Senate: North-Central leaders drum up support for Akume
Senate: North-Central leaders drum up support for Akume
May 12, 2015 :
Akume
A group of North-Central leaders
under the aegis of Leaders of Thought from the North-Central Zone has
urged senators-elect from other zones interested in the Senate
Presidency to shelve such an ambition.
Spokesman for the group, Alhaji Mohammed Gwaska, made the appeal at a media briefing in Abuja, on Monday.
Gwaska led the group made up of former
Deputy Governor of Plateau State, Mrs. Pauline Tallen, Senator Jack
Tilley Gyado, former military administrators of Katsina and Plateau
states, Maj. Gen. Laurence Onoja (retd.) and Col. Joseph Akaagerger
(retd.), among others, to the briefing.
He said the appeal to others to shelve
their ambitions in favour of Senator George Akume was premised on the
need to ensure justice and fair play in the 8th National Assembly.
Gwaska said, “We want to appeal to all
Nigerians from other parts of the country to suspend their ambition as
this is not their time.
“We also advise all leaders who want
stability to support Senator Akume. We are not unmindful of the fact
that during the 7th session of the senate, our zone had the opportunity
to occupy this position. However, the political exigencies of today have
again invited the senate to invoke the Doctrine of Necessity, which
makes it most desirable for this position to be retained by our zone.”
According to the group, the issue of the
doctrine would not have come up if there was a ranking All Progressives
Congress, senator from the South-East or South-South geo-political
zone.
It, however, noted that since the two
zones were unable to produce a senator during the last election, it was
only fair for minorities to be given a sense of belonging and a voice in
the scheme of things in the incoming administration.
The group argued that since the
President-elect is from the North-West, and the Chief Justice of Nigeria
is from the North-East, the remaining arm of government, the
legislature should be headed by someone from the North-Central zone.
This, they argued, would help to ensure stability because it was only the right thing to do.
Gwaska also said that Akume qualified
for the position because of his steadfastness and commitment to the
cause of the opposition in which he led in the senate for four years.
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