The Rivers State House of Assembly has accused the state Governor, Sir Siminalayi Fubara, of frustrating the implementation of the Supreme Court’s judgment, particularly the aspect requiring him to re-present the 2025 Appropriation Bill.
The Assembly called on members of the public to compel the governor to sincerely follow the established due process in presenting the appropriation bill instead of playing to the gallery, whipping up public sentiment with a motive to demonize the lawmakers.
The Chairman, House Committee on Information and Spokesperson of the House, Dr. Enemi Alabo George, who spoke on Sunday in Port Harcourt, challenged the governor to produce the acknowledged copy of the letter he allegedly sent to the House.
George said: “Last week, we were told that on his way to Ogoni for a programme, the governor made a stopover at the gate of the House of Assembly Quarters to grant an interview to the press.
“In that interview, he claimed that he had sent a letter to the House of Assembly indicating his intention to visit and present the appropriation bill, a claim we found rather astonishing as no such letter was received by the House of Assembly.
“His aides later alleged that they forwarded a letter through WhatsApp to some members of the House, which was also awkward, unprofessional, and embarrassing.
“As I speak, the social media space is awash with stories about a purported letter from the governor to the House of Assembly expressing his intention to visit the house to present the appropriation bill for the year 2025.
“Nothing can be farther from the truth. We want to state categorically that there is no such letter before the House of Assembly nor any of its staff. We challenge the governor and his aides to produce an acknowledged copy of such a letter or any evidence that such a letter was sent or received by the House of Assembly. It is absolutely untrue and unfortunate. The general public must, as a matter of importance, ignore such a claim.
“It is now very obvious that if at all there was such a letter, the intended recipient was not the legislature but the public, and the clear intention was to play to the gallery, whip up public sentiment, demonize the House of Assembly, and set the public against us. This is demeaning, denigrating, and perilously unfortunate.”
George said the governor frustrated all the efforts of the House to work with him to resolve the lingering crisis immediately after the Supreme Court judgment, particularly on the aspect of presenting the Appropriation Bill in the interest of the state.
George said: “Recall after the recent Supreme Court judgment on the budget of our state, it became absolutely necessary for the Governor of Rivers State, His Excellency, Sir Siminalayi Joseph Fubara, to present the appropriation bill to the legislature for consideration and passage.
“Also recall that immediately after the judgment, this house wrote to the governor, calling on him to immediately present the budget for speedy consideration.
“It was our hope that by the 15th of March, 2025, we would have concluded the process of passing the appropriation bill into law, so as to give us enough time to approach the Federal Government to release funds meant for our state, which have been seized by the judgment of the Supreme Court.
“This we did in the interest of our dear state and in pursuit of peace, recognizing that no government can function optimally without a harmonious coexistence between the executive and the legislature.
“This letter was rejected, and the staff of the House of Assembly who attempted to deliver the mails were brutalized at the gate of the Government House and sent back. Undeterred by this, the House resorted to using a courier service to deliver the mail. The governor did not heed our call, nor did he demonstrate any intention to.
“Recall again that the judgment of the Supreme Court invalidated the appointment of most of the Commissioners of the state. To bridge this gap and avoid a vacuum, this house immediately wrote to the governor to submit the list of commissioners for immediate screening.
“Our letter was again rejected at the government house, and we once again resorted to delivering the mail through a courier service. Rather than heed our call, the governor instructed them to go to court against us, which they have now done.
“The governor went further to instruct all ministries, agencies, and departments of government not to receive any correspondence from the Rivers State House of Assembly nor communicate with us in any manner.”
George said the governor must be reminded that the House of Assembly is not an appendage of the executive, and its members are not his slaves, bondservants, or serfs.
“We are an independent arm of government in line with the principles of horizontal separation of powers as expressed in Section 4, Section 5, and Section 6 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended.
“It is in responding to this attitude that the Supreme Court said in its judgment: ‘A government cannot be said to exist without one of the three arms that make up the government of the state under the 1999 constitution. In this case, the executive arm of the government has chosen to collapse the legislature to enable him govern without the legislature as a despot. As it is, there is no government in Rivers State.’”
George said the House had hoped that such strong words from the Supreme Court would help “purge the governor of such despotic ways.”
He said that as an Assembly, the lawmakers were deeply concerned about the progress of the state, adding that one man should not be allowed to hold everybody in the state to ransom because of his ego.
George called on everybody to collectively urge the governor to do the right thing in the right and lawful way to allow the state to make progress.
He said the Assembly was the worst hit in the ongoing crisis, lamenting that the lawmakers had suffered untold hardship and insisting that the governor must be stopped from extending such punishment to Rivers people.
George said: “This Assembly has borne the brunt of this crisis. We have endured immense hardship. We have been battered almost beyond our carrying capacity. We have been punished unduly and unfairly for trying to perform our constitutional duties. Our governor must not extend this punishment to Rivers people. No, please, no. We must not allow it.
“We have seen hell. Our hallowed chamber was burnt down by the governor. The House of Assembly Complex was brought down by the governor, totally demolished alongside our personal effects and belongings. Our Speaker’s residence was brutally attacked. Our residential quarters were brutally invaded by the governor.
“Our allowances have been seized for about a year and six months. We still continue to suffer. Yet, we have resolved to put all of these behind us in the interest of our state, so that our state can move forward. We cannot afford to punish our people because of our ego and personal interests.
“We have our aged pensioners who must receive their pensions. We have our teachers in public schools who we depend on for our children to be educated; they must be paid their salaries. We have government hospitals and health centers, which our people depend on for discounted and affordable medical services.
“We have public schools, which depend on public funds for their daily running. The governor is toying with the lives and livelihoods of Rivers people. Let us please all call on him to do the right thing in the interest of our dear state and its people.”
In response, Rivers State Commissioner for Information and Communication, Barrister Joseph Johnson, dismissed the lawmakers’ claims, stating that the Martins Amaewhule-led House of Assembly is fond of denying everything concerning the governor.
He regretted that it is only the Assembly that is yet to receive the letter, which is already in the public domain.