After three postponements, a former Governor of Rivers State and President Muhammadu Buhari’s ministerial nominee, Rotimi Amaechi, was finally screened on Thursday by the Senate but the exercise left the Peoples Democratic Party members of the Senate alleging betrayal.
The opposition senators have also threatened to oppose Amaechi’s confirmation when the time comes.
They said their All Progressives Congress
 colleagues in the upper legislative chamber betrayed the agreement they
 had not to screen the ex-Rivers governor given the report of the panel 
that investigated the petitions against him.
The ethics committee of the Senate was 
said to have advised that Amaechi screening be left till the end of the 
cases of alleged corruption he has in court.
One PDP senator, who asked not to be 
named, said, “We had opened Thursday’s sitting with a closed session, 
which lasted for 50 minutes to sort out knotty issues relating to the 
screening of Amaechi.
“During the closed session, Chairman of 
the Ethics Committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, briefed us on the report 
and indicated that the committee reported that the issue regarding 
Amaechi’s petition was in court and that the Senate should suspend 
action on his screening, pending the resolution of the court issues.”
Another senator, who said a similar 
thing, said the PDP senators were surprised when the Senate President, 
Bukola Saraki, and the other APC senators started asking Amaechi 
questions.
The two and others alleged that all the 
senators at the closed session had agreed that the PDP senators would 
insist on not having anything to do with Amaechi, while their APC 
colleagues also agreed that they would only ask the nominee to only 
“take a bow and go.”
They said they were surprised seeing Saraki and other APC members asking Amaechi questions.
At the screening, which lasted for about 
55 minutes, the PDP senators did not ask the nominee any question with 
the Minority Leader, Godswill Akpabio, saying his members would not 
participate in the screening of Amaechi until the outcome of his court 
case.
Akpabio also raised a point of order that no controversial matter be brought before the Senate.
He said, “My point of order is under 
Order 43. The PDP senators seated here will not have any question for 
the nominee because we have just received the report of the ethics 
committee bordering on corruption and all sorts of things from the 
Senator Anyanwu committee and we have not debated that report at all. 
So, we have little or nothing to ask the nominee.”
Akpabio then asked his PDP colleagues 
whether he had spoken their minds and the opposition senators responded 
in the affirmative.
The PUNCH learnt however that 
the APC senators had pleaded with their PDP counterparts during the 
closed session to allow Amaechi to be screened while the debate of the 
report of the ethics committee continued.
The PDP senators were also said to have 
agreed to the suspension of the debate on the report of the ethics 
committee only if their APC colleagues would also ask the Rivers nominee
 to take a bow and go so as not to “cause controversy.”
Amaechi had arrived on the premises of 
the National Assembly around 10.30am, dressed in Rivers attire. His name
 was Number One on the order paper, with other nominees. –
Heineken Lokpobri (Bayelsa); Omoleye 
Daramola (Ondo); Adewole Folorunso (Osun); Baba Shehuri Mustapha 
(Borno); and Ocholi James (Kogi ) – listed in that order.
The business of the day commenced with 
the laying of the report of the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges 
and Public Petitions, on the alleged fraud allegation against Amaechi, 
by Anyanwu. On the directive of the Senate president, Amaechi was led 
into the chamber moments later by the Senior Special Assistant to the 
President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Ita Enang; the National
 Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun; Senator Olorunnimbe 
Mamora; Governor Rochas Okorocha; Rivers APC governorship candidate, 
Dakuku Peterside;   Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba and a former Speaker of 
the House of Representatives, Ghali Umar Na’Abba.
Amaechi explained details of his 
achievements as Rivers State governor for eight years and     pledged to
 improve on the relationship between the executive and the legislature.
In a reply to Akpabio’s earlier order, the Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, had raised a point of order under Order 53 (9).
Ndume said, “My position and by the grace
 of God, as a Senate Leader, I want to guide the Senate properly. The 
committee report has been laid by the committee that we assigned to do 
the job of ethics and privileges and the procedure is that after laying 
the report, we will make copies of that report.
“This is a confirmation hearing, it does 
not stop the confirmation hearing but we are glad that you have said 
that you are not asking the nominee questions. We must as well, as a 
former speaker and as a former governor, ask the nominee to take a bow 
and go.”
Amaechi was Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly before becoming governor in 2007.
The drama of the ex-governor’s screening 
continued with Akpabio interrupting Ndume and telling Amaechi, “Mr 
Nominee, the leader has spoken and by implication, the leader is saying 
that today, the Senate should have a rule that every nominee should bow 
and go. Maybe the leader did not hear me well, what you (APC senators) 
are now saying is that you can’t ask questions?”
Ndume also stood up again and said, “Mr 
chairman, as I said, I raised two orders. One: It is my responsibility 
as the Majority Leader. Two, on the other order that I raised, the 
gentleman you see here as a nominee, it’s my responsibility to market 
him here before the Senate.
“It is you people that are given the privilege to ask questions and you said….”
Calling his colleagues “you people” led 
to an uproar and Saraki had to apologise on behalf of Ndume and asked 
the PDP senators to accord Amaechi the usual courtesies of former 
lawmakers who had appeared before the Senate.
Amaechi was thereafter asked questions on
 the challenges in the Niger Delta; his alleged indictment by the Rivers
 State Government Commission of Inquiry and his view on corruption.
At this point, Akpabio left the chamber.
Amaechi was again asked further questions by many APC senators before he was asked to take a bow and go.
As part of his answers, he said, 
“Corruption is very difficult to define. If you are a public officer and
 you don’t take a bribe, I have never taken a bribe in my life but if 
they send a girl to you and you sleep with the girl and do her favour, 
you are corrupt.
“Corruption is a very wide concept. If 
people are contesting a position and you offer your son, brother or 
sister an opportunity to hold that position, probably the person is not 
qualified, you are corrupt. So, it is difficult for me to define 
corruption.”
He said the APC used anti-corruption to sell the Buhari brand to Nigerians.
Amaechi said, “We sold to the public the 
fact that there was massive corruption in the system and that there was 
the need to fight that corruption. We agreed that the only way to fight 
that corruption is to put a new government.
“So, we had to get a signpost candidate. 
The signpost candidate is a man who the Nigerian public has seen as an 
incorruptible president; that was why the party had to put President 
Buhari forward. We thought that there was a need to do things 
differently.
“I thought that as good as the former 
President (Goodluck Jonathan) might have been, I don’t think he was 
suitable enough for the growth and development of Nigeria. So, we needed
 to offer an opportunity to somebody we believe is better than the 
former President.
Amaechi denied being indicted by the 
Rivers State Government Commission of Inquiry instituted to investigate 
his stewardship as the governor for eight years.
He said, “There was nowhere I was 
indicted (in the judicial panel report). I was born to test my rights 
and fight for my rights, I was once a student union leader and believe 
me, if there is one man who does not like corruption, I do not like 
corruption.
“I came here with a copy of the so-called
 panel report, there is no where that the panel indicted me, I am ready 
to tender this report before the Senate. I was ready for the questions 
on it and I brought the panel report so the Senate can juxtapose it with
 the White Paper.
“However, because there are challenges, 
people in Nigerian politics believe that there is the need to compromise
 and be able to manage yourself around; I will do that but where it 
clashes with my principles I find it a bit difficult to do what people 
expect me to do.”
Ameachi stressed the need to diversify 
the nation’s economy, improve on power supply and invest heavily in 
agriculture as a means of providing jobs for the youths.
He said, “When you deal with the issue of
 massive unemployment, you deal with the change in the economic mantra. 
The mono-economic situation that we have cannot survive. Nigeria cannot 
continue to be what we are if we continue to rely on oil.
“For me, I agree with the President that 
there is the need to invest in agriculture. If we invest in agriculture 
and technology, you will hire as many workers as possible.
“Government must invest in that regard. 
We must diversify the economy. Mining is another area that God has 
blessed us with and we also need to invest in education because some of 
these people are unemployable.
“We need to invest hugely in education. 
We did that in Rivers State. For four, five, six years, our budget was 
highest in education. So, if this happens, we will employ quite a number
 of workers.”
Amaechi also justified his radical 
posture when he was the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum. He 
said it was meant to check executive recklessness.
He said, “The governors’ forum started as
 a check to executive recklessness. The Senate president (Saraki) was 
the chairman and with other governors who are here today as senators, 
including Senator (Danjuma) Goje, to make me the chairman of the forum 
for the first time.
“It happened in Kwara State and we 
checked the excesses, including the expenditure of the oil subsidy. 
There is a case in court up till now stopping the Federal Government 
from drawing money from the account to fund oil subsidy.
“I think that the radical posture of the 
governors’ forum led to the former president asking me that I had turned
 the forum into a union, so it’s no longer a governors’ forum, it is now
 a trade union and all we were doing was to defend the lives of 
Nigerians and ensured that the money accruable to the country was 
judiciously utilised.”
Amaechi was greeted with a loud round of 
applause from his supporters when he emerged from the senate chamber. 
The supporters were seen rendering solidarity songs.
The other nominees listed for the day were also screened by the senators.

