Declare Buhari’s seat vacant if he fails to come back by the end of February – Lawyer tells Senate
Human
rights activist and lawyer, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa has said President Muhammadu
Buhari can stay away from office for 60 days because he is entitled to it.
According
to Adegboruwa, the president is entitled to 60 days annual leave from 2015 to
2016, adding that if he has not exhausted this leave prior to this time, he is
entitled to his annual vacation.
“But I am
aware that the president has in times past, enjoyed part of his annual leave,
in 2016, when he first travelled for alleged ear infection,’” he
told The Guardian.
He noted that Buhari has not disclosed to
Nigerians that he is on annual leave, adding that the president converted his
annual leave to medical leave, which is now indefinite.
He therefore advised the Senate not to allow
the president such indefinite period of leave, given the sensitive nature of
his office.
His
words: “Once it is impossible to
determine definitively, the period of days to be spent by the president,
whether on annual vacation or medical vacation, what that translates to in law
is that the president has given indication of his inability to perform the
functions of his office, leaving Nigerians with no other choice than to replace
him immediately, with the acting president as the substantive president.
“It is
indeed very unfortunate that the president is ill and we cannot grudge him the
right to have his treatment, as no one can play God in the area of illness.
“But if the
illness of the president is of such a nature as to make it impossible for him
to perform the functions of his office, then there cannot be a vacuum in that
office. The fact that there is an Aacting president will not suffice.
“A president
of a sovereign state as Nigeria cannot be allowed to abscond his duty post
under the guise of medical vacation. In this case, the president has turned
himself into some form of tourist attraction, whereby, he has turned his abode
into an alternative government house, where who-is-who in Nigeria now troop to,
giving room for speculations and vacuum in governance.
“If by the
end of February 2017, the president is unable, for reason of ill health, to
resume his normal duties as president, then the Senate should proceed to invoke
the provisions of section 144 of the constitution to declare his seat vacant,
so that the Vice President will officially step into the position of president.
“This is
because we cannot afford the Yaradua scenario again in this country, whereby;
those who were not elected into office by the people of Nigeria are the ones to
be ruling us by proxy, on account of the prolonged absence of the president.”
President Buhari has been in London since
January 19. The presidency had first announced that he was there for a 10-day
leave. But he has since extended the leave on medical grounds.
Meanwhile,
the House of Representatives has dismissed some rumours that it is
contemplating using theHouse of Representatives has dismissed
some rumours that it is contemplating using
the ‘doctrine of necessity’ to
remove President Buhari from office.
The position of the green chamber was made
known by its spokesman, Honourable Abdulrazaq Namdas on Wednesday, February 22.
The National Assembly had on February 9, 2010
invoked the ‘doctrine of necessity’ to empower then vice president,
Goodluck Jonathan to act as president following the illness of late President
Umaru Yar’Adua.
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