Saturday, January 23, 2010

Yar’Adua’s fate hangs in balance

Yar'Adua's fate hangs in balance
Camillus Eboh | Reuters
 

Umaru Yar'Adua
 

ABUJA: Nigeria's Cabinet will decide within 14 days whether President Umaru Yar'Adua is fit enough to govern Africa's most populous nation after a two-month absence for medical treatment, the attorney general said on Friday. The country's Federal High Court early in the day gave a 14-day deadline to the Cabinet to pass a resolution to determine whether the ailing president is capable of remaining in power.

The 58-year-old leader has not been seen publicly since leaving the country on Nov. 23 to receive treatment for a heart ailment. He has not transferred power to his deputy, triggering debate over the legality of government decisions.

Judge Dan Abutu gave the ruling after a former lawmaker brought a legal case against the government, saying the president's failure to transfer power was in breach of the constitution.

"We will abide by the judgment of the court. The Executive Council of the Federation will within 14 days, as directed, consider a resolution on the state of the president's health," Attorney General Michael Aondoakaa said.

The Senate, which was briefed on Thursday on Yar'Adua's health in a closed-door session, is due to meet next Tuesday for an update and may also take a position on whether the president should remain in office.

The Cabinet unanimously agreed in early December that there were no grounds to seek his resignation, rejecting calls for him to step down or prove his fitness to govern.

Some political analysts say ministers are reluctant to come out against Yar'Adua because they fear they would lose their jobs if Vice President Goodluck Jonathan were to take over. But pressure for a resolution has mounted since December.

Nigeria has had to cope with clashes between Christians and Muslims, which killed hundreds of people in the central city of Jos this week as well as the risk of resurgent violence in the Niger Delta, the heartland of its mainstay oil industry.

More than 3,000 people marched to the state government headquarters in the commercial capital Lagos on Thursday, a rare public demonstration of political anger, demanding Yar'Adua give up his executive powers or return to Nigeria immediately.

It was the second major street protest following a similar demonstration in the capital Abuja.

Foreign Minister Ojo Maduekwe declined to give a clear answer when questioned in a BBC interview broadcast on Thursday. "I do not rule out (a transfer of power to Jonathan) but he should not be stampeded into doing that."

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Yar'Adua's direct predecessor and his main sponsor to the presidency, defended himself against accusations he had imposed an "invalid" on the nation, but was less than equivocal in his support for Yar'Adua.

"If you take up a job, elected, appointed or whatever, and then your health starts to fail you and you will not be able to deliver ... to satisfy the people you are supposed to serve, then there is a path of honor and path of morality," he said.

"If you don't know that, you don't know anything. I will stop on that note," he told a briefing in Abuja on Thursday.

Obasanjo remains an influential figure within the ruling party and his closeness to Jonathan means his influence over government could grow should the vice president take over.

Abutu's ruling was in response to a case brought against the government by a former lawmaker and an Abuja-based lawyer in the hope that it would force Yar'Adua to hand over power.

Two similar suits by the Nigerian Bar Association and a leading human rights lawyer are still awaiting judgment.

Abutu last week ruled Jonathan could exercise executive powers but could not be "acting president," sparking confusion over how far his authority extends while Yar'Adua is absent.

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