1999 Constitution:
Between Sections 188 and 308
culled from THISDAY, November 17,
2006
In the past few months, the
nation's constitution has undergone series of tests. These tests are those
capable of unsettling the polity and creating serious crises. In one
instance, the impeachment process provided for under Section 188 of the
constitution had led to a situation where three individuals were laying
claim to the governorship seat in Ekiti State. Eventually, the logjam was
resolved by the resort to that extreme measure of declaration of emergency
rule as provided in Section 305 of the same constitution.
Apart from Ekiti, the situtions in Anambra, Oyo and Plateau states have
exposed the soft under-belly of the 1999 constitution which is the supreme
law of our country. The impeachment process has been bastardised and misused
both by those it is expected to check and those who are expected to use it
as a check.
Section 188 is included in our constitution by its makers to prevent the
chief, executives of our 36 states and their deputies from misbehaving. This
misbehaviour could border on misuse of the enormous powers at their
disposal or misapplication of the huge resources of the state. The Section
is also to protect the citizenry from a governor who may have forgotten the
contents of his or her oath of office.
The impeachment process is also expected to be one of the instruments of
effecting the doctrine of Separation of Powers in a modern presidential
system.The legislature which is a branch of government relies on the
impeachment process to check the excesses of the executive and to keep them
in line. More importantly, the impeachment process is expected to be an
antidote to the iron-cast protection granted the president, governors and
their deputies under Section 308. The immunity clause protects the
beneficiaries from civil or criminal prosecution. The elected officials
mentioned in the section cannot even be compelled to appear in court to give
evidence. Neither can they be arrested or detained.
By the provision of the immunity clause, it is almost impossible to do
anything to an incumbent governor even if he openly commits an offence. The
governor of a state remains above our laws and immune to prosecution for any
type of offence while his tenure lasts. That is why some governors are
alleged to have indulged in care-free looting of the state treasury. Some
governors have allegedly been indicted in the murder of political opponents
while some others have been arrested abroad for money laundering and other
criminal activities.
However, in recent impeachment process instituted by legislators in Bayelsa,
Ekiti and Plateau states, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
had been mentioned as the motivator, instigator and enforcer. The EFCC had
been rightly accused of coercing legislators to embark on impeachment
process against their governors. This obviously is an infraction of the
constitution. It is trite law that where a person charged with the right to
exercise discretional powers is being forced to utilise that power, then the
result is illegality. It is the sole responsibility of the legislators, if
they are convinced that the governor has ommited to do or commited an act
which amounts to gross misconduct, to commence impeachment process to
restore the dignity of the gubernatorial office. Again, by the Supreme Court
decision in Fawehinmi Vs Inspector General of Police in the Bola Tinubu
case, The EFCC or any law enforcement agency can investigate criminal
allegations against a governor or the President. The highest court of the
land had in that case ruled that "That a person under Section 308 of the
1999 constitution, going by its provision can be investigated by the police
for an alleged crime or offence is, in my view, beyond dispute. To hold
otherwise is to create a monstrous situation whose manifestation may not be
fully appreciated until illustrated”.
It is, therefore, normal for EFCC to forward its report to the House of
Assembly or National Assembly to enable the legislature act as it deems fit.
After the submission of the report, the EFCC has no further role in the
matter except it is invited for further clarification or further testimony.
The framers of the constitution had created sections 308 and 188 based on
certain assumptions. Section 308 is the modern version of the old saying
that ‘Res potest peccarre’, that is 'the king can do no wrong' and that a
sovereign cannot be tried in his own court under a law that he himself has
made. In modern day governments, the immunity clause is to "equip the chief
executive of states with powers that will enable them to exercise the
freedom the action required for the day to day administration and to take
difficult decisions which impact on the lives of the citizenry at short
notice". The President, governors and their deputies are by Section 308
expected to have "free hand to act boldly and courageously for public good.
In doing so, such governors or President would not be hindered by fear for
self, for repercussions of actions embarked upon, for general public
interest of a state or for national interests clearly defined-all legitimate
actions undertaken during the pendency of term of office of a governor or
President must be foreclosed from personal legal liability, hence the
concept of immunity".
The framers of our constitution therefore expect the immunity clause to
make governance easy and protect the chief executive from undue
distractions. However, this shield is also given on the rational assumption
that those who aspire to be governors and president will be the best in
terms of virtues and the values they hold dear. They will be honourable men
who will neither participate in nor condone the violation of any section of
the constitution, the document from which they derive their legitimacy. Like
Justice Yahaya Akanbi, former chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices
Commission (ICPC) stated, "the whole idea of giving immunity is founded on
the fact that those people who are covered by immunity will show themselves
to be men of integrity and honour. They will be men who represent the best
interest of the nation. The king does no wrong and so whoever is the
President or governor (and their deputies) will do no wrong as they are seen
as an embodiment of integrity of the nation and that they would not do
things that are improper."
From the events in Bayelsa, Ekiti and Plateau states, there are strong
indications that the optimism displayed by those who conceived the immunity
clause has been misplaced.
Dr. Chidi Amuta once articulated the situation in Nigeria of today which
showed how the objective behind the immunity clause had been defeated. He
stated that: " a residual culture of official impunity inherited from
military rule has been worsened by constitutional immunity granted to public
officers with questionable background and worthless pedigree. So, people
watch helplessly as those they ostensibly elected to govern them behave like
reckless brigands licensed by the constitution to commit heinous crimes".
The framers of the constitution also believed that the lawlessness which
immunity clause would encourage could be checkmated by an independent
legislature holding on to the doctrines of separation of powers and checks
and balances in a presidential system. But what do we have in Nigeria? We
have legislative houses in most states where members are lackeys of the
executives. The governors order the removal and enthronement of legislative
leaders at will. Some state legislators get feeding allowances directly from
their governor. That is why in some governors' lodges, you see legislators
sitting on the floor or kneeling down to address the governor who sits like
the almighty emperor. The governors were the first set of leaders to make
nonsense of Section 188. They were the ones who started by manipulating
legislators and getting them to remove deputy governors on flimsy excuses.
Some deputy governors lost their positions simply because they did not come
every morning to pay homage to the 'emperor-governors'.
Now, what goes round must come round. It is now the turn of these
dictator-governors to face the repercussion of the misuse of power and abuse
of constitutional process. I must state here that I am opposed to situations
where in the desperation to impeach a seemingly bad governor due process as
provided in Section 188 is not followed. At all times, there should be full
compliance with the provisions of the constitution. Nobody should violate a
section of the constitution under the pretext that he is doing so to protect
other sections of the same constitution.There should be holistic, strict and
consistent application of constitutional provisions. Where there is doubt or
ambiguity, the courts are there to give interpretation. Otherwise, we can
seek to amend the supreme law. Some of the violations of the impeachment
provisions have been anchored on the frustrations of those who believe there
are incontrovertible evidence to show that a governor had committed acts
amounting to gross misconduct and yet, the state legislators refused to
invoke Section 188 of the constitution. We may need to amend Section 308, so
that the courts will also have a role in ensuring that a governor who
commits a crime faces the consequence of his own temerity.
I believe Section 308 has offered too much protection, a carte blanche to
those 74 officials. There is the need for that section to be amended to
ensure it protects governors and the President only in the course of
perfomance of their lawful and official duties. We can follow the United
States example. There, immunity is not enshrined in the constitution.
Rather, it was derived from judge-made laws and the leading authority on the
issue is the Nixon Vs Fitzgerald case. In November 1968, Ernest Fitzgerald,
an air force management analyst, testified before Congressional
sub-committee that aero-space developmental projects would necessitate
increase cost of over two billion dollars. In January 1970, he was sacked
in a cost-saving re-organisation by the Pentagon. Fitzgerald however
believed he was witchhunted by his bosses because of his Congressional
testimony, an act which was a violation of the Federal Civil Service rules.
He therefore sued several members of the executive arm, including President
Richard Nixon.
At the time of the case, Nixon was no longer in office. But, in his defence,
the former president raised the issue of "presidential immunity". In the
lead judgement read by Justice Powell, he said "the chief executive of the
United States enjoys absolute immunity from damages, liability for official
acts, even those within the "outer perimeter" of official responsibility".
It is based on this decision that the same court in Paula Jones Vs President
Bill Clinton in 1997 rejected the claim of Clinton that he enjoyed
"qualified immunity". At the US Court of Appeals, Justice Bowman in his
ruling in that case noted that “no presidential immunity of any kind is
expressed in the constitution and that by the decision in the Fitzgerald
case, unofficial acts such as the ones the Jones case was based are not
within the perimeter, not even the outer perimeter of the president's
official responsibility.”
From the foregoing, it is important that Section 308 be amended to allow the
immunity therein to protect its beneficiaries only in their official acts. A
governor who is involved in money laundering, looting state treasuries,
killing of political opponents, illegal importation of arms, arming militant
groups and other subversive activities cannot be acting within his official
capacity or within the "outer perimeter of official responsibility". It
should be possible for law enforcement agencies to put such a governor on
trial and if convicted, he should be jailed. If the House of Assembly
members feel comfortable with a convict who is in prison remaining as the
governor of the state, so be it. But the offender would not have escaped
justice.
Thus, the next National Assembly should consider the issue of amending
Section 308 to avoid a situation where perpetrators of crime hide under
state protection to act with impunity.It is also important for political
parties, their members and all the voters to ensure that only credible men
are elected into the legislature. We should elect only men who will hold the
governors and President accountable to the people. The next set of
legislators should be men who will not condone or cover-up a governor or
president who has committed criminal acts.
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