
The Senate has berated President Muhammadu Buhari’s Federal
Government for deploying troop to The Gambia without seeking legislative
approval.
Recall that tension has continue to rise following the refusal of Yahya Jammeh to step down from office after losing the December 1 2016 Presidential election.
The Nigerian Air Force had on Wednesday sent a contingent of 200 men and air assets, led by Air Commodore Tajudeen Yusuf, to Dakar, Senegal, with the aim of ousting the embattled President from office.
Reacting to the military action, Senator Chukwuka Utazi, during
today’s plenary at the red chambers of the National Assembly, raised a
point of order.
Citing Section 5(4) of the Constitution, he said what the Buhari-led government did was against the law.
Utazi said, “I am saying this because of the happenings in our
friendly country in Gambia. The ECOWAS countries have been discussing on
this issue; on how to ensure that democratic crisis of the people of
Gambia are protected. But to add that this country will go on a warfare
in another country without a recourse to this constitutional provisions
is an affront of the 1999 Constitution and it is a breach of the
Constitution, and we have failed even when the Senate has been
cooperating with the executive.
“Let it be on record that if anything of this nature happens, that
this national assembly have to be informed properly in writing.”
Section 5(4) states, “(a) the President shall not declare a state of
war between the federation and another country except with the sanction
of a resolution of both houses of the National Assembly sitting in a
joint session; and (b) except with the prior approval of the senate, no
member of the armed forces of the federation shall be deployed on combat
duty outside Nigeria.”
Daily Post

