APC, lawyers attack Jonathan over 90-hectare farmland
The All Progressives Congress and some lawyers have faulted President Goodluck Jonathan’s acquisition of 90.04 hectares of farmland...
https://9ijatunes.blogspot.com/2015/02/apc-lawyers-attack-jonathan-over-90.html
The All Progressives Congress and some
lawyers have faulted President Goodluck Jonathan’s acquisition of 90.04
hectares of farmland at the Aviation Village in Abuja barely seven
months after he was sworn into office.
They said his action was a clear breach
of the provisions of section 138 and 5th Schedule of the 1999
Constitution, Parts 1 and 2.
The APC, in a statement on Monday by its
National Publicity Secretary, Lai Mohammed, therefore asked Jonathan
to apologise for abusing his office and engaging in corrupt practices
by acquiring the farmland as a sitting President.
It said nothing could justify the
indiscretion exhibited by the President in acquiring such a swath as
contained in a newspaper advert which had yet to be refuted by him.
A group, the Purpose Driven Initiative,
had in the advertorial claimed that Jonathan incorporated Ebele
Integrated Farms Limited which he used to acquire the land.
The APC said the claim by the
President’s apologists that their boss got the land because he wanted to
engage in farming and that a former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo,
did the same while in office, missed the point.
According to the APC, the claim by the
apologists that the 5th Schedule, Part 1 (Code of Conduct for Public
Officers) of the constitution empowers a President to engage in
farming, is also not tenable.
It stated that the issues involved went beyond the fact that a public officer was legally allowed to engage in farming .
‘The Fifth Schedule Part 1(Code of
Conduct for Public Officers) of the 1999 Constitution, Section 1 states
that, a public officer shall not put himself in a position where his
personal interest conflicts with his duties and responsibilities.’
“Would President Jonathan have been
given 90.04 hectares of such a prime land were he not a sitting
President?,” the APC asked. It said the President leveraged on his
office to “grab” the land.
The APC statement partly read, ‘‘What
happened in that Abuja land grab is nothing but the height of
indiscretion and abuse of office, and cannot be justified or explained
away just like that. Without mincing words, it also amounts to
corruption, which is defined in part as a perversion of integrity and a
glaring instance of bad leadership.”
It said the Minister of the Federal
Capital Territory, Bala Mohammed, was emboldened to also grab land in
the area because the President had done so.
The APC said, “Those pushing this kind
of argument are worsening the President’s case and insulting Nigerians.
When did one bad act become a justification for another? Does a thief
escape punishment by saying he stole because someone else had stolen? If
indeed Chief Obasanjo did it, does that make it right? Is this not part
of the reasons this President has been unable to fight corruption?
“It is also important to point out that
the Aviation Village, under the Abuja Master plan, is meant only for
Aviation-related activities and not farming.
“The President knew this, yet he went ahead to apply and was allocated land for farming in the Aviation Village.
“Perhaps his intention is to
subsequently apply for a change of use. How many other people were
allocated land for farming in the Aviation Village?’’
The APC asked Jonathan to immediately give back the land he had grabbed.
Some lawyers – Jiti Ogunye, Festus Keyamo and Monday Ubani – in separate interviews with The PUNCH in Abuja, also faulted the acquisition of the land by the President.
Ogunye argued that act of corruption
was not limited to dipping hands into public treasury but also “includes
all forms of illicit conduct in office in violation of the code of
conduct and other laws of the land.”
Ogunye likened the President’s action to
an attitude common with Nigerian leaders, who he said, “are involved
in primitive acquisition of capital, including fixed assets, like land.”
He added, “Land belongs to the people,
so says the Land Use Act. The Land Use Act says the President, a
governor or the Federal Capital Territory minister is a trustee of the
land for the people.
“When that trustee then uses his
position to acquire public resources, including fixed assets, which in
this case is large expanse of land, which he ought not to have obtained
while in office, it is condemnable.
“The critical question is that what kind
of farming is he going to use that large size of land for? Is it for
cocoa or groundnut?
“This act is condemnable regardless of who is in power – be it Obasanjo or Jonathan.”
Keyamo on his part said though the law
allowed a President to be involved in farming while in office,
Jonathan had no defence for acquiring the land since he had not started
using it for the purpose for which he claimed to have acquired it.
Keyamo said, “Farming is an exception.
Public officer can acquire land for farming. But the President has not
started the farming. Since he has not started it, there is no evidence
that he wants to use it for farming.
“The issue of farming is an exception
for public officers, but the truth is that we don’t know what he wants
to use it for. He can later build an estate there or use it for a big
business. We don’t know what it is meant for. It is what you know that
you can defend.”
Ubani, a former Chairman, Ikeja branch
of the Nigerian Bar Association, said the President and many state
governors were guilty of illicit acquisition of land.
He said, “They all abuse powers. Even in
Lagos. It is something that happens across all the states of the
federation. It is not limited to the federal level.
“The Land Use Act says land should be
held in trust for the people. But the manner in which these public
officials abuse their powers shows that they are not holding the land in
trust for the people but in trust for themselves.
“They acquire land meant for public
purposes and sometimes revoke the land of citizens and allot it to their
friends, cronies and even to themselves.”
The Presidency had on Sunday said that
Jonathan had not done anything against the laws of the land by owning a
farmland in Abuja.
The Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said, ‘‘It is not against the
constitution for either a civil servant or a public officer to engage in
farming.
“One APC-funded, motivated and inspired
NGO placed an advert in a newspaper, alleging that the President and the
Minister of the FCT have farms somewhere in Abuja. They were alleging
conflict of interest.”