Acting-President pending when counter-correspondence
is received from the President on his readiness to resume duties. Professor
Osinbajo can only do mere ‘coordination’ if no correspondence was sent to the
Senate on the medical trip.
The hullaballoo is therefore uncalled
for, and reduces the architects as mischief makers. Nigeria as a nation should
face important issues that would bring substantial dividends of democracy to
the people. Criticisms are essential
characteristics of leadership especially in a democracy but when they lose
constructive elements and values; it becomes bickering, loquacity and pull-down
syndrome. The hate politics in Nigeria in recent times is monumentally grotesque,
bizarre, barbaric and egoistic. The country is greater than any individual or political
affiliations, and therefore national interests should be utmost priority. All that
most critics are desperate to hear is President’s death or resignation due to
his unwavering dispositions on corruption. The unprecedented discoveries recently
of public funds in billions of naira, dollars, pounds inside pits, septic
tanks, uncompleted buildings, serviced-flats, locked-up shops and others amidst
of economic recession in a society most average families and pensioners are
facing hell meant nothing to the critics.
The sole target of these detractors is to plant seeds of discord between
President Buhari and Acting-President, Osinbajo whose working relationship
since inauguration has remained cordial, exemplary and brotherly despite
religious differences, ethnicity and careers. However, they will not succeed.
President Buhari and Prof Osinbajo will complete the missions Nigerians
entrusted to them.
The cleansing and change must
continue until a new country is rebirth. The challenges facing the nation are
enormous, and therefore unacceptable for the red chamber to concentrate on such
irrelevancies. There are numerous executive bills awaiting legislative processes,
as well as other relevant sensitive issues to address towards improving the
standard of living of the citizenry and governance. The uproar is a futile
exercise. In the first place, Nigeria’s President presently does not have
constitutional powers to appoint Acting-President but strictly affairs of the
Senate, and the presidency understands it clearly. Secondly, the section of the
constitution cited in the letter made the intention of the President
unambiguous. Thirdly, the perception and claims that President Buhari didn’t
appoint Prof Osinbajo to be acting-President is ridiculous and the height of
naivety. The office of the acting-President is provided in the constitution and
the prerequisites clearly spelt out. It is an office recognized in law and
invoked upon exclusively by the lawmakers on meeting a specified condition;
transmission of a notice by the President. Without a doubt, the President can
magnanimously mastermind his Vice to become an Acting-President. Nonetheless,
he doesn’t do the ‘appointing’ but can only stop at creating the way by
transmitting in writing his vacation or inability to discharge official duties.
Importantly, the office of the Acting-President does not fall within the
appointments designated for the President as ministers and aides. It is
sacrosanct on the Vice President. Thus, no space for unnecessary distractions.
Umegboro, an analytical journalist writes from Abuja.
Osinbajo is favorite leader of majority people in Nigeria. Indeed it was expected that he would win with that heavy mandate.I think everyone should now accept the reality about his mandate.
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