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Don’t politicise or trivialise due process in Senate, Saraki tells Akpabio

By Guardian Editor
09 March 2025   |   5:16 pm
Former Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, on Sunday, slammed current Senate President Godswill Akpabio for what he described as an attempt to politicise and trivialise calls for a transparent investigation into allegations leveled against him by Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan. Saraki, in a statement signed by his spokesperson, Yusuph Olaniyonu, dismissed Akpabio’s claim that the calls…
Saraki
Bukola Saraki

Former Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, on Sunday, slammed current Senate President Godswill Akpabio for what he described as an attempt to politicise and trivialise calls for a transparent investigation into allegations leveled against him by Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan.

Saraki, in a statement signed by his spokesperson, Yusuph Olaniyonu, dismissed Akpabio’s claim that the calls for due process were part of a political plot to remove a Niger Delta politician from office.

“The attention of the Abubakar Bukola Saraki Media Office has been drawn to the statement made by Senate President, Senator Godswill Akpabio, while addressing the leaders of some “youth ethnic groups” on Friday that certain individuals from Kwara and Adamawa States want him removed because he is from the Niger Delta region,” the statement read.

“Ordinarily, Dr. Saraki would have ignored the statement as a sign of the times in which we now live. However, its underlying motive of politicising and trivialising a serious issue that threatens the integrity, credibility, and importance of the legislature is the reason why we think we should not allow the Senate President to create a misleading impression of the issue at stake in the all-important institution that the National Assembly represents in our democracy.”

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Saraki reiterated that at no point did he call for Akpabio’s resignation but only urged the Senate President to ensure that the allegations related to sexual harassment, gender discrimination, and abuse of office are investigated.

He then urged Akpabio to read his press statement dated March 1, 2025, very well to understand that there was nowhere he suggested the resignation of the Senate President.

He said, “Dr. Saraki, in his last comment on the Akpabio-Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan crisis, never called on the Senate President to resign or step aside. Rather, he urged the Senate President to be conscious of the fact that perception is reality and, therefore, he should avoid treating the allegations by the Senator in a manner that will create the perception that the Senate, as an institution, is trying to cover up issues bothering on sexual harassment, gender discrimination, and abuse of office.

“Also, Dr. Saraki made it clear that his intervention was neither about Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan nor whether her claim was right or not. He stated that since the Senator has gone public with such serious allegations against the presiding officer, the image of the institution should be saved through an honest, sincere, open, transparent, and unbiased investigation.”

The former Senate President also argued that due process should be followed, noting that “there are already existing processes recommended in the Constitution, laws of the land, Senate rules, conventions, and precedents to be followed in carrying out such an investigation.”

He warned that the “issue is definitely not one in which Akpabio should exploit ethnic sentiments, political division, or regional proclivity. This will neither be in his own interest nor that of the institution over which he is presiding. He should face the reality on the ground and do what is right.”

Saraki noted that he believes that when a sensitive matter suggesting sexual harassment, gender discrimination, and mistreatment of women comes up anywhere, it evokes the pains that thousands of women across the nooks and crannies of our society experience daily.

The statement added, “Thus, when it is raised in a place like the legislative institution, it is an opportunity for us to handle it with utmost openness and transparency to ensure that justice is not only done but glaringly seen to be done.

“Once again, Dr. Saraki stands by and maintains his earlier suggestion to Akpabio and the Senate leadership on the allegations raised by the Senator from Kogi State. An open, transparent, and honest investigation of the allegations is still needed to ensure that the Senate is not cast in the image of an institution that is tolerant of sexual harassment, gender bias, victimisation and mistreatment of women, abuse of office, and the enthronement of the culture of silence. By having such an investigation, the general public and the international community will have more confidence in our legislative institution.”

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