Impeachment: Obi raps Anambra lawmakers
" I can’t loot the treasury because of you."
Embattled Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State, under the threat
of impeachment, on Monday talked tough, saying he would not
bow to the wish of the state assembly men by looting the treasury
to satisfy their demands.
This is coming as strong indications emerged that the 22
members of the House that passed the motion to impeach the
governor would not obey the seven-day ultimatum given to them
at the weekend by the Anambra Leaders of Thought to withdraw
the notice or be recalled.
Speaking through his Commissioner for Environment, Mineral
Resources, Science and Technology, Dr. Ifedi Okwenna in Abuja
, the governor maintained that he was being persecuted because
of his refusal to buy cars for the state legislators.
Reacting to the allegation that the governor bribed union
leaders and traditional rulers in the state as well as journalists,
for them to support him in his battle against the impeachment
process, the commissioner described the allegation as a cheap
lie, saying the governor would not succumb to such blackmail.
Speaker of the State House of Assembly,
Hon. Mike Balonwu, had, in an interview with Sowore Omoyele
of Sahara Reporters, alleged that Governor Obi “gave
labour union leaders N20 million, $40 million to traditional
rulers and bribed journalists with a lot of money.”
He added that the governor would still
have to account for those monies because “they
are extra budgetary expenses that will compound his trouble.”
But Dr. Okwenna said the allegations were frivolous, baseless
and unfounded.
Rather, the commissioner said it was
the lawmakers who demanded for N40million bribe for each legislator
from Governor Obi and when they couldn’t get
it, they decided to move against him.
“Governor Peter Obi as a person can never bring out
that type of money to bribe anybody. It was the state governor’s
refusal to give them the N40 million bribe that led to the
whole brouhaha. And Dr. Obi asked them to tell him where they
expect him to get that type of money”, said Okwenna.
He added that the legislators also demanded for a new car
each but that the governor made it clear to them that the former
Governor (Dr. Chris Ngige) gave them cars and that such cars
could only be given to them once in four years.
Okwenna explained that contrary to the bribery allegations,
the governor was getting support from workers in the state
because the workers had seen a government that was out to protect
their interest.
“The workers are paid their salaries as and when due, pensioners collect
their money every month, they don’t even have to come to Awka before they
get paid. The governor has bought official cars for all permanent secretaries
in the state, why won’t they move against the impeachment?” he queried.
The commissioner said the labour unions had taken a decision
to down tools should the lawmakers go ahead to impeach Governor
Obi. He said the workers would not go back to work until the
impeachment was reversed, because they believed that none of
the issues the lawmakers raised was worth reprimanding the
governor for, let alone impeaching him.
But speaking to Daily Sun on phone, the Deputy Speaker of
the House, Chief Ozo Ughamadu, said that there was no platform
like Ndi Anambra that could issue such ultimatum.
He maintained that what the lawmakers
did was in line with their legislative functions, which according
to him, did not call for “renting of crowd
to protest the action of the legislature.”
He said: “There is no platform like Ndi Anambra,… what
the legislature is doing is trying to discharge its functions.
The legislature has not impeached anybody, the legislature
is saying that these offences are impeachable. And they are
more or less repeating the constitution.
“As soon as the legislators
said these offences are impeachable, they were expecting
superior logic to prevail. If you have a superior logic over
their own logic the matter dies.
But what did we see, everybody
took to the street, rented crowd and all sorts. You do not
reduce constitutionalism to sentimentalism, you do not do
that. What the House of Assembly said is in keeping with
the position of the constitution. They said these things
are impeachable, you can also say they are not impeachable
and it can be looked into, superior logic will prevail. But
when you begin to mobilize people from all over the state,
that does not deter the action of the legislators on the
floor. This is a crucial issue, it’s not a moral
issue.
It is a constitutional issue, it’s
not a passionate issue. They have the right to say what they
want to say, move where they want to move, I have a right
to say what I want to say, move to where I want to move.”
As the people await the end of the ultimatum and the end
of two weeks given to the governor to answer the allegations,
the state has remained quiet, with pockets of supporters coming
to pay solidarity visit to Governor Obi. |