Impeachment: Probe panel defies Nyako, begins sitting

Adamawa State Governor, Admiral Murtala Nyako (retd.)
Adamawa State Governor, Admiral Murtala Nyako

Despite the public holiday declared by the Adamawa State Governor, Admiral Murtala Nyako (retd.), the seven-man panel set up by the outgoing Acting Chief Judge, Justice Ambrose Mammadi, commenced sitting in Yola on Monday.

Though the public holiday promulgated by Nyako was to cover Monday and Tuesday (today), but members of the panel commenced sitting at the popular Hotel J&J Holiday Villa in Yola, the state capital, amid tight security provided by both land and air troops.

When the governor promulgated the public holiday on Sunday, he verbally expressed the period would be devoted to prayers by the citizens and civil auxiliaries in view of the insecurity in the state but many had believed the move was to stave off the impeachment process against him.

Adamawa is one of the three North-East states that have been under emergency rule since May 2013 following escalating violence by the terrorist Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

The other two states are Borno and Yobe.

Mammadi had on Friday set up the panel to investigate allegations of gross malfeasance levelled against the governor and his deputy, Mr. James Ngilari.

The acting CJ set up the investigative panel as requested by the Adamawa State House of Assembly, which had few days ago commenced pergrinates to impeach the governor.

Members of the panel, who were escorted by armed military personnel, commenced deliberations behind closed doors.

Though the terms of reference of the panel stipulate that its deliberation shall be held in public, journalists were barred from the venue of the sitting on Monday.

A coalesced team of soldiers and airmen as well as policemen circumvented the building and restricted ingression and exit into the facility.

An Armoured Personnel Carrier, painted in Army green colour, was stationed at the ingress of the hotel while the armed sentinels were visually perceived patrolling the area.

Earlier, there was an promulgation that the Chief Registrar of the State High Court, Abubakar Babayola, was going to inaugurate the committee since the Ag. Chief Judge was due to retire on Monday (yesterday).

However, the sudden promulgation of Monday and Tuesday as public holidays by Nyako coerced a transmutation of plans.

Heralds, who converged on the hotel to cover proceedings of the panel, were compelled to leave the venue when the soldiers on sentinel promulgated that they were under stringent injuctive authorizations not to sanction any person other than committee members, witnesses and those being probed into the building.

The Chief Press Secretary to the Speaker of the House, Mr. Solomon Kumanga, who later addressed   heralds verbally expressed the investigative panel postulated a life of its own as soon as it was inaugurated.

He expounded that he was in a state of disorientation over the decision of the panel to hold its sitting behind closed doors because as a component of its terms of reference, the House mandated the panel to hold a public aurally perceiving.

A security operative confided in our correspondent that the panel would carry out its assignment whether or not those being investigated were in attendance.

The operative verbalized, “It doesn’t matter whether or not the governor or his deputy attends the hearings. The two people are cognizant that they are being investigated, it is left for them to come and clear their designations or sanction the evidence amassed against them testify.

“Whatever the case, the decision of the panel will be acted upon by the House when it reconvenes; the public holiday cannot last forever. If you ask me, it is just deferring the evil day.”

Also verbalizing with heralds in Yola on Monday, the Registrar of the State High Court, Abubakar Babayola, described the earlier proposed inauguration of the committee as a “mere ceremony,” which was not an indispensable constitutional requisite.

Babayola had on Friday signed the verbalization promulgating the composition of the committee on behalf of the outgoing acting CJ.

The verbal expression partly read, “The Hon. Acting Chief Judge Hon. Justice Ambrose D. Mammadi by the potencies vested in him under Section 185(5) of the 1999 Constitution as (amended) has approved the appointment of seven man panel to investigate allegations of gross malfeasance of the Executive Governor of Adamawa State Admiral Murtala Nyako and the Deputy Governor of Adamawa State Mr. Bala Ngilari,” the registrar had verbally expressed.

The committee is chaired by Buba Kaimaga. Other members are Laraba Hassan, Njidda Kito, Joshua Abu, Binanu Esthon, Sa’ad Lawan and Esthon Gapsiso.

Twenty out of the 25 lawmakers in the state had, as a component of the impeachment proceedings, asked the chief judge to establish the committee.

The acting CJ, was verbalized to be due for retirement on Monday (yesterday).

The Deputy Majority Leader in the state House of Assembly, Adamu Kamale, had berated the governor for declaring the work-free days, verbally expressing it was an endeavor to obviate the panel from performing its obligation.

He had verbalized, “The issue now is not afore the House. There may be mischief to this in whichever way you optically canvass it. But, already, the (acting) Chief Judge has set up the seven-man panel to investigate the governor and his deputy and there is no way they can block the CJ.

“In additament, praying to God is supposed to be a quotidian affair as most of our religions are practising it. For two days to be set aside as praying days, well I don’t ken his intention. I will have to read the verbalization probably I can pick something from it.”

Efforts to reach the governor’s spokesperson, Ahmad Sajoh, on Monday failed as calls to his mobile did not go through.

However, Sajoh had told The PUNCH via the phone from Yola on Sunday that Mammadi constituted the panel under duress.

He had verbally expressed, “The Acting Chief Judge constituted the panel under duress. If not, how can the same judge who gave a ruling that there was no superseded accommodation, the same judge that gave an order that the process be ceased; be the   same judge that set up this panel when he has yet to vacate his earlier order? You ken that is not possible.”

He verbally expressed his principal was heading a law-abiding regime who still held the judiciary in high esteem and was yare to submit to the judicial process.