The Senate on Wednesday said several actions of Kogi
State Governor, Mr. Yahya Bello, geared towards harassing his political
opponents are a threat to Nigeria's democracy.
This is as the Red chamber of the National Assembly
condemned the recent disruption of the Senator Ahmed Ogembe's empowerment
programme in Okene, Kogi State, allegedly on the orders of the governor with
complicity of the state police command.
The Senate's position followed a point of order
raised by Ogembe, who alleged that the programme, where seed capital was to be
provided for 1,500 women, was disrupted by thugs.
Ogembe, who is a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senator,
alleged that the state police Area Commander, who had earlier promised to send
20 policemen to secure the event, refused to send the police personnel.
The lawmaker said he could no longer travel to his
constituency without vulnerability to harassment or intimidation, adding that
the situation in the state could lead to a breakdown of law and order.
According to him, "Further aware that the
Nigerian Police Force Area Commander in Okene and the Divisional Police Officer
of Okene, Okehi and Adavi council areas are very much aware of the empowerment
programme as well as the political violence unleashed on beneficiaries and
supporters gathered to witness the event and did nothing.
"Worried that indeed, political violence,
kidnappings, killings, assassinations of my constituents and political
supporters in Kogi Central senatorial district have become the order of the day,
and the police have chosen to turn a blind eye.
"I am deeply worried that a lot of my
constituents and supporters were thoroughly beaten up, badly injured and some
of them kidnapped and later dumped in the bushes and uncompleted buildings.
Indeed, as l speak, a lot of my constituents are lying critically injured and
traumatised in hospitals across Kogi Central senatorial district."
Senator Dino Melaye (Kogi APC) listed his travails
which he alleged are orchestrated by Bello, including his experience last week
where men of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) laid siege on the Federal
High Court in Abuja, where he had been arraigned for false information.
Melaye said: "I was arraigned by a government
I helped to install," narrating how he was holed up in the court for hours
after he was granted bail, with reports that the squad was searching every car
leaving the premises in a bid to arrest him.
He called on President Muhammadu Buhari to declare
a State of Emergency in Kogi State to restore security and uphold the welfare
of the people.
Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe (Abia PDP), while contributing
to the debate, lamented that issues of police complicity in intimidating political
opponents are surfacing at a time when Nigerians are clamoring for state
police.
Abaribe said it is wrong for Bello, who is from the
same area as Ogembe but in different parties, to try to stop a programme meant
to empower their people.
"People have been saying we need youths, the
man in Kogi State does not give credence that we should give this country to
youths to run," Abaribe said.
The Deputy Senate Leader, Senator Ibn Na'Allah,
said the issue in Kogi State is a serious matter.
"It appears we can validly say the governor of
the state is a threat to our democracy, and the party that he belongs to should
call him to order. He is not representing our party well," Na'Allah said.
The Deputy of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, said
between 2011 and 2015, he went through a worse experience in the hands of then
Governor of Enugu State, Sullivan Chime.
Ekweremadu narrated how a medical mission he arranged
for old people's sight issues was disrupted by thugs, and how a traditional
ruler was dethroned for accepting a car donated by him to the traditional
rulers' council.
He listed several states where the governors and
senators are at loggerheads to include Kaduna, Kano among others.
"People are holding meetings everyday on how
to deal with every one of us here. Some gangs of people are trying to truncate
our democracy," he said.
Presiding, Senate President Bukola Saraki said the
situation in Kogi State has become totally unacceptable.
"It is not really just about Kogi State, but
it is clear from what we see that Kogi State is coming to the point where it is
a threat to our democracy and it cannot be seen to define our democracy because
this is not what our democracy is all about. We must be seen to be making
examples to other parts of the world.
"How can a governor proudly say he is going to
bulldoze a house in Nigeria at this time and we are all keeping quiet? These
are things that we must condemn totally," Saraki added.
He said the Senate must take actions that would
prevent such reoccurrences, and address such issues not just in Kogi, but all
states.
The Senate thereafter resolved to constitute an ad hoc
committee to investigate the circumstance of the disruption of Ogembe's
empowerment programme and the alleged complicity of the police.
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