The screening of the former Rivers State Governor and a
ministerial nominee, Mr Chibuike Amaechi, may take place on Tuesday, as
the Committee on Ethics Privileges and Public Petitions plans to submit
its report to the Senate at the resumption of plenary.
The
chairman of the committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, told reporters at
the end of the committee’s meeting on Monday that the report of the
petition against the nomination of Mr Amaechi would be submitted at
plenary.
Mr Amaechi was billed to be screened last week but the
Senate could not proceed with his screening, as the committee could not
submit its report.
For two days last week, the attention of
Nigerians was fixed on the National Assembly, as the Senate began the
screening of ministerial nominees.
The Senate finally screened and confirmed 18 ministerial nominees and resolved to continue with the screening this week.
Allegations Of Corruption
The nomination of the former Governor of Rivers State, Mr Amaechi, has been enmeshed in controversy.
Mr
Amaechi has a petition filed against him by a group in Rivers State
over allegations of corruption and criminal breach of trust.
The
Senate forwarded the petition to its Committee on Ethics, Privileges and
Public Petition to investigate and report back to the Senate before Mr
Amaechi would be screened.
However, the committee was unable to
present the report to the Senate last week and this stalled the
screening of the former Governor of Rivers State.
Underground
bickering and rumours of a division among the Senators over the
screening of Mr Amaechi notwithstanding, the chairman of the committee
said the report would be submitted on the floor of the Senate.
A
federal lawmaker, Senator Abdulfatai Buhari, however, told Channels
Television that the Senate would not allow political sentiments
interfere with the screening of Mr Amaechi.
While the committee is
set to present the report on the petition against the former River
State Governor, it began its investigation on a petition against another
ministerial nominee, Aisha Abubakar from Sokoto State.
A
coalition of women from Sokoto State had written to the Senate, asking
that Abubakar’s nomination be rejected because she was ‘not known’ to
the people of the state.
But the committee members said the petition was defective because it was not properly addressed to the Senate.
The
chairman of the committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, said the committee
would still report its findings on the petition to the Senate.

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