National dialogue: My appointment inappropriate, says Nwabueze

Nwabueze
LEADER
of The Patriots, Prof. Ben Nwabueze, has described his appointment to
serve on the National Conference Advisory Committee by President
Goodluck Jonathan as inappropriate.
“I never expected to be appointed
chairman or member of the Committee, and would, quite frankly, have
considered such an appointment inappropriate in the circumstances. It is
an appointment for a younger person, not for an old man of 83 years
afflicted by ill-health,” Nwabueze said in a statement on Thursday.
He said in the statement that he had
been in London since September 8, receiving treatment for prostate
cancer but that he had to cut short his medical trip on October 12, “to
keep a long-standing commitment to chair the Anambra Literary Creativity
Festival at Awka on 15 October”.
Nwabueze had earlier nominated a member
of The Patriots, Solomon Asemota (SAN), to replace him on the committee
but the nomination was yet to be accepted by President Goodluck
Jonathan.
In fact, the President on Thursday selected Prof. Anya O. Anya as a replacement for Nwabueze in the committee.
Members of the national dialogue
committee, headed by Senator Femi Okurohunmu, were inaugurated at the
Presidential Villa, Abuja on October 7.
Nwabueze said he had expected Jonathan
to ask The Patriots to nominate a candidate for the national dialogue
project, given the contact the group had with the President prior to the
setting up of the committee.
The Patriot, chaired by Nwabueze, is a
group of eminent Nigerians who constantly intervene in national issues.
The group had been in the forefront of demand for convocation of a
national conference.
Nwabueze, a renowned constitutional
lawyer, said, “After The Patriots fruitful meeting with the President, a
member of our team who has access to him on a personal basis was
mandated to go back to get him to set up the Committee on the National
Conference of which he had earlier given a hint.
“My understanding from the contacts with him was that The Patriots would be asked to nominate a member to the Committee.”
He explained that though it was not
generally known that he had been “fighting prostate cancer for some
years now,” he had been kept going by consultations from time to time
with, and treatment by, a Consultant Oncologist at Charing Cross
Hospital, London.
He added that it might be necessary for him to return to London to continue his treatment after the Awka literary festival.
He said he had expected that his
contribution to the national dialogue would have been to help prepare “a
Draft People’s Constitution” which he had hoped to send to the
President and the National Assembly , without pre-empting the work of
the Okunrounmu-led committee.
He said, “While still in London and
before the setting up of the Presidential Committee was announced, I
wrote to 13 prominent lawyers and political scientists to join me in a
committee to prepare a Draft People’s Constitution which will be
submitted for deliberation at the Uyo National Summit when it
re-convenes in terms of paragraph 7 of the Communiqué adopted at the
September 3 and 4 Meeting, and thereafter to be presented to the
Presidency and the National Assembly as a working Paper for the National
Conference proper.
“This is the area in which I think my
contribution to the work of the Conference would be particularly useful,
and I do not see this as in any way conflicting with the Terms of
Reference of the Presidential Committee, although they (i.e. the Terms
of Reference) contain a somewhat vaguely worded item, to wit, ‘to advise
government on legal procedures and options for integrating decisions
and outcomes of the national dialogue/conference into the constitution
and laws of the nation’.”
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