Ekiti State Governor Fayose Gives Solid Reasons Buhari’s Niece Amina Zakari Should Be Removed As INEC Boss

Buhari-and-Fayose

Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, has called for the removal of Amina Zakari as Acting Chairperson of the Independent National Electoral Commission.

The governor faulted the Zakari’s appointment saying it is unknown to the 1999 Constitution.

Calling on President Mohammadu Buhari to terminate Zakari’s appointment, Fayose added that the Constitution (as amended), which established INEC and other Federal Executive Bodies, did not make any provision for the appointment of acting chairman.

In a statement issued on Sunday, August 9, 2015 by the governor’s Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, Fayose reiterated the call to terminate the appointment of Zakari as INEC Acting Chairperson.

According to the statement, ‘Since Mrs. Zakari’s tenure as INEC National Electoral Commissioner had expired, she cannot continue to preside legally on INEC affairs, except if duly appointed as substantive chairman of the commission as provided in Section 154 (1) and (3) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

One of the major legacies bequeathed to Nigeria by the immediate past Peoples Democratic Party government was free, fair and credible electoral process and President Buhari, who is a beneficiary of this legacy, must sustain this legacy by ensuring that the impartiality of the electoral umpire is unblemished by suspicions of partisanship and illegal appointments.

Two weeks ago, respected former lawmaker and former top civil servant, Alhaji Tanko Yakassai, revealed that he knew Mrs. Zakari since childhood, and that her late father, the former Emir of Kazaure, was married to President Buhari’s elder sister,’ Fayose said.

The statement continued further, ‘Alhaji Yakassai went on to reveal that President Buhari lived with, and spent a significant part of his early years in the home of Amina Zakari’s father.

‘This is enough establishment of conviviality between Mrs. Zakari and President Buhari, whose party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), will be standing elections with other political parties this year and this will no doubt cast credibility aspersion on any election conducted by INEC headed by Mrs. Zakari.

Section 154 (3) provided that the President shall consult the Council of State in exercising his powers to appoint a person as the chairman of INEC and there is no record of such consultation before the appointment of Mrs. Zakari as INEC Acting Chairperson.

‘The only requisite condition for Mrs. Zakari to be acting as the chairman of INEC is that she must be a National Electoral Commissioner and her tenure as National Electoral Commissioner ended on July 21, 2015.

‘As of today, there are four National Electoral Commissioners in INEC instead of 12. They are Abdukadir Sulaimanu Oniyangi, Mohammad Ahmad Wali, Chris Iyimoga and Lawrence Nwuruku. If anyone should act as INEC chairman, it should be any of the remaining four National Electoral Commissioner, not someone whose tenure has expired.

The danger in this is also that any action taken by INEC with Mrs. Zakari as its head will amount to illegality and it is hoped that President Buhari will avoid plunging Nigeria into an avoidable legal quagmire by rescinding immediately, the illegal appointment of Mrs. Zakari as INEC Acting Chairperson, a position that is not known to the Constitution of Nigeria,’ the statement read in full.