The
Nigerian Senate has begun the screening of about twenty-seven electoral
commissioner nominees submitted by President Muhammadu Buhari.
The Nigerian Senate
The Senate on Tuesday began the screening of 27 Resident Electoral
Commissioner (REC) nominees sent to it by President Muhammadu Buhari for
confirmation, NAN reports.
The leader of the Senate, Ahmed Lawan, presented the president’s request for approval of the nominees at plenary in Abuja.
After the motion, the senate directed its Committee on Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) to screen the nominees and report
back in two weeks.
The nominees are Godswill Obioma, Abia; Ibrahim Abdullahi, Adamawa;
Ahmad Makama, Bauchi; James Apam, Benue; Mike Igini, Delta; Nwachukwu
Orji, Ebonyi; Iloh Chuks, Enugu and Hussaini Pai, Federal Capital
Territory.
Other are Sadiq Musa, Kaduna; Jibrin Zarewa, Kano; Asmau Maikudi,
Katsina; Mahmuda Isah, Kebbi; Samuel Egwu, Kogi; Rufus Akeju, Lagos;
Mustapha Zubairu, Niger; Agboke Olaleke, Ogun and Sam Olumekun, Ondo.
The list also contained names of AbdulGaniyu Raji, Oyo; Riskuwa
Shehu, Sokoto; Kasim Geidam, Yobe; Ahmad Mahmud, Zamfara; Nentawe
Yilwatda, Plateau and Umar Ibrahim, Taraba.
Emeka Joseph, Imo; Obo Effanga, Cross River; Francis Ezeonu, Anambra and Briyai Frankland, Bayelsa, were also nominated.
The president of the Senate, Bukola Saraki, directed that Suleiman
Nazif (APC-Bauchi) should head the committee in the absence of its
chairman, Ali Ndume, currently on suspension.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Senate had, after
the receipt of the list of nominees, threatened that it would not treat
it.
Its grouse was the Executive’s handling of the refusal of the
chamber to confirm Ibrahim Magu as chairman of Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC).
In another development, the senate referred a list of three
non-career ambassadorial nominees to its Committee on Foreign Affairs
for scrutiny.
The nominees are Justice Sylvanus Nsofor, Imo; Joseph Iji, Ondo and Yusuf Hinna, Gombe.
The committee is to report back to the Senate in two weeks.
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