APC accuses Senate President, David Mark of double standards over defection of 11 PDP senators to APC
The last may not have been heard of the defection saga in the Senate, as the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described Senate President David Mark’s insistence on not reading the letter of the 11 Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators who want to defect to APC as double standards.
The opposition party threatened to take further steps to assert the rights of the defected senators by next week if the matter is not resolved amicably.
The interim National Publicity Secretary of APC, Alhaji Lai Muhammed, said the party viewed the drama in the senate over the defection as totally strange and uncalled for.
On the affected senators, Lai Muhammed said they remained APC members whether their letter was read or not by the senate president, adding that what was playing out at the upper legislative chambers was strange.
The affected senators who wrote a joint letter to the senate president notifying him of their intention to defect from PDP to APC a fortnight ago are Senator Bukola Saraki (Kwara Central), Umaru Dahiru (Sokoto South), Magnus Ngei Abe (Rivers South-East), Wilson Asinobi Ake (Rivers West), Bindawa Muhammed Jibrilla (Adamawa North) and Mohammed Danjuma Goje (Gombe Central).
Others are Aisha Jummai Alhassan (Taraba North), Mohammed Ali Ndume (Borno South), Mohammed Shaba Lafiaji (Kwara North), Abdulahi Adamu (Nasarawa West) and Ibrahim Abdullahi Gobir (Sokoto East).
The opposition party threatened to take further steps to assert the rights of the defected senators by next week if the matter is not resolved amicably.
The interim National Publicity Secretary of APC, Alhaji Lai Muhammed, said the party viewed the drama in the senate over the defection as totally strange and uncalled for.
“It amounts to double standards for the senate president not to have allowed the letter to be read, whereas the defections to PDP was celebrated by the ruling party.He said the recourse to the Standing Rules of the Senate and order of the court by Mark was not tenable as far as the issue of defection was concerned.
“Why will he refuse to read our senators’ letter while at the time allowing other defections to sail through? It is lack of sincerity to allow defections to one party and refuse others from defecting to another. As a matter of fact, what applies to the House of Representatives should also apply to the Senate,” he maintained.
On the affected senators, Lai Muhammed said they remained APC members whether their letter was read or not by the senate president, adding that what was playing out at the upper legislative chambers was strange.
The affected senators who wrote a joint letter to the senate president notifying him of their intention to defect from PDP to APC a fortnight ago are Senator Bukola Saraki (Kwara Central), Umaru Dahiru (Sokoto South), Magnus Ngei Abe (Rivers South-East), Wilson Asinobi Ake (Rivers West), Bindawa Muhammed Jibrilla (Adamawa North) and Mohammed Danjuma Goje (Gombe Central).
Others are Aisha Jummai Alhassan (Taraba North), Mohammed Ali Ndume (Borno South), Mohammed Shaba Lafiaji (Kwara North), Abdulahi Adamu (Nasarawa West) and Ibrahim Abdullahi Gobir (Sokoto East).
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