The Senate approved an investigation by State Services Department (DSS) operatives into the recorded invasion of a Federal High Court, Abuja. The committee chairman, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, moved the point.
Punch reports that Opeyemi noted that Nigerians, leadership and members of the judiciary were concerned about the issue and Nigeria’s judiciary believed that the courtroom was meant to be a sanctuary.
In the same vein, he urged the Senate to act on it as representatives of the people.
Bamidele said: I rise to draw the attention of this Senate to a matter that has been in public domain and especially, as the chairman of the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, the reported alleged invasion of the courtroom, again, by alleged officials of the Department of State Services.
It is one issue that has raised a lot of concern in different quarters in Nigeria.
The leadership and members of the judiciary are particularly concerned about this development.
They believe, like the rest of us do, that the courtroom is meant to be a sanctuary; but, for us as Senate, we cannot begin to take a position or analyse the issues based on conclusion without facts that we consider incontrovertible.
Yet, much as we cannot just jump into conclusions, it is also a fact that we cannot pretend not to know that Nigerians are concerned about this development.
The reason I have chosen to come under Order 43 is so that I will not generate any controversy or even make the Senate to begin to debate or engage in a debate over an issue in respect of which we still need to have incontrovertible facts and evidence.
In view of this, I just want to say that as elected representatives of the people in whom Nigerians — including the judiciary — must find their voice that we mandate our Committee on National Security and Intelligence to interface with the relevant security agencies.
They should look into this matter, investigate what happened and report back to the Senate on this matter.
In response, President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, asked Bamidele’s panel to start legislative action on the issue and submit its report next week.
Lawan said: Distinguished colleagues, you know Order 43 does not allow for any debate and since this is a matter that affects the Judiciary, we rather mandate your committee to find out what happened.
So, I would suggest that our committee on judiciary investigates, finds out what actually happened and then report back to us in one week.