Abdulmumin Jibrin who was until July, 2016, Chairman of the House Appropriation Committee, cuts a forlorn figure these days. He's had a rough year even by his own brash, garrulous standards.
Social media site, Twitter, frequently offers some solace for the young lawmaker, but close aides and friends say behind his gadgets, Jibrin is suffering.
"It's tough for him, I can tell you", said one media aide of the Kano born legislator.
Jibrin was suspended from parliamentary duties
for 180 legislative days and barred from future official positions in
the House. It's the equivalent of taking out a man's balls and hanging
him out on a stake to dry.
Following his suspension, Jibrin's office was sealed by officials in the National Assembly and the keys thrown away. He would not be allowed access.
The walls are closing in on Jibrin; the ground underfoot, giving way.
However, in typical Jibrin fashion, he's fighting back.
"Predictably,
Speaker Dogara ensured I was suspended. I wish to state that the
suspension is unfounded as the entire process is flawed", said Jibrin.
"The
so called suspension is ridiculous, a non issue, bunch of nonsense and
completely inconsequential...that cannot stand anywhere in the world", he railed.
It
all began some time this year within the bowels of the National
Assembly. The Executive alleged that the 2016 appropriation document,
presented to a joint session of parliament by President Muhammadu Buhari, had been padded by the lawmakers.
In
Nigeria parlance, "padding" has come to mean "criminal insertions" (as
Jibrin prefers to call it) by lawmakers into the budget for their own
pecuniary gains.
Interestingly, as boss of the
legislative committee in charge of fine-tuning the budget, Jibrin was
one of the lawmakers who called out the Executive branch, stopping short
of calling Buhari and his ministers corrupt.
Those were the days
when lawmakers woke up to find two versions of the same budget document
in their chambers. The Executive insisted it could only swear by one
document. Jibrin and the lawmakers passed the buck and Buhari fired a
handful of civil servants for mangling his first budget as democratic
President.
Weeks after, in a dramatic twist of events, Jibrin tendered his resignation as Chairman of the House Appropriation Commitee. Speaker Yakubu Dogara handed
the media a different version of events--Jibrin had met him to say he
couldn't continue in the role, said the Speaker, so he backed his
decision and sacked him.
In a series of back and
forth, Jibrin and Dogara held different views on his ouster and then the
Pandora box from Camp Jibrin was ripped open.
Jibrin
embraced a three-pronged media approach in his allegations against
Dogara: Twitter, Television and Newspaper. You'd think he was going to
run out of tweets and then he'd return the next day with a new set of
numbered tweets. He had become the King of the numbered tweets--its
Crown Prince.
Dogara has been
called a "corrupt thief" by Jibrin and much more. No negative
appellation has been considered off limits by Jibrin when the subject is
Dogara.
Following his suspension from the House
this week, Jibrin was asked to apologise, by the committee that
recommended he be barred from getting anywhere near the National
Assembly.
No way he's going to apologise, vowed Jibrin.
"Let
me state very clearly that I will never ever apologise to anybody in
the House of Reps. There is no reason whatsoever to apologise! I did not
commit any offence. I did not abuse my office. For the five years I
have served, I have never corruptly enriched myself", said Jibrin.
"In
contrast, these are the allegations that I raised against Mr Speaker
and others which they have not responded till date. The bad news for
the Speaker and his cabal is, despite doing their worst and exhausting
their bullets by "suspending" me, it has not in any way...Despite the
"suspension" the fact has not changed that the Speaker conspired with
others to commit monumental budget fraud and corruption.
"I
stand by all the allegations I raised. I wish to state categorically
that there is chronic individual and systemic corruption in the House".
He may well have a case, but he's getting to stand alone by the day.
Said one lawmaker who wouldn't want his name used in this story: "He
had over 200 lawmakers on his side before the House reconvened from its
recess. That number has been completely wiped out by the Speaker who
has been doling out money to the lawmakers to get them on his own side.
Jibrin is taking on the might of a very powerful Speaker. He was always
going to emerge wounded".
It may not all be bad news for Jibrin. Presidency sources told Pulse he's
secured a meeting date with President Buhari. Attempts to secure the
meeting while the budget padding allegations were still fresh, was
frustrated by powerful individuals within the presidency.
"Buhari has agreed to meet with him and discuss all the budget padding wahala", said the source.
A silver lining at long last?
For
Jibrin, the road to redemption and political relevance may well be a
long, tortuous one. The medium term plan is to finish him off
politically, insiders say.
Ain't no love for the whistle-blower in Nigeria.
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