Choose between us and Oteh, Reps tell Jonathan
The House of Representatives yesterday demanded for the sack of the Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Ms. Arunma Oteh, by President Goodluck Jonathan or in the alternative forget about the House.
This came a few days after the President had
forwarded an amendment bill of the 2013 Appropriation Act and the
Subsidy Re-investment Programme (SURE-P) to the National Assembly.
In the amendment bill, he specifically raised issues
over the clause that forbade the SEC from spending funds in the 2013
fiscal year, a development, he said, that would spell doom for the
Capital Market.
Both chambers of the National Assembly had, in
separate resolutions, asked Jonathan to remove Oteh, saying she lacked
the requisite qualifications to head the commission, adding that failure
of which the legislature would have nothing to do with the commission.
But in a resolution passed yesterday, following the
adoption of a motion moved under matters of urgent public importance by
the Deputy Minority Whip, Hon. Garba Datti, the House also mandated its
Committee on Legislative Compliance to monitor the compliance and report
back within 21 days.
Leading a debate on the motion, Datti expressed
concern that the inaction of the president was an extension of “blatant
disregard” for the resolutions of the House of Representatives, and that
most of these resolutions, though products of motions, hinge on
fundamental public duty placed on public officers by the Constitution
under the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State
Policy.
He said: “The motion urging the removal of Ms Arunma
Oteh, for instance, hinged on the fact that her appointment as
Director-Gerneral of the Securities Exchange Commission was a gross
violation of the Commission’s Act as she does not possess the minimum
professional qualification prescribed for appointment to that position.
“Recently, the Executive has adopted the dangerous
and vexatious approach of picking and choosing the implementation of
resolutions of the Senate on the dismissal of Abdulrasheed Maina which
was passed much later in time while still disregarding the long pending
motion on the removal of the Director-General of the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
“Resolutions bordering on the breach of extant
legislations should not be treated with levity as such tends to portray
government in bad light.”
In their separate contributions to the debate on the
motion, Minority Leader of the House, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, and
Comrade Suleiman Aminu called for the exercise of the constitutional
powers of the parliament where acts of deliberate negligence are
noticed, pointing out that even in advanced democracies, the executive
always obey resolutions of the legislature.
Gbajabiamila faulted the assertion that if Oteh was
removed, the SEC would be grounded as the Commission would still
function with a new appointed DG.
Others who spoke in support of the motion were Friday Itulah, Tajudeen Yusuf and Ibrahim El-Sudi.
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