WHY PRESIDENT GOODLUCK SACK SULEIMAN ABBA
President Goodluck Jonathan
DISPLAYING
utter contempt for the 1999 Constitution he swore to uphold, President
Goodluck Jonathan has sacked Suleiman Abba as the Inspector-General of
Police. He replaced him immediately with Solomon Arase, a Deputy
Inspector-General, in an acting capacity. Both the dismissal and the
acting appointment are gross violations of the 1999 Federal
Constitution, Nigeria’s supreme law.
Without citing any cogent reason, the
President unceremoniously fired Abba, who assumed office nine months
ago. Sadly, however, these actions are in keeping with the trend of
impunity in the Jonathan administration, which has consistently
conducted itself in an imperial manner, to the detriment of the rule of
law, the common good and growth of our democratic norms. They have all
the trappings of using power for selfish end.
ADVERTISEMENT
The
provisions of sections 215 and 216 of the 1999 Constitution, which
guide the appointment and removal of the IG, are unambiguous. Section
215, subsection 1, states, “There shall be (a) an Inspector-General of
Police who, subject to section 216 (2) of the Constitution, shall be
appointed by the President on the advice of the Nigeria Police Council…”
Section 216 (2) adds, “Before making any appointment (not an acting
appointment) to the office of the Inspector-General of Police or
removing him from office, the President shall consult the Nigeria Police
Council.”
The constitution, in the Third Schedule L
(27), lists the composition of the NPC as the President (Chairman),
governor of each state, Chairman of the Police Service Commission and
the IGP. All the recent capital that Jonathan garnered when he conceded
defeat to Muhammadu Buhari after the March 28 presidential ballot has
been wasted by this breach of the constitution.
Many observers – local and international –
praised the conduct of the police under Abba’s guidance. They not only
appeared in neat uniforms, their conduct was passed off as being far
better than in previous elections. Shortly after the March 28 polls, the
National Peace Committee on the 2015 Elections, headed by a former Head
of State, Abdusalami Abubakar, had commended the police “for their
professional conduct.” This was also the position of the United States
Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle, who said the conduct of the
Nigerian police would be a reference point for the 13 other African
countries holding elections in the next two years.
In spite of some lapses, the European
Union observers gave a pass mark to the 2015 polls, describing them as
the best in the past 16 years. John Kuffour, also a former president of
Ghana and Head, ECOWAS Election Observer Mission, said, “The Nigerian
elections are a pride, not only to Nigerians, but also to West Africa
and the whole of the African continent; we are all proud of the success
of the Nigerian elections.”
Yet, the uncommon speed with which
Jonathan dismissed Abba is a stark contrast to the lethargy of the past
five years. When Boko Haram extremists abducted 276 Chibok schoolgirls
on April 14, 2014, Jonathan didn’t lift a finger for 18 days, by which
time the girls had long disappeared. He spared Mohammed Abubakar, the
then IGP, the military service chiefs, and the National Security
Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, for their serial failures. Neither did Jonathan
make any pronouncement on April 14, 2015, the first anniversary of the
girls’ abduction, although the event was marked by other leaders the
world over.
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