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Latest update: 22/01/2010 

- Nigeria


Cabinet gets 14 days to rule on ailing president

Cabinet gets 14 days to rule on ailing president

The High Court in Nigeria on Friday gave the cabinet 14 days to decide if ailing President Umaru Yar'Adua (pictured) is fit to stay in office. An official petitioned the court to have the vice president sworn-in as acting president.

By News Wires (text)
 

AFP - The High court in Nigeria on Friday gave the cabinet 14 days to decide if ailing President Umaru Yar'Adua was fit to stay in office.
  
Judge Dan Abutu directed the cabinet to resolve whether the president, in hospital in Saudi Arabia since November 23, "is incapable of discharging the function of his office."
  
The ruling came after former lawmaker Farouk Adamu Aliyu petitioned the court to have the vice president sworn-in to act for Yar'Adua until the president is able to return.
  
The Yar'Adua-appointed cabinet has resisted opposition demands that it take action over the president's absence, insisting that Yar'Adua is in full possession of his faculties.
  
He has been receiving treatment for an acute heart condition in a Jeddah hospital.
  
"We will abide by the judgement of the court," Justice Minister Michael Aondoaaka told reporters after the ruling.
  
"The executive council of the federation will within 14 days as directed by the court, consider and pass a resolution on the state of the president's health," he said.
  
Under the constitution, the cabinet can discharge the president with a two-thirds majority vote.
 

Comments (15)

to catapult Nigeria to the highest glory

I am a Nigerian in diaspora. please it is so obvious that so called president hear and doer and not Ya'radua b'cos if he wants Nigeria to grow as per his plan when he entered office he would not have listening to those blood sucking demonds and greedy persons we regard as leaders. I must say i am sorry to see that he is sick although it was not smthing he asked for it is just by nature for him to find him self sick so for the contry to grow i suggest he kindly hand over power to Goodluck. and as for Goodluck, i personally do not trust him i m only supporting him b'cos i love following the constitution and if he will fail to give Nigerians the dreams we ought to get then let him considered him self a failure.

He can be treated here in Nigeria.

Let our President come home. He can be treated by my grand father in a sleepy town called Idode in Ogun State. No cost attached. FOC.Period. Shina Adeyemi Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, Nigeria.

Nigerian Leadership.

This is a step forward. In as much as we want our elected President to captain the ship of Nigerian governrment, he must not be overwheled with the responsibilities that his present health status cannot shoulder.

Our wish for him is to get well and live to enjoy his life rather than staying put in office, live a short life and die prmaturedly as a President.

Coup d’état: An Alternative to Democracy?

Coup d’état: An Alternative to Democracy?
Feb 02, 2010

By Clifford Ogbeide

The recent calling by some segments of the Nigerian society for military interregnum as a result of the epileptic leadership and vacuum in the management of state affairs in Nigeria due to the continuous absence of President Musa Yar’Adua, was not only uncalled for, worrisome, barbaric, ill-conceived and unpatriotic. Despite the apparent imperfections of the nation’s democracy there is still no alternative to democratic governance. The fact that military top brass has even admitted that it is aware of “rising tensions” in the services would not be a yardstick for intervention rather a proactive mechanism should be put in place to check these “rising nerves”.

The recent warning from the military top brass to its members of the Armed Forces to steer clear of the political arena is a welcomed development in the right direction in our political history as a nation. Since their constitutional primary responsibility is to defend the territorial integrity of the country. There is no gain saying that military regime is an aberration and no longer fashionable in anywhere in the world.

We are able to discuss freely the comatose state-of-the- nation through intellectual discourse, non violence protest by the civil society’s organisation without fear of arrest and intimidation is the beauty of democracy which can never be contemplated in a military regime. Draconian Decrees Number 2, 46 and 47 are reminders of the dark days of illegal detention. The hallmark of a military regime is the suppression of free speech, violation of press freedom and human rights abuse. Military as a regime of force is a non accountable system of government which as the Nigeria experience has shown, perpetrates arbitrary arrest, repression, authoritarianism in governance. As constitutionalism, the rule of law, respect for human rights and other principles essentials for democratic rule give way to arbitrary, authoritarian and repressive rule under military, civil society is virtually held hostage.

When the military came to power as in case of Nigeria, the society became militarized through the establishment of military task forces, military governors or administrators, military tribunal, supreme military council, armed forces ruling council, not as representative organs of government but mere super structures for the conduct of government business with little or no regard to the ideas of popular will and public opinion.

With the overthrown of a legitimate government by military, there exists a low political culture, absence of institutionalized political norms with respect to process of political participation. In a situation of low political culture, governmental legitimacy is likely to be at low ebb while law and order are most likely to be threatened.
During military regime, the judiciary usually suffers reduced capacity, independence and credibility needed to serve as the last hope of the common man. The most common forms of assault on rule of law by military regime in Nigeria are the ouster of the jurisdiction of court. By this, the military precludes the judiciary from inquiry into the validity or legality of any legislation be it decree or edicts, any action or decision of the government.
Corruption as a monster in Nigeria today was the handy work of the military through the institutionalization of corrupt practices by plundering of state resources for their personal aggrandizement at the detriment of the generality and mismanagement of national economy which left the economy in ruins till date. For us as a nation to have successfully managed the first ever civilian-to-civilian transition only three years ago, in spite of 49 years of political independence, the invitation for military interregnum is not just only inappropriate, but sign- post- to -disaster and should be nip in the bud and condemned in the strongest term.

It’s my humble submission that the military establishment should in imbibe the political culture within the political system and not allow herself to be drag into murky waters of politics by some self serving politicians who would want to undermine their constitutional responsibility of protecting the territorial integrity of the nation for their selfish political interest. The military must subject its self to civil authority at all time and must protect the interest of the nation.

Clifford Ogbeide
Centre For Strategic & Development Studies,
Ambrose Alli University Ekpoma, Nigeria
Email: Ogbeide2000@yahoo.com

no truth

let our nigerian leaders tell themselves the truth,is enough of all this cock and bull stories.

all concerned take note

whether dead or alive we want to see him ( our president musa yar'adua) at least we deserve to know the real condition of our dear president. so all who is concerned should take now

Cabinet gets 14 days to rule on ailing president

I don't know why they are still giving 14days...to me is a delay tactist for those corrupt leaders to plan their next move. Nigerian leaders do not know the importance of a constitution, it is a slap on the face of Nigerian leaders and Nigeria as a whole. What do you expect from a nation full of corruptions, bribery, tribalism, nepotism, favouratism...a nation without a national interst...a place where leaders turn national interest to personal interest, a nation that does not know the functions of the Vice president. 14days is not supprise to me.

THE VICE PRESIDENT

DO WE FOLLOW WHAT THE CONSITUTION WANT US TO DO IN A SITUATION LIKE THIS,NIGERIAN WE NEED TO WAKE UP AND DO THE RIGHT THING FOR THE NATION.EDDDY.

LET HIM RESIGN.

LET HIM RESIGN.

Yar'Adua's refusal to transfer powers to his Vice.

Good evening to all Nigerian citizen, i wish to tell all nigerian to leave every thing people behind yaradual refusal to transfer powers to his vice to God, Vice president leave by his name. let watch what God will do. Thanks.

IS THIS A COUNTRY OR PARTY

THIS IS WHAT WE CALL RUBBISH..HW WOULD A PRESIDENT BE OFF DUTY FOR 60DAYS ,DATS TOO BAD AND HE IS CRITICALLY ILL OR MAYBE DEAD I GUESS ,SINCE THE DAY I HEARD THAT NEWS FROM CHRONICLES THAT HE'S DEAD ,THATS ON DEC 10,I JUST BELIEVE HE IS DEAD,HOW WOULD BBC BETRAY US WITH FALSE COMMENT ,AM REALLY DISSAPOINTED BY THAT,WHY NOT A LOCAL STATION HANDLE THAT THEMSELVES...PLS STOP THIS....

I THINK WE NEED JUST 2 PARTIES ,THAT CAN HELP BACK NIGERIA...AND THE WORLD HAS TO PUT MATTER OVER THIS ISSUE IF NOT THIRD WAR STARTS IN NIGERIA...

LET THE MAN COME DOWN FOR US

LET THE MAN COME DOWN FOR US

let him go

i wonder if nigeria is an organisation where only few poeple say what happens,the court has done well but let twoweeks be two weeks.the president is not strong to govern the nation again.please let the nation move forward.ebiziem from kiev,ukraine.

truth

Truth must be told. yaradua should resign.

nıgeria

i think its a wise decision because that was what we are waıtng for long. at times we Nigerians wonder if we have a constitution to abide on any way its a wise decision but we were expecting this for long time ago
long live federal republic of Nigeria long live Africa and the whole world.

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