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Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Real life Mortal Kombat in The National Assembly!
Member of the House of Representatives, Ms. Doris Uboh, being dragged out of Tuesday’s plenary session by the Sergeant-, at-Arms, Col. Emeka Okere (retd.), and a female security operative during a brawl in the House. On the right is a member of the House, Mr. Dino Melaye, after the incident.
The crisis in the House of Representatives degenerated into a free-for-all on Tuesday, as lawmakers exchanged blows, injuring one another in the process.
Eleven members of the Progressive-Minded Legislators, a group calling for the resignation of the Speaker, Mr. Dimeji Bankole, were placed on indefinite suspension, following the fracas.
The suspended lawmakers are Mr. Dino Melaye; Mr. Anas Adamu; Mr. Ehiogie West-Idahosa; Mr. Independence Ogunewe; Mr. Solomon Awhinawhin; Mr. Austin Nwachukwu; Mr. Gbenga Oduwaiye; Mr. Gbenga Onigbogi; Mr. Kayode Amusan; Mr. Bitrus Kaze; and Ms. Doris Uboh.
A pro-Bankole lawmaker, Mr. Chinyere Igwe, was injured on his right arm after Nwachukwu attacked him with a substance suspected to be tear-gas.
But as the fighting continued, operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission raided the office of the Clerk of the House and took away documents believed to be those relating to the N9bn allegation against Bankole by the PML.
A source at the EFCC, who disclosed this to one of our correspondents, said that the operatives, on arrival at the National Assembly complex around 10am, restricted movement around the clerk’s office before taking away the documents.
Trouble broke out on the floor of the House when Igwe and Nwachukwu confronted each other, with the latter allegedly spraying the substance on the former.
Igwe stumbled and fell before he was helped out of the chamber. It was unclear whether he broke his arm as he held it and writhed in pain on his way out.
The speaker‘s loyalists reacted to the development by pouncing on Nwachukwu, and tearing his clothes to shreds before dragging him out of the chamber.
In the ensuing commotion, Awhinawhin was also beaten and forced out of the chamber. He had attempted to snatch the mace but was prevented by the Sergeant-at-Arms, Col. Emeka Okere(retd.), and his aides.
Many members punched Awhinawhin in the melee but he replied with blows. He was left with a bleeding nose before he too was dragged out of the chamber by pro-Bankole legislators.
The PML, which is led by Mr. Dino Melaye, had accused the leadership of the House of allegedly misusing N9bn out of the N11bn voted as the capital vote of the House between 2008 and 2009.
The group had earlier given Bankole a seven-day ultimatum to resign or be “disgraced out of office.”
On Monday, the group submitted a petition to the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mrs. Farida Waziri, seeking an investigation into the matter.
Waziri had promised to investigate the allegation immediately and went ahead to say that Nigerians had become fed up with the ”scandals upon scandals” in the House since 1999.
The exchange of fisticuffs took place on Tuesday as the House made to suspend the anti-Bankole lawmakers, on the grounds that the method they adopted in attacking the speaker brought the House to public ridicule .
The House argued that whatever offence the speaker was alleged to have committed should have been addressed through an internal mechanism rather than taking the matter to the public.
A member of the House, Mr. Chile Igbawua, was called by Bankole to move a motion for the suspension of the 11 members.
Igbawua stood and said that the conduct of Melaye and his group breached Section 24 of the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act, 2004.
He said that the law prohibited anybody from publishing any statement, ”whether in writing or otherwise, which falsely or scandalously defames a legislative House or any committee thereof.”
Igbawua added that it was an offence under the Act for anyone to publish any material ”reflecting on the character” of either the President or the speaker or ”publishes any writing containing a gross, willful or scandalous misrepresentation of the proceedings of a legislative house or of the speech of any member in the proceedings of a legislative House....”
As Igbawua read the motion, Melaye suddenly sprang out of his seat and started shouting, “Point of order, Mr. Speaker, no, it cannot happen; it cannot be, not here, never!”
Melaye, who came into the chamber with a whistle, started blowing it to distract Igbawua when it was apparent that the speaker was not listening to him.
Bankole asked Igbawua to proceed, but Uboh surged towards Igbawua and tried to snatch the paper from him.
A member sitting next to Igbawua, Mr. Ishiaku Bawa, pushed Uboh, who almost fell. She fought back, hitting Bawa with punches.
Melaye snatched the paper from Igbawua, tore it and threw the pieces on the floor.
Pandemonium resulted as Awhinawhin rushed to snatch the mace but was prevented by Okere, security operatives and some lawmakers. They beat him repeatedly.
In a bid to restore order, Bankole adjourned the sitting of the House by ramming his gavel.
However, the majority of lawmakers led by Mr. Abdul Ningi, a former majority leader, advised him to go back to his seat to continue with the motion.
For over 25 minutes after Bankole returned to his seat, there was a free-for-all as the majority of members backing him, fought with the PML lawmakers.
In the midst of the fracas, Bankole rammed his gavel, endorsing the motion for the suspension of the 11 members.
A bizarre drama followed thereafter, as the PML members were dragged out of the chamber one after the other.
Nwachukwu, who also brought a walking stick into the chamber, received the worst beating. He was almost stripped bare before he was forced out.
Kaze, Melaye, Awhinawhin and Udoh were also beaten and dragged out of the chamber.
Some journalists were also attacked by security agents on Tuesday in the course of performing their legitimate duties.
The Aide-de-Camp to Bankole, Mr. Dauda, personally confiscated the camera of a photojournalist for daring to take shots of the fighting from the press gallery.
The photographer was later beaten and taken out of the gallery. Two reporters suffered a similar fate.
The spokesman of the House, Mr. Eseme Eyiboh, later told a news conference that the disorderliness in the chamber took place because the 11 suspended members failed to heed the order of the speaker to leave the chamber after they had been suspended.
He also claimed that the PML members attempted to disrupt the proceedings of the House by attacking Igbawua, while he was moving a motion.
Eyiboh said, ”Nwachukwu came to the session with tear-gas while Melaye brought a whistle and was blowing it. These are weapons and under the rules of the House, they are not allowed to do what they did; it was unruly.
”The speaker invoked Order 10 (5)(6), which culminated in their indefinite suspension.”
When asked whether the suspension had addressed the allegation of abuse of funds by the leadership, Eyiboh replied that the PML members knew the rules of the House and should have exhausted them before going to the public with their allegation.
But reacting to the incident, Melaye said that the House was under the spell of a tyrannical leadership.
He added, “It is the height of tyranny; what they accused us of, Eyiboh and Bankole are also guilty of talking to the press.
“There is nowhere in our rules that says we cannot talk to the press. Mr. Halims Agoda did the same thing when Mrs. Patricia Etteh was the speaker; Farouk Lawan did the same.”
Melaye and Nwachukwu were later invited by the Federal Capital Territory Police Command for questioning over the fracas.
The command’s spokesman, Mr. Jimoh Moshood, told the News Agency of Nigeria, that the Commissioner of Police ordered that they should be questioned.
Moshood said, “It is true that Mr. Melaye and Mr. Nwachukwu were invited. They were questioned over the attack on another member of the House, Mr. Igwe.
“I cannot confirm if they have been released or not; all I know is that the commissioner of police ordered their interrogation.”
One of our correspondents learnt from an EFCC source that while the free-for- in the House was going on, five operatives of the commission headed straight for the office of Clerk and retrieved some documents on the award of contracts by the House between 2008 and 2009.
A source at the EFCC who disclosed this to our correspondent said, “They (operatives) moved from office to office to retrieve documents relating to award of contracts that covered 2008 and 2009. The lawmakers were having a stormy session at the period.
“The EFCC men combed all the administrative offices and restricted movement of people around the area. They were seen moving big bags of documents out of the office of the Clerk.
When contacted, the Head of Media and Publicity of the EFCC, Mr. Femi Babafemi, denied knowledge of the operation.
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