The idea of impeachment started in the Senate after the Senate President stopped a motion on insecurity. Impeaching the President in Nigeria will take 132 days, which is 4 months and 12 days. That is if the lawmakers should start the process in September as they promised. They are due to resume on 20th of September, it could last till January.
The opposition parties sometimes last week in the National Assembly gave President Muhammadu Buhari 6-8
weeks ultimatum to address the insecurity in the country or face impeachment.
The Senate
Minority Leader, Philip Aduda led some lawmakers out of the red chamber in
protest.
Soon
after, the PDP members in the lower chamber joined the threat.
According
to the 1999 constitution, there are essentially two ways a President could be
removed from office. Section 143 of the constitution gives the National
Assembly the power to impeach the President on the ground of misconduct, while
section 144 gives the Federal Executive Council the power to remove the
president on the basis of medical incapacity.
This is
not the first time President Buhari will be facing the threat of impeachment.
During the controversy on the withdrawal of $1 billion from the Excess Crude
Account, which part of it was used to purchase the Tucano jets, the lawmakers
also dangled impeachment threat on him.
The
lawmakers threatened impeachment, however, nothing came out of the threat.
How
National Assembly can sack the president.
Section
143(2) of the Constitution provides that to give notice of impeachment on the
President, 1/3 of the members of the National Assembly must sign the notice.
In this
case, since there are 360 members in the House and 109 Senators, one-third of
the lawmakers is 157 members.
The
impeachment notice is to be presented to the Senate President, who is the
Chairman of the National Assembly. The notice must contain all particulars of
the alleged misconduct.
Within 7
days of the notice, the Senate President must send copies of the impeachment to
the President and all the members of the National Assembly. The President can
reply to the impeachment or not.
Again,
within14 days of the presentation of the notice to the Senate President, the
Senate must vote on the notice. The vote requires 2/3 of all the Senators, that
is 73 senators, minus the Senate President, who cannot vote.
Same thing
is required in the House, where 240 members, excluding the Speaker of the
House, must vote to allow the investigation.
If the
motion should scale the two chambers, it means that the National Assembly has
given the go-ahead for the President to be investigated. However, if it fails
to get the needed support, it dies.
After the
approval, the Senate President will inform the Chief Justice of Nigeria to set
up a panel of 7 persons “who in his opinion are of unquestionable integrity,
not being a member of any public service, legislative house or political party,
to investigate the allegation as provided in this section,” section 143(6)
reads in part.
The panel
will have 3 months to conduct the investigation. The President will have the
right to appear or send a legal representative.
The panel
will decide the merit of the allegations and if it deems that the allegations
have been proven to be true, the panel will submit a report to the National
Assembly.
The
National Assembly must within 14 days of getting the report, subject the report
to the voting of each chamber. Again, 73 Senators must back the report and 240
Reps must also back the report to remove the President.
Section
143(3) prevents the court from entertaining matters on the impeachment
proceedings.
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