N10BN JET: COURT NULLIFIES REPS’ SUMMON ON ALISON-MADUEKE, NNPC
The Abuja Division of the Federal High Court, yesterday, aborted
moves by the House of Representatives to investigate the Minister of Petroleum
Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, over the allegation that she spent N10
billion on chartered jet.
Delivering judgment on a joint suit filed before the court by
the Petroleum Minister and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC,
Justice Ahmed Mohammed voided two separate summons issued to the plaintiffs by
the Public Accounts Committee of the House of Reps, which requested them to
appear to offer explanations regarding allegations of financial recklessness
against them.
Justice Mohammed nullified the summons on the premise that no
evidence was adduced before the court to show that the proposed investigation
was contained in a resolution of the House, which he said ought to have been
published in the journal of the National Assembly or the official gazette of
the Federal Government of Nigeria.
He noted that the Attorney-General of the Federation and
Minister of Justice, Mohammed Bello Adoke, had confirmed that no such
resolution was published in the official gazette, “implication of failure to
provide the published resolution is that there is no evidence before the court
to show that the investigation followed the provisions of the constitution”.
He held that the House of Reps failed to fulfil the condition
precedents for the commencement of such probe as stipulated in sections 88 and
89 of the 1999 constitution, as amended.
“I am, therefore, bound to set aside the letters of invitation
issued to the plaintiffs, which were marked as exhibits KA-1 and KA-2”, the
Judge added.
The judge, however, stressed that had the House produced or
annexed a copy of its journal containing its resolution to probe the
plaintiffs, “I would not have hesitated to dismiss this suit and order them to
submit themselves to the investigative panel.”
Besides, Justice Mohammed maintained that the House of Reps has
the constitutional powers to summon any person in Nigeria, regardless of
position or status, to appear before it, saying the House equally has the
powers to compel the attendance of such person so far as it exercises such
powers with due deterrence to the due process of the law.
“This should not send a wrong signal to the public that the
House of Reps does not have powers to summon any public officer for the sake of
accountability and transparency in the process of governance.”
culled from 'Vanguard'
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