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Though I have not seen an enrolled copy
of the ruling of the Federal High Court
delivered today by the Honourable
Justice Abutu, from media reports it is
clear that Honourable Justice Abutu
sought to enforce the provisions of
section 144 of the 1999 Constitution by
compelling the Executive Council of the
Federation to meet within two weeks to
determine by resolution whether
President Yar’Adua is medically fit to
continue in office as president of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria.
However, the problem we face with this
ruling is that under section 144 of the
1999 Constitution, the President shall
cease to hold office if:
“(a) by a resolution passed by
two-thirds majority of all the members
of the executive council of the
Federation it is declared that the
President or Vice-President is incapable
of discharging the functions of his
office; and
(b)
the declaration is verified, after such
medical examination as may be necessary,
by a medical panel established under
subsection (4) of this section in its
report to the President of the Senate
and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives.”
From the above, it is clear that there
can be no medical examination of the
President and there can be no report of
such medical examination to the
President of the Senate or the Speaker
of the House of Representatives,
UNLESS THERE IS FIRST A RESOLUTION
BACKED BY TWO-THIRDS OF THE MINISTERS
DECLARING THE PRESIDENT MEDICALLY UNFIT
TO CONTINUE. It is absurd that
the medical examination does not come
first before the resolution. So on what
basis will the Ministers pass their
resolution? It simply means politics
will take precedence over correct
medical opinion. And this is another
fatal flaw in our 1999 Constitution.
But the biggest blow to the provisions
of section 144 as reproduced above is
that it would amount to political
suicide or hara-kiri for the
Ministers who are appointed by Yar’Adua
to now vote to remove him from office
which may also sound the death knell for
their political future. They will never
do that. Anyone expecting anything
positive to come out of this ruling
should have a second thought.
Once again, we are confronted with a
meaningless ruling that can only
truncate our hopes and prolong our
sufferings whilst the nation continues
to drift without a captain.
The only way forward is for the National
Assembly to exercise its powers under
section 143 of the 1999 Constitution to
impeach the President for the gross
misconduct of not informing them he was
proceeding on leave of absence and for
failing to comply with the Constitution
by handing over to the Vice President
whilst proceeding on leave of absence.
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