24 Sep 2012
President Goodluck Jonathan
By Ike Abonyi and Onwuka Nzeshi
President Goodluck Jonathan may give in to pressure from the National
Assembly, which has pushed for the sack of the Director General,
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Ms. Arunma Oteh, and the
Chairman of the Pension Task Team, Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina, THISDAY has
learnt.
It was gathered that the president is considering removing the duo
along with the Director General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Ms.
Bolanle Onagoruwa, if he fails to convince the leadership of the
National Assembly to grant them a reprieve, as part of his efforts to
thaw the frosty relationship between the two arms of government.
The executive, it was gathered, had made overtures to the leadership of
the National Assembly, explaining why some of its resolutions had not
been implemented to the letter.
At a meeting last Tuesday between Jonathan and the leadership of the
legislature, the president had yielded to their demand to reconsider the
currency restructuring exercise and introduction of N5,000 note planned
by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
The lawmakers, however, were said to have accused the president of
dithering on the implementation of notable resolutions, including those
calling for the sack of Oteh, Maina and Onagoruwa.
Of the trio, it was gathered that the National Assembly remains uncompromising on Oteh’s removal.
The demand for Oteh's sack formed an integral part of the
recommendation of the House of Representative’s ad hoc committee, which
investigated the near collapse of the capital market. Last March, Oteh
was involved in an ill-tempered spat with the standing committee of the
House on Capital Market and Institutions, which was investigating the
remote and immediate causes of the collapse of the capital market
between 2008 and 2012.
The House, which had recommended her removal before it went on recess
in July, renewed its clamour for her sack on Tuesday after it resumed
from recess, stressing that it was not prepared to back down on its
earlier resolution on the matter.
The House had passed a resolution on July 19 requesting Jonathan to
remove Oteh from office for allegedly being unqualified by law to occupy
the position, for being incompetent, and her inability to manage the
organisation effectively.
In renewing its resolution last week, it warned that it should
henceforth cease to accord any recognition to Oteh or deal with her as
the SEC director general.
It also directed its Committee on Legislative Compliance to monitor
developments on the issue and to brief the House on the level of
compliance with the resolution within the next 14 days.
The House expressed dismay that the executive ignored the earlier
resolution even when it was duly conveyed by the Clerk of the National
Assembly on July 30.
“The House is worried that the president recalled Ms. Arunma Oteh from
suspension immediately the report of the ad hoc committee which indicted
her was made public in flagrant contempt of the House of
Representatives and the feelings of the Nigerian people and investors
who lost money in the capital market.
“We are further worried that the staff of Securities and Exchange
Commission protested the recall of Ms. Oteh and even the letter by the
Secretary to the Government of the Federation recalling her cautioned
her against flouting extant rules and administrative procedures in the
conduct of all official transactions," said the lawmaker last week.
The Senate, in adopting recommendations of its Joint Committee that
investigated the Police Pension Fund, had urged the Federal Government
to arrest and prosecute Maina and others for their alleged involvement
in the misappropriation of N273.9 billion pension funds.
The task team was also directed to transfer an estimated N27.7 billion
of unspent pension funds to the Federation Account through the Office of
the Accountant General of the Federation.
The Senate also ordered Maina and his team to refund another N15 billion, which they allegedly diverted into personal pockets.
It urged the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to further
investigate the transfer of N4.6 billion from the United Bank of Africa
Plc to Union Bank Plc and the transfer of another N7.6 billion from
Zenith Bank Plc to Union Bank by the pension task team.
The resolution followed the consideration of the report submitted by
the Senate Joint Committee on Establishment and Public Service, States
and Local Government. The joint committee was led by Senator Aloysius
Etuk.
The Senate, which also adopted the report of its ad hoc committee that
probed the privatisation programme from 1999 to 2012, demanded
Onagoruwa’s sack for her alleged gross incompetence and illegal sale of
the Federal Government’s residual shares in Eleme Petrochemicals
Company.SOURCE: ThisDay, 24 September 2012. http://www.thisdaylive.com
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