We
must never permit a situation of having to lock the stable door after
the horse had bolted. The constitution is clear and unambiguous: the
process of removal of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral
Commission, according to Section 157 of the 1999 Constitution, starts
from the Senate and ends with the President.
Reacting to the
purported dismissal of Maurice Iwu by President Goodluck Jonathan in
the Daily Independent in 2010 under the title, The collapse of the Rule
of Law in Nigeria, I said inter alia:
“Readers of this column
would have observed my obsession with issues relating to the rule of
law. My pen has never failed to spare any infraction of what I regard as
the canon of civilisation, however marginal or minute is the breach. It
is my firm belief that relations in any human concourse must be guided
by a code, the breach of which must attract a penalty. This is what
distinguishes a political community from the community of beasts.
Indeed, the stage of development of any nation is a function of the
degree of compliance with the rule of law. Show me a civilised and
developed nation and I will show you a nation that worships at the
temple of the rule of law.
“Recently, the
newspapers were awash with the news of the Acting President, Goodluck
Jonathan, directing the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral
Commission, Prof. Maurice Iwu, to proceed on a “pre-disengagement leave
with immediate effect.” This, of course, generated considerable hoopla
in the polity with many Nigerians, including those who should know
better, commending the Acting President for sacking Iwu. First, Iwu was
never sacked; the (Acting) President has no such power to sack Iwu; he
can only do so with the authority of the Senate. Second, Iwu is entitled
to his (annual) leave; asking him to proceed on his leave “with
immediate effect” does not and cannot amount to a sack or dismissal. As a
matter of fact, Maurice Iwu is still the substantive chairman of INEC
because no one can replace him until his tenure expires on June 13,
except he is removed constitutionally; he can even be recalled from his
leave to attend to matters that are considered important.
"Therefore,
I detest the attempt by Goodluck Jonathan to score a cheap political
point by making a huge show of a simple administrative matter on the
need for Iwu to proceed on his terminal leave. It was an attempt to
create the impression that he actually sacked Iwu, and consequently
secure a political mileage out of the action. The Independent National
Electoral Commission, Code of Conduct Bureau, Federal Character
Commission, Federal Civil Service Commission, National Population
Commission, Police Service Commission, Revenue Mobilisation Allocation
and Fiscal Commission, among others, are autonomous federal executive
bodies created by Section 153 of the 1999 Constitution. Will it, for
instance, be part of due process for the (Acting) President to issue a
public statement anytime any chairman of any of these bodies is to
proceed on (a pre-disengagement) leave? If Maurice Iwu preferred to
continue to work without leave and his administrative employer thought
otherwise, I suppose a memo to that effect should suffice… The problem,
however, is that we do not know the content of the letter of appointment
of Maurice Iwu. Even at that, the chairmen of these bodies (those I
listed above) do not hold their offices at the pleasure of the
President. It will be interesting, for instance, for the President to
direct the Chairman of the National Judicial Council to proceed on a
pre-disengagement leave (“with immediate effect)!”
The
impression conveyed to the public by President Jonathan during the
Wednesday, February 11, 2015 Presidential Media Chat was that he could
hire and fire the chairman of INEC at any time. No sir. Such power does
not reside in the Presidency.
Even if INEC Chairman were to
commit a criminal offence today, such as murder, he can be arrested by
the police and prosecuted, since he enjoys no immunity, but the
President has no constitutional power to either constructively remove
him through suspension or dismiss him outright on account of that
criminal act. Indeed, I find it ludicrous when some lawmakers claim they
can suspend the Speaker of a House of Assembly.
The fact is,
there is no such provision for the suspension of a Speaker. Suspension
and removal amount to the same thing, in that he will not function in
the said office during the period of suspension. No such is ever
envisaged by the framers of the constitution. If he has committed any
gross misconduct, he can be removed by two-thirds majority of the ENTIRE
House. I am aware of the Public Service Rules, the House Rules, etc.,
but these are subordinate to the constitution.
The power of the
President to appoint or dismiss the Chairman of INEC, NJC, NPC, etc. is
not only limited but circumscribed by the fact that he shall consult the
Council of State for appointment and obtain confirmation of the Senate,
and in the case of removal secure, first, the concurrence of at least
two-thirds majority of the Senate. The language employed by the
constitution is that the process of removal should commence from the
Senate – unlike the process of appointment which should begin from the
President. Therefore, the President should be well-guided and not act in
ignorance or defiance of the provisions of the constitution.
Buoyed
by his getting away with constructive removal of the immediate past
Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mallam Lamido Sanusi, from
office through suspension, the President erroneously believes that he
can do the same for powerful federal executive bodies clearly listed in
Section 153 of the 1999 Constitution. No sir; that’s a no-go-area.
But
then impunity begets impunity. Under what constitutional power did the
President remove Chief Festus Odumegwu, the then Chairman of the
National Population Commission? Did the process commence from the Upper
House? Did the Senate debate, let alone vote on his removal? But we all
kept quiet then; so, why not attempt other infractions if you could get
away with one act of impunity? But it is time to say thus far and no
further to the President. Acting against the constitution is tantamount
to treason.
We must warn against a situation where the President
will attempt to unconstitutionally dismiss the chairmen of INEC, NPC,
NJC, etc. and then ask anyone that is not satisfied to go to court. That
will amount to high treason. The constitution is clear: the process of
removal of the chairman of INEC, according to Section 157, starts from
the Senate and ends with the President. The purpose of Section 157 is to
insulate the all-important bodies like INEC, CCB, NPC, RMAFC, etc. from
the vagaries of politics and political interference from the President.
The polity should no longer permit any act of impunity that may bring
down the edifice of this nation.
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