Many lawmakers afraid to speak up, Natasha says

During the 2025 budget defense session of the Joint Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Petroleum (Upstream), and Gas, Senator Natasha Akpoti (PDP, Kogi Central) raised critical questions about the lack of comprehensive research before rolling out the CNG program

Senator Natasha Akpoti
During the 2025 budget defense session of the Joint Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Petroleum (Upstream), and Gas, Senator Natasha Akpoti (PDP, Kogi Central) raised critical questions about the lack of comprehensive research before rolling out the CNG program

Senator representing Kogi Central at the National Assembly, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, has likened the red chamber to a cult, saying many lawmakers are afraid to speak up.

Akpoti-Uduaghan stated this, yesterday, during an interview with the BBC over the allegation of sexual harassment leveled against the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio.

This is coming few days after Natasha took the case to the United Nations “seeking for justice” over the matter. Since the issue broke out, Akpabio has had an overwhelming support from senators, leading to Natasha’s six months suspension.

But during the interview, Natasha said her colleagues were afraid of expressing contrary views over the matter for fear of victimisation. She said: “I am being victimised. My suspension is a means of silencing me. It was episode after episode, moment after moment. We were at his country home. He was taking me around his house. My husband was walking behind us. He held my hand.

“He then squeezed my hands in a very suggestive way. We women, we know what it means when a man squeezes our hands in a suggestive way.

“And he went, ‘now that you’re in the Senate, I’ll make an opportunity for us to come here and have a good moment’”

Asked if Akpabio ever made any advances towards her in the chamber or in the Senate, Natasha said: “There was a time when I rushed to work forgetting to wear my ring, there were about five senators there.

He (Akpabio) said, oh Natasha, you are not wearing your ring, is this an invitation to treat?’ You know, statements like this,” she added.

But the Senate’s Deputy Chief Whip, Onyekachi Nwaebonyi, restated the denial of the senators, adding that “there was never a time Akpabio made sexual advances towards Akpoti-Uduaghan”. He also said the Senate president never made any inappropriate comments towards the female lawmaker, whether in his country home or the Senate chamber.

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