Sunday 12 July 2015

Buhari Refuses To Meet With Saraki

President Muhammadu Buhari has resisted fresh moves by the Senate
President, Senator Bukola Saraki, to formally meet with him.An
official in the Presidency who confided in one of PUNCH correspondents
on Saturday said the President and the Senate President had only met
once since the latter's emergence as the
leader of the senate.

The official said all efforts by Saraki to have another meeting with
the president, after the party's National Executive Council meeting
penultimate Friday, were rebuffed by Buhari.

The reliable source said the president of the Senate had at different
times reached out to people to help him persuade Buhari to grant him
audience.

Saraki had defied the All Progressives Congress to contest for the
position of the senate president on June and emerged victorious after
a controversial election that excluded a sizeable number of senators.
The APC had endorsed Senator Ahmed Lawan as its candidate for the
senate presidency.

The government official who spoke to PUNCH said, "The truth is that
the President is still displeased with what transpired in the National
Assembly, especially the Senate.

"Their encounter during the APC National Executive Council meeting,
when they shook hands, was the first meeting between President Buhari
and Saraki since he emerged as the President of the Senate.

"We are aware that Saraki has been going about begging people to
assist him to plead with the President to meet with him. That was one
of the reasons why he visited former President Obasanjo.

"I can tell you that the President is very pained by what happened. He
felt that since he had been transparent with the party, everybody
should play that way. But since Saraki took that path, the President
was and he is still pained. Let us just hope that at the end of it
all, they will be able to put the matter behind them."

Also speaking to PUNCH, a highly placed party official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, told
one of our correspondents that the handshake between the President and
Saraki during the recent NEC meeting of the APC "was for journalists."

He stated, "President Buhari is still upset because of what happened.
If you read in-between the line his speech during our last NEC
meeting, he reminded people who joined the party after it was formed
not to rubbish the sacrifices made by party leaders.

"It was not for the fun of it that the President took time to go down
the memory lane to trace the genesis of the APC.

"Although the President said he was prepared to work with anybody who
emerged as leader in the National Assembly, he did not envisage a
scenario where Saraki would emerge as the Senate President and Ike
Ekweremadu, a member of the PDP, would emerge as the deputy president
of the Senate."

Asked whether or not the President might change his mind anytime soon,
the source said, "Not until the governors, who were mandated by the
NEC to resolve the matter in the National Assembly, bring the matter
under control."

When contacted, the Special Adviser to the Senate President on Media
and Publicity, Mr. Yusuph Olaniyonu, said there was no cause for
alarm. During a telephone interview on Saturday, Olaniyonu said Buhari
had repeatedly told Nigerians that he believed in the independence of
the parliament.

He explained that Buhari had had cause to formally communicate with on
"state issues" and that they exchanged warm pleasantries at the APC
NEC meeting held in Abuja.

He said, "The president of a nation can have private discussions with
the Senate President or the Speaker of the House of Representatives
anytime he likes.

"At the moment, President Buhari, probably wants the issue around the
National Assembly leadership positions formally resolved before
calling for such meetings. He has said that he would not involve
himself in the affairs of the legislature and we should respect his
views."

Olaniyonu explained that Saraki and Buhari had been having regular
official communication and that such would continue because the Senate
would have to approve all appointments made by the President.

Asked why the President had met with the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, without meeting with Saraki up till
now, Olaniyonu answered that he was not aware of the Buhari-Dogara
meeting.

—PUNCH

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