Friday 6 May 2016

70% Nigerians Want Saraki To Resign Over Corruption Trial - Poll (Stats)

More Nigerians want Nigeria’s embattled senate
president, Bukola Saraki, to step down from office as he
faces corruption trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal, a
poll conducted by PREMIUM TIMES has shown.
The poll, sampling public opinion on whether Mr. Saraki
should resign in view of his trial, ran on the newspapers’
site for two weeks ending May 5. It showed significant
public support for Mr. Saraki’s resignation.
The poll had five structured answers from which a total of
5,454 respondents chose.
A total of 3,624 respondents, representing 66 per cent,
chose “Yes, he is a corrupt person”, implying the senate
president is corrupt and should stand down.
Another 652, representing 12 percent, also wanted Mr.
Saraki to resign, choosing “yes, he does not represent
APC change agenda”.
In sum, either because “he is a corrupt person” or “he
does not represent APC change agenda”, 4,276
respondents, 78 per cent, voted that Mr. Saraki should
resign.
Altogether, 647 respondents, representing 12 per cent,
voted “No, his travails are just political vendetta”, while
315, representing six per cent, said the Senate President
should not resign. The last group voted “No, he is
innocent of all charges unless proven otherwise in court”.
Therefore, 962 respondents, 17.6 per cent, elected to
stand with Mr. Saraki on his vow to stay in office unless
he is ultimately convicted.
The remaining 223 respondents, or four per cent, said “I
don’t care” whether Mr. Saraki resigns.
The Trial
Mr. Saraki, in charge number ABT/01/15 dated
September 11, 2015 and filed before the Code of Conduct
Tribunal, is accused of offences ranging from anticipatory
declaration of assets to making false declaration of
assets in forms he filed before the Code of Conduct
Bureau while he was governor of Kwara state.
The senate president is also accused of failing to declare
some assets he acquired while in office as governor.
Mr. Saraki is also accused of operating foreign accounts
while being a public officer.
On April 18, three new corruption charges were added to
the initial 13-counts.
Mr. Saraki denies wrongdoing, and pleaded “not guilty” to
the amended charges.
The prosecution has called one witness, Michael Wetkas,
from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, to
detail how Mr. Saraki allegedly looted Kwara State and
brazenly converted state’s funds to personal use.
Mr. Saraki is yet to begin his defence.
Penalty if convicted
If eventually found guilty, the Code of Conduct Tribunal is
empowered by the paragraph 18 (1)(2), Part 1 of the fifth
schedule to the Constitution to remove Mr. Saraki from
the National Assembly; bar him from holding any public
office for a period not exceeding 10 years; and/or
confiscate his properties determined as ones acquired in
abuse or corruption of office.
Mr. Saraki has repeatedly accused the chairman of the
Tribunal, Danladi Umar, of bias, expressing “big fear” he
may not get justice from Mr. Umar.
He has filed a motion in the CCT asking Mr. Umar to
disqualify himself from his trial. The motion was
dismissed prompting him to seek relief of the
Appeal Court to upturn the chairman’s ruling.
The senate president also alleges that his trial is
politically motivated, having emerged Senate President in
defiance of the position of his party, All Progressives
Congress, which favoured Ahmed Lawan from Yobe State
for the position.
Mr. Saraki has also subtly accused former Lagos
Governor, Bola Tinubu, of masterminding his travails, as
retaliation for his opposition to Mr.
Tinubu’s ambition to contest as Muhammadu Buhari’s
running mate in the last presidential poll.
I won’t resign
Mr. Saraki has since vowed not to resign. He told his
colleagues in 2015 to “stand with me to defend the
National Assembly!”
The Senate, last month, during a session led by Deputy
Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, while his boss was
attending trail at CCT, resolved to support its embattled
President “to the end, except he is convicted”.

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