Editorial
Impeachments: Need For Caution
The impeachment and rumours of plots
to impeach some opposition governors
and key officers of some State Houses of Assembly across the country come across as suspect and one that is capable of creating more political bad blood.
Coming barely months before the 2015 general elections, this gale of impeachments can only cause more trouble for the country and legitimise an oppressive kind of politics that will make Nigeria a laughing stock internationally.
Incidentally, this trend was first triggered early last year shortly after an Abuja High Court sacked the Chief Godspower Ake–led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) State executive in Rivers State. This paved the way for five anti-Governor Chibuike Amaechi lawmakers to attempt to take over the Assembly ostensibly to impeach the Governor.
Since then, the crisis generated by the unnecessary political distraction has resonated across the country, with dire consequences for the citizens and the economy. This wave of instability has played up in Delta, Ebonyi, Imo and Taraba States. It was rebuffed in Lagos and Edo States and no one knows the next threatre of political oddity.
On July 15, 2014, the former Governor of Adamawa State, Murtala Nyako was impeached for an alleged misappropriation of public funds, among other charges. Just then lawmakers in Nasarawa and Enugu States initiated steps to impeach Governor Tanko Al-Makurah, and Deputy Governor Sunday Onyebuchi, respectively. Even in Oyo State, rumours of impeachment were rife.
While we cannot hold brief for the political figures involved in the crisis, the timing and some of the charges, especially the one against the Deputy Governor of Enugu State is laughable. It simply tends to enact a replay of the impeachment saga of some governors years ago.
Under former President Olusegun Obasanjo, a number of governors and even National Assembly members were randomly impeached, some without due process. The case of Dr Chris Ngige of Anambra State, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha of Bayelsa State, Ayodele Peter Fayose of Ekiti State, Boni Haruna of Adamawa State and Joshua Dariye of Plateau State are still fresh in the minds of Nigerians.
How those cases affected the political landscape, even the foreign image of Nigeria could not have been forgotten too soon. Sad as the issues were, they are supposed to have served as deterrent for other Governors. The repeated allegation of corruption against leaders of this age is more of a national disgrace.
Granted that impeachment is constitutional and part of a healthy democratic process, that is encapsulated in Chapter 5, Part 1, Sections 88 and 89, as well as Part 2, Sections 128 and 129, respectively, of the 1999 Constitution as amended, The Tide fears that the timing, reasons, and way and manner it is done cannot be accepted.
This, no doubt, portends serious danger for the nation’s fledgling democracy. In fact, we observe that rather than lubricate the political atmosphere, and promote good governance, transparency and accountability, as intended by the Constitution, most of the impeachments have sadly raised the political temperature, heralded instability and created a cloud of uncertainty in the polity.
While we cannot subscribe to executive impunity, corruption and abuse of office, nor encourage legislative rascality, we feel that the lawmakers across the political divides need to tread with caution, while carrying out their constitutional responsibilities.
We suspect that the gale of impeachments may not be unconnected with the desperate political maneuvering which has recently dominated interactions amongst politicians across the board. Clearly, the trend is a build up to the 2015 General Elections that all patriots expect to be outstanding.
The Tide believes that this ill-wind that blows no one any good impacts negatively on the nation. This is not how to lead a people. This desperation has also penetrated virtually every sector of the polity, including the civil service and the judiciary. This is how the First and Second Republic politicians drove the nation aground. But this time people must rise up against it.
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