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Tuesday, 24 July 2018

Atiku, Balarabe Musa, others speak on security siege on Saraki, Ekweremadu

Former Vice President and presidential aspirant of the PDP, Atiku Abubakar and others have reacted to the siege on the residences of Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, by security operatives in Abuja. Atiku
Atiku said the APC should “avoid biting the fingers that gave the party victory in the last general elections.”
He said: “The news of the sieges on the residences of the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, and his Deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, is both troubling and unsettling. No democratic nation ought to treat the leadership of its Parliament like common criminals in the course of a political disagreement.
Atiku, Balarabe Musa, Dankwambo speak on security siege on Saraki, Ekweremadu
Police cars allegedly blocking the home of the Senate president. Photo source: Bamikole Omisore
“I remind the powers that be that on August 31, 2013, when Senator Bukola Saraki walked out of the Peoples Democratic Party and began the process of joining the All Progressives Congress, there was celebration in their camps.
“I also remind them that their electoral victory, which they have so badly mismanaged today, would not have been possible without the Senate President.
“Power is transient and is also a trust that should only be used for the good and advancement of the people one leads and not for the persecution of real and imagined political opponents.”
He called for “the lifting of the sieges on the persons and homes of Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Senator Ike Ekweremadu by security forces.”
“I remind President Muhammadu Buhari of his public words of solidarity to Senator Saraki after his ordeal of malicious prosecution, which thankfully was brought to a halt by the Supreme Court, and I urge him to live up to those words today and always.”
In a reaction to the siege, the Gombe State Governor, Ibrahim Dankwambo, described the action of the security operatives as the manifestation of tyranny in a democratic system.
He said: “I condemn in its entirety the siege on the houses of the Principal Officers of the National Assembly by officers and men of the Nigerian Police.
“The National Assembly as an arm of the government must be accorded the due respect that it deserves. This is tyranny.”
Also in a similar reaction, a former Kaduna state governor, Balarabe Musa, described the siege as bad for Nigeria’s democracy.
According to him, “It’s an unfortunate end of the fight to the death between the Presidency and the Legislature. It’s bad for the country’s democracy. This can result to anything.”
“Yes he should be investigated but that was not the way to do it. Remember we are talking about the Executive and Legislature. The two of the three fundamental institutions of government.
“Now if the Executive and Legislature are not compatible, ‎how can we have peace and progress under this situation? So actually even though the right thing should be done, there are ways and means of doing it in a better way without creating tension in the country.”
“The advice should go to the president. The president should know that he is the chief security officer of the country.
“He is the commander in chief of the armed forces, he is the controller of the resources of the country. So, the last blame lies on the president.”
Our source hint that the convoy of Senate president Bukola Saraki blocked by the operatives of the Special Anti Robbery Squad unit of the Nigeria Police, from leaving his Maitama residence in Abuja.
The policemen reportedly stormed the residence at about 6a.m. and prevented vehicles from coming in or going out of the home of the Senate president.
Bamikole Omisore, the special assistant to the Senate president, tweeted that the police blocked the Senate president's convoy at Lake chad junction on his way to report to the police headquarters upon the last night invitation by the police received at 8pm.
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