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Appointments: Mark Insists On Federal Character
The Senate President, Sen. David Mark, has cautioned his colleagues against too much emphasis on federal character for appointments in the country.
Mark said this at the consideration of the reports of three Senate Committees on the screening of nominees of various boards in Abuja yesterday.
The committees are; Senate Committee on Banking, Senate Committee on Drugs, Narcotics, Financial Crimes and Anti-Corruption and Senate Committee on Judiciary.
He said that while federal character was an important component to consider in appointments, it should not be made the only yardstick.
According to him, it is not possible to reflect federal character in appointments into every board because sometimes there are only five slots and we have six geopolitical zones.
The senate president said it was important to make the clarification following complaints from some senators that candidates from their geopolitical zones had not been nominated to fill vacant positions
Sen. Abdul Ningi (PDP-Bauchi) said that there were no nominees from the North West and the South West zones as non-executive members on the board of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
But the Deputy Chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Senator Isa Galaudu (PDP-Kebbi), who presented the report said the current nominees were only replacing those whose tenure had expired.
Senator Abdulaziz Usman (PDP-Jigawa) also said that there was no nominee from North East zone as a member of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
Mark explained that since there were only five positions to be filled, there was no way every zone would get representation.
He, however, said that in the next round of nominations for appointment, it should be taken note so that someone from the South East would be nominated.
All together, the Senate confirmed 11 nominees for appointment into the boards of three different commissions.
The nominees include; Mohammed Kafarati, Collins Chikelube, Adaba Adeiza and Ayuli Jemide, as non-executive members of the board of the CBN.
Others are; Mr Emmanuel Aremo as Secretary, Mr Uwasomba Udochukwu, Mr Emmanuel Ibitola and Dr Ismaila Dukku, as members of the EFCC.
Hajia Fatima Kwaku and Mr Olumuyiwa Akinboro, were also confirmed as members of the Federal Judicial Service Commission.
Mark congratulated all the candidates, noting that the task ahead was enormous, and charged them not to disappoint the nation and to ensure that their confirmation was justified.
Meanwhile, the Federal Character Commission said yesterday that adherence to Federal Character principles and guidelines by Ministries, Departments and Agencies would promote equity, peace and unity in the country.
The chairman of the commission, Prof. Shuaibu Abdulraheem, made the assertion in Abuja at a sensitisation workshop for stakeholders organised by the Commission’s Committee on Environment and Petroleum Resources.
“The commission will help to ensure that heterogeneous nature of the nation is reflected in the composition of the staff of all MDAs,’’ he said.
Abdulraheem said the workshop was aimed at enlightening stakeholders on the guidelines on the recruitment of personnel by the various MDAs.
According to him, the workshop is also a platform where issues and problems arising from the implementation of the federal character principles and guidelines will be discussed.
Abdulraheem, who was represented by a commissioner, Mr Femi Ogunsola, said the principle of equity, fairness and justice were necessary for the MDAs to observe when recruiting staff.
“The composition of the government and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner as to reflect the federal character of Nigeria.
“The principles will promote national unity and command loyalty, thereby ensuring that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few states or ethnic group in the government,’’ he said.
The chairman noted that the commission had been ensuring that an equitable formula for the distribution of all cadres of posts in the civil and public services of the federation and states was carefully worked out.
In his contribution, Mr Jude Rex-Ogbuku, the Secretary to the commission, urged the participants to take the workshop seriously for adequate information and better understanding of the commission’s role in promoting the principles of equity, justice and fairness.
He reiterated that the commission would not hesitate to prosecute any MDA for failure to comply with the federal character principles and guidelines.
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