The
Presidency on Thursday promised that President Goodluck Jonathan will
not cover up the embattled Minister of Aviation, Ms Stella Oduah, on the
N255m bulletproof cars bought for her by the Nigerian Civil Aviation
Authority.
Special Adviser to the President on
Political Matters, Mr. Ahmed Gulak, made the Presidency’s position known
in an exclusive interview with our correspondent.
But despite the assurances from the
Presidency, Nigerian lawyers said they had no confidence in the ability
of the probe panels and committees set up to bring the minister to book
if found guilty.
Gulak told Saturday PUNCH that
the position of the President remained that whoever is found wanting, no
matter how highly placed, would be sanctioned appropriately.
He said if Jonathan planned a cover-up
for the embattled minister, he would not have bothered to query her and
constitute an administrative probe panel to investigate the matter.
The presidential aide added that the
fact that the National Assembly was also investigating the matter showed
the seriousness the government attached to the issue.
He, therefore, appealed to all
stakeholders to wait for the three-man administrative panel to conclude
its assignment next week and see what the President will do based on the
report before forming their opinions on the issue.
Gulak said, “How can people be accusing the President of planning to cover up the minister?
“If he had planned a cover-up for her,
he would not have bothered to query her. If he wanted to do cover up,
the President would not have constituted a probe panel to investigate
the matter.
“I can tell you authoritatively that President Jonathan will not cover up anybody.
“We should all wait for the outcome of
the panel and see what the President will do. What I know is that he
will not hesitate to sanction anybody found wanton, no matter how highly
placed.
But, lawyers who spoke to Saturday PUNCH
on Thursday said all the committees set up by both the National
Assembly and the Presidency were not necessary, saying the job should be
left to anti-corruption agencies.
According to Mr. Bamidele Aturu, a
lawyer, the committees whether by the Presidency or the House of
Assembly constitute a waste of resources and time.
He said the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission and the Independent and Corrupt Practices Commission
ought to take up the investigation instead of the media show or soap
opera that the committees were engaged in.
He said the minister should have saved
the President the embarrassment that her continued stay in office had
caused rather than going before the committee to give what clearly was
no more than an attempt to rationalise the indefensible.
Another lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, said the
whole investigation by the House of Assembly and the Presidency was
diversionary, adding that the committees were only blowing hot air.
He said the Presidency should have
directed the EFCC and ICPC to investigate the matter. ‘’Let criminal
investigation commence and if a case is established against her, let
prosecution follow,’’ he added.
He described the minister’s defence as
hogwash, an afterthought and an untenable pretext for the unpardonable
act of squandering public funds by her ministry and the department which
her ministry supervised.
He said the issue was not whether the
vehicles were meant for her personally but the fact that under her watch
the vehicles were bought at outrageous price and the purchase did not
follow due process.
‘’The NCAA was not established to buy
armoured vehicles. Are they carrying money,’’ he queried, adding that
previous committees on corrupt allegations did not yield any positive
results.
Similarly, another lawyer, Mallam Yusuf
Alli (SAN), said he was not sure that the investigation would produce
any meaningful result because some of the legislators carrying out the
probe are not ‘clean’.
Alli, who spoke with one of our
correspondents in a telephone interview on Thursday, said the minister
should have taken the high road by resigning at the initial stage.
He said, “My thesis is that if it had
been a country in which we have high morality and decency among public
officials, we won’t even have to go to all these levels. The concerned
official would have quietly resigned and saved all of us these exposé.
But we are in a country where the culture of resignation even in the
face of the most startling scandal is totally absent.
“It is as if we are obtuse to all things
that are decent and proper. I said I hope anything comes of the sitting
because in the same House of Representatives, there are few members
facing serious criminal allegations. These sets of people are the ones
probing someone else. It is the pot calling the kettle black. Anybody
who wants to launch a moral crusade must be clean.”
Asked if resignation would have been
enough to make the scandal go away, Alli said if the minister had taken
that step, she would have retained some level of rectitude.
Also, the Acting National Coordinator,
Committee for Democracy and Rights of the People, Mr. Saka Wahid, said
it was shameful that past probes by the President Goodluck Jonathan
administration had amounted to nothing.
Describing public probes as a waste of taxpayers’ funds, CDRP alleged that the Presidency was shielding Oduah
In a telephone interview on Thursday,
the group said, “Would the Presidency claim not to know that the cars
were brought for the minister in the first place? It is obvious that she
would have announced the purchase of the cars gleefully to the
President and glasses would have been clinked over it.”
“Who is deceiving who? What is the
outcome of all the probes in the past? Was any culprit ever brought to
justice? Nigerians are wiser.”
An online publication, Sahara Reporters, had also stated that the committee seemed reluctant to ask Oduah hard questions.
It quoted a member of an
anti-corruption group who witnessed the session as saying “Why were they
not grilling Ms. Oduah on how her spokesman, Joe Obi, could have issued
a statement on such a sensitive issue without clearing it with her? Why
would he say the cars were purchased for the minister’s safety and
security, and now she’s suddenly claiming that they were bought for
foreign delegates visiting the ministry? And there is the most
important question that any serious committee should ask: Why did she
authorise the spending of nearly $800,000 to buy each car when the real
price tag is not up to $200,000?”
“The source said that, unfortunately,
“oversight committees of the National Assembly have a reputation for
letting corrupt government officials get off the hook in exchange for
payoffs.”
Oduah had appeared before the House of
Representatives Committee on Aviation on Thursday where she denied being
the owner of the controversial N255m bulletproof cars purchased by the
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority.
Before her appearance, there were fresh
revelations on the scandal in the ministry on Wednesday. Part of these
revelations was that Coscharis Motors which imported the armoured cars
failed to pay duty on the vehicles to the Nigerian Customs Service.
It was also discovered that both the
Federal Ministry of Finance and the National Security Adviser were made
to believe that the two vehicles were for the 18th National Sports
Festival [Eko Games 2012] hosted by Lagos State.
According to the Customs, the government lost N10.1m due to the waiver for the two bulletproof cars.
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