There may likely be another controversy involving the Senate as the spokesperson of the Red Chamber, Yemi Adaramodu, has disclosed that the upper legislative chamber will review recent comments by Adams Oshiomhole on the suspension of Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, senator representing Kogi central.
Speaking in a telephone conversation with TheCable on Tuesday, Adaramodu, however, dismissed Oshiomhole’s claim that some senators’ signatures were forged or improperly included in the report that recommended Akpoti-Uduaghan’s suspension.
“That is not true. Signatures forged, over what?” he said.
Recall, Oshiomhole, senator representing Edo north, had alleged in an interview on AIT that some lawmakers whose names appeared on the report did not append their signatures to the document.
The former Edo governor cited Ireti Kingibe, senator representing the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), whom he claimed told him that she only signed the attendance register of the committee meeting and not the suspension report.
“If Senator Kingibe had anything against any procedure, she would report it on the floor of the senate, not to an individual.
“But it is not even true, because I was part of the ethics and public petitions committee that listened to the matter.
“Nobody will say that he or she was coerced or somebody’s signature was forged; that has never happened in the senate and it cannot happen. It has never happened.
“Senators are independent-minded people. We are mature men and women. And if you have any infraction against anybody, that person can, without any advocate from anywhere, that person will show it. So there’s nothing like that. I’m just hearing it for the first time. That’s very strange.
“We are going to review any statements made by him. The senate will take a cursory look at either extraneous, spontaneous or intentional comments from any senator appropriately.
“We are going to look into it. We will take a stand and everyone will know where we stand. But we can say no senator has reported that his or her senator was forged during the Natasha matter.
“It was debated on the floor of the senate openly at the plenary in the full glare of every Nigerian and even the international audience, and so nothing to hide.
“All Nigerians knew where we stood then on the issue of Natasha… that she ran foul of the senate’s orders. And we are orderly because we are bound by orders of the senate,” he pointed out.