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Wednesday, 23 November 2016
Dogara vows to amend SSS law, condemns raid on ‘corrupt’ judges homes
Speaker Yakubu Dogara on Wednesday said the invasion of the homes of
senior judicial officers by the State Security Service was a
disorganised and worrisome. The Speaker said the clampdown was a duplication of the function of
other anti-corruption agencies such as the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission and promised sweeping reforms to prevent its recurrence.
Mr. Dogara made the observations when he inaugurated a House
committee charged with investigating the clampdown and its aftermath.
“It is untidy, it seems, to have multiple agencies exercising similar
functions. The EFCC already handles issues of corruption and economic
crimes in Nigeria,” Mr. Dogara said. “Should the State Security Service
also be charged with the same functions?”
Scores of SSS operatives swooped on the homes of judges in a
coordinated raid across the country on October 7. The raid dragged until
the next morning on October 8 before the news of the raid filtered to
Nigerians.
Two judges of the Supreme Court, an appellate court judge and five high court judges were arrested in the operation.
The SSS also said it recovered a huge amount of money denominated in
different currencies from the judicial officers’ homes and said it was
the climax of a sting operation launched months before.
Some of the arrested judges are already being prosecuted for corruption while all of them have been granted bail.
President Muhammadu Buhari immediately came out to defend the action
of the secret police and said he was fighting corrupt judges and not
necessarily the judiciary.
The crackdown created a major fissure amongst Nigerians who immediately took sides on the matter.
While some saw the action of the SSS as needed to fight alleged
corruption in the judiciary; others raised alarm that the president is
trying to suppress the judiciary and instil fear on judges who might be
poised to delivery unfavourable rulings against his administration.
Although Mr. Dogara did not immediately speak out at the time, the
House deliberated on the matter during its plenary on October 11, which
was the first sitting since the raids.
The deliberation was initiated via a motion of urgent national
concern by Kingsley Ogundu, a lawmaker from Rivers State which was part
of the affected states.
Mr. Ogundu’s prayer for the House to summon the Director-General of
the SSS failed to gain traction amongst lawmakers, but they resolved to
raise a committee to investigate the circumstances surrounding arrests.
At the inauguration of the committee today, Mr. Dogara hinted that
the executive might have usurped the powers of the legislature.
Photo credit: Pulse.ng
“The activities of the State Security Service of late have raised
concerns in the Nigerian polity as to the propriety of the conduct of
officials of the service and whether their actions are consistent with
the law setting it up,” Mr. Dogara read from a prepared speech.
“It is in this regard that I enjoin this Committee to make relevant
findings of fact that will enable the National Assembly initiate the
necessary amendments to the National Security Agencies Act —and even the
Constitution where necessary— to ensure conformity with the
constitutional design and framework that envisage that federal
legislative power should be domiciled in the National Assembly and not
shared with the executive in the manner provided under the Act.”
Mr. Dogara said the Buhari administration was exploiting a decree
promulgated by the last military junta led by Abdulsalam Abubakar.
Mr. Abubakar, through an instrument in 1999, expanded the role of SSS
to include other functions as dictated by the head of state.
But Mr. Dogara questioned the validity of instrument since the NSA
Act is amongst the four extant laws under the Transitional Provisions an
Savings component of the Constitution.
“The National Security Agencies Act is specifically protected by
Section 315(5) of the Constitution as it cannot be altered like ordinary
Acts of the National Assembly. It has the same alteration procedure
like the Constitution as laid down in Section 9 (2) thereof,” Mr. Dogara
said.
The Speaker said lawmakers serving in the committee will answer all
questions that stemmed from the action of the SSS and recommend all
necessary means of forestalling a recurrence— including a possible
amendment to the Constitution.
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