A question by a
woman on why Patricia Etteh was removed as Speaker of the House of
Representatives over corruption allegations, yesterday, forced
conflicting responses from Dimeji Bankole, the current Speaker who is
also facing allegations of corruption, and the house ethics chairman.
Stella Okereke, a
Nigerian resident in America, faced up to Mr. Bankole during a courtesy
visit by Nigerians in Diaspora group, and demanded to know why he has
retained his seat when he played a role in removing Ms. Etteh on a
similar accusation.
Ms. Okereke said
she monitored the events of June 22, 2010, in the house, when 11
members of the house were suspended for leading calls for the Speaker
to step down on corruption allegations.
“When Patricia
Etteh was accused of committing crime against the house, it didn’t take
a long while before you people pushed her out,” she told Mr. Bankole at
the event organised by the House committees on diaspora and foreign
affairs.
“Since what is good
for the goose is also good for the gander, we are asking why was Etteh
punished when we are having the same thing now.”
Mr. Bankole
devolved the query to the chairman of the committee on ethics and
privileges, Sani Minjibir, whose committee is charged with the
responsibility of the chamber’s self-scrutiny.
Mr. Minjibir argued
that the two cases were not similar, since an investigative committee,
which he was a member of, found Ms. Etteh guilty of not following due
process – an argument Mr. Bankole himself rejected.
“The conclusion we
reached, which has stood the test of time and adjudged okay by my
colleagues, found out that the former Speaker was the person who was
driving the procedures and in all the procedures, due process was not
followed,” Mr. Minjibir said.
“When we come to
the Melaye’s case, we must always understand that until proven guilty,
one is still innocent. As the ethics committee chairman, I have not
taken sides with any party. I don’t attend meetings of any of the
sides, and my colleagues know that, as I will do justice.
“The Melaye’s case
pains me. The rule is that members exhaust internal mechanisms before
anything, and these people did not,” he explained.
But Mr. Bankole
countered the argument, admitting that the House position was not a
judicial indictment. “I will be as frank as possible. I’ve been known
to be sometimes frank,” he said.
“For the records, Foluke Etteh was never indicted by any court, and was not impeached and remains a former Speaker.”
Mr. Bankole,
however, evaded discussing the allegations against him saying the
matter is already before the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.
On the N2.3 billion
Peugeot car scandal, which he was earlier accused of, he said the
lawmakers who raised the issue forged the price documents to give a
misleading impression of him.
“Those cars were
bought from PAN, based on the price list, but the price list in the
allegations was forged,” he said. “The price list of 2006 was
superimposed on the 2007 price list, so that they can give the public
the impression that the prices were tampered with.
“And then the issue of payment into Zenith Bank; we don’t even have an account with Zenith Bank,” Mr. Bankole said.
He said the
allegations spring up whenever the House takes decisions to investigate
alleged fraud like the N64 billion airport runway project and the N236
billion Abuja expressway contracts.
Motions for the two
inquiries, incidentally, were sponsored by Dino Melaye, the leader of
the group that accused Mr. Bankole of fraud.
Mr. Minjibir, whose committee has not made public results of its
investigations into series of members’ misdemeanours, like a lawmaker
who assaulted a guard, and the Ekiti State lawmakers who were accused
of election malpractices, declared that his committee is already
investigating the speaker’s case and will do justice.