The Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, has debunked claims by an online medium that the 7th National Assembly ‘pocketed’ a staggering N8 billion on the failed fourth constitution amendment exercise.
Recall that the failed process was chaired by Ekweremadu, who was also Deputy Senate President at the time.
In a statement over the weekend by his Special Adviser (Media), Uche Anichukwu, Ekweremadu described the report as an attempt to defame his person, while describing the allegation of pocketing of public funds as the figment of the imagination of the peddlers.
The statement read: “The attention of the Office of the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, has been drawn to a purported investigative report by an online medium, which claimed that he and other members of the Committees on Constitution Review of the seventh National Assembly, comprising the Senate and the House of Representatives, ‘pocketed’ N8 billion in ‘failed’ constitution amendment exercise.
“However, this report did not come to us as a surprise. It could be recalled that the office in a statement dated September 29, 2015 had warned of ‘some clandestine efforts by desperate political elements to publish false and defamatory information against the office and person of Ekweremadu.’
“It is easily recalled also that the office alerted that ‘These elements are currently making desperate efforts, including scavenging through Senate accounts and committees he has ever served on, with the sole aim of misrepresenting information, maligning, and running him out of office by hook or crook or force him to resign from office as the Deputy President of the Senate.
“Therefore, even though these latest bogus allegations appear an institutional matter of the National Assembly, it is not surprising that the report is in content, deliberate manipulation, and body language, one directly targeted at the person and Office of the Deputy President of the Senate.
“The office wishes to state categorically that there was no “pocketing” of N8 billion by members of the Committee on Constitution Review in the seventh Senate chaired by Senator Ekweremadu. Such fathom pocketing of public funds is a figment of the peddlers and their paymasters. For emphasis, the Senate Committee on Constitution Review does not have any account domiciled with the Guarantee Trust Bank as alleged by the report.
“For clarity, constitution amendment as an expenditure item is covered by the Appropriation Act of each year and disbursed by the appropriate bureaucracy of the National Assembly for the purpose it was appropriated in accordance with extant rules.
“The submission in the report that the lifespan of a parliamentary committee ends with the submission of its report, as Premium Times sought to mis-educate unsuspecting public, is not true and goes further to show that some political desperados, were at work.
“It is equally imperative to state that members of the seventh National Assembly and the 36 state assemblies did not fail in their legislative duties towards the realisation of the fourth alteration of the 1999 Constitution.
“Members diligently and successfully piloted the most elaborate amendments to the 1999 Constitution through all the legislative due process. They were indeed amendments that held great promises for the nation’s democracy.
“Therefore, the ambush and lynching of the Fourth Alteration Bill by a conspiracy of divisive agenda and malevolent political forces through the withdrawal of an already given presidential assent cannot be described as failure on the part of the National Assembly. Doing so is tantamount to barking up the wrong tree.
“For the records, the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, is proud of what the National Assembly has achieved with the constitution amendment project from 2010 till date.
“Apart from breaking the jinx of amending the 1999 Constitution, it needs to be reiterated that the various amendments have helped to deepen the nation’s democracy.
“For instance, the federal legislature has, by these amendments entrenched extensive electoral reforms, including financial and administrative autonomy for INEC as well as freeing the electoral umpire from political manipulations.
“These, among others, account for the incremental improvements in our electoral process culminating in the seamless and unprecedented transfer of power from one political party to another in the nation’s political history.
Therefore, any efforts to diminish these achievements or run the Deputy Senate President out of office will fail, just like the malicious allegations of forgery of Senate Standing Rules, assassination attempt, and efforts to undo him at the election petition tribunal, etc.
“Consequently, we urge the members of the public to disregard the report in its entirety.”