POLITICS
9th Assembly: Reps members speak on Gbajabiamila ‘buying’ votes with
green cards
A group of
lawmakers have spoken up over accusation of vote buying against the Speaker of
House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila
We reported
that a House of Representatives group, G7, are seeking legal redress over
alleged proof of vote-buying and gross impunity by the Clerk of the National
Assembly, Alhaji Sani Omolori.
Omolori, who
supervised the June 11 election of Speaker and Deputy Speaker in the House of
Representatives, is being accused of having condoned impunity among the
lawmakers.
Making references
to photographic images and video evidence being released to back up their
claims, the group asserted that they are only embarking on a principled
struggle, adding that while the members have no personal grudges against any
person or political party, they will not condone any illegitimacy in the
election of the person or persons who will lead the House of Representatives.
But, reacting, a
House of Representatives member Khadijah Bukar Abba on Monday said that
Gbajabiamila did not induce his colleagues financially to vote for him.
Abba, the acting
spokesman of the House, spoke shortly after the inauguration of four adhoc
committees by the Speaker on Monday.
Also Prof. Julius
Ihonvbere, who stood in for the ad Committee Chairman, said Gbajabiamila had no
reason to induce any lawmaker as he worked hard enough to deserve the seat.
Ihonvbere said:
“For us, we have conducted a democratic election that was held and aired live.
At the end, winners emerged and we all witnessed the losers congratulating the
winner on the floor.
“To us as a House,
everything is now in the past and we are focused on the serious legislative
business we are are here to carry out, to make the House and the country
better.
“As far as we are
concerned, nobody received money, nobody was enticed to vote. As a matter of
fact, no one campaigned intensely robust more than Gbajabiamila, and it went
beyond the call of duty to explain what he has to offer.
“At times he went
to parts of the country with over 120 lawmakers, with that kind of work, he
needed to buy no vote”.
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