President Muhammadu Buhari has rejected the recommendation
of the senate for the sack of Babachir Lawal as Secretary to the government of
the federation (SGF).
Buhari said his decision was informed by the failure of the
senate ad hoc committee on humanitarian crisis in the northeast to give Lawal a
fair hearing.
He conveyed his decision in a letter read by Senate
President Bukola Saraki on Tuesday.
In December 2016, the senate recommended the sack of Lawal
for alleged corruption.
In its report, the senate ad hoc committee, which
investigated the diversion of funds for internally displaced persons in the
northeast, and was chaired by Shehu Sani, a senator from Kaduna central,
accused Lawal of receiving a kickback of N200m through his company, Rholavision
Limited, from a company he awarded a contract for the clearing of invasive
plant species in Yobe state.
But Buhari dismissed the document as a “minority report”,
saying that “the senate committee comprised nine members” but only three
persons signed it.
“The review of the interim report showed that only three
members signed the report. This makes it a minority report of a senate
committee,” he said.
He said Lawal was not given the opportunity to clear himself
of the allegations, and that the company linked to him was not accorded the
chance as well.
“The current report does not meet the principle of fair
hearing required in cases of abuse of office by public officer,” he said.
Reacting to the letter, Sani, chairman of the committee,
described the current anti-corruption war of the president as a farce.
“This letter is a funeral service of the president’s
anti-corruption war,” he said.
“When it comes to fighting corruption in the national
assembly and the judiciary, the president uses insecticide, but when it comes
to the presidency he uses deodorant.”
He also explained that the SGF was invited personally and
through the media, but that he chose to ignore the invitation.
He added that seven of nine members of the committee signed
the interim report, and that Buhari’s letter absolving Lawal of guilt was full
of lies.
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