L-R: Chime and Onyebuchi |
After weeks of horse-trading and
melodrama the members of the Enugu State House of Assembly on Tuesday, August
26, finally impeached the deputy governor of the state, Mr. Sunday Onyebuchi,
on the alleged orders of the state governor, Sullivan Chime.
Onyebuchi’s impeachment followed his
indictment by a seven-man panel of inquiry, which investigated allegations leveled
against him by members of the Enugu State House of Assembly.
The panel, in its report, held that
Onyebuchi was guilty of the allegations brought against him.
“The allegations of gross misconduct
leveled against the Deputy Governor of Enugu State, Mr. Sunday Onyebuchi, by
the Enugu State House of Assembly have been proved,” the panel, headed by Mr.
Franklin Oraekeyi, stated in the report.
The members of the house adopted the
report of the panel after the House Leader, Hon. S.K.E. Udeh-Okoye, moved a
motion for its adoption.
Ude-Okoye, who sponsored the motion
on notice alongside 21 other members of the house, numbered HM/06/2014, noted
that the motion was in line with the provisions of section 188 (9) of the 1999
Constitution, as amended, which provided for the removal of members of the
executive arm of government.
The motion called for a resolution
of the house to consider the report of the investigation panel on the
allegations of gross misconduct of the deputy governor, and that the house,
having carefully considered the report of the investigative panel, “do adopt
it.”
Onyebuchi was accused of running an
illegal poultry in his official residence, an offence according to a resolution
of the house, and also refusing to represent Governor Sullivan Chime at
official functions, in spite of a directive from the governor.
The lawmakers, in the impeachment
notice, held that the said actions amounted to gross misconduct on Onyebuchi’s
part.
The deputy governor had denied the
allegations, insisting that he was witch-hunted for expressing an intention to
contest the seat of the Enugu East Senatorial Zone, which is said to be
reserved for the governor’s Chief of Staff, Mrs. Ifeoma Nwobodo.
Onyebuchi’s position became shaky
after the lawmakers commenced impeachment proceedings against him on July 23.
The impeachment saga was eventually
tagged ‘Enugu chicken impeachment’ as most of the testimonies presented before
the impeachment panel centered on the poultry operated by Onyebuchi in his
official residence.
The panel was told that the stench
from the poultry was an embarrassment to the state government, which had to
relocate the chickens in order to check the offensive odour.
It was also alleged that the poultry
constituted severe health hazards to residents, staff and visitors in the
government house.
But Onyebuchi, who claimed that he
was not aware of the whereabouts of the chickens since they were moved,
retaliated by alleging that the governor also operated an official poultry and
piggery in the Government House.
He pointed to sums allocated to the
said poultry and piggery in the state’s budget to justify his claim.
However, in a statement, Chime’s
Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Chukwudi Achife, denied Onyebuchi’s allegation,
explaining that the poultry mentioned by the deputy governor was part of the
‘Agric Unit’ in the Government House, which served both the governor’s and
deputy governor’s official residences, as well as the needs of the staff.
Achife disclosed that staff of the
agric unit slaughtered a cow at the request of the deputy governor on August 4,
2014 – when Onyebuchi was already facing impeachment.
The deputy governor would have been
removed before Wednesday, had the panel not adjourned proceedings for a few
days after he slumped while testifying in his own defence on August 18.
Onyebuchi’s lawyers and aides blamed
the development on the stress occasioned by the impeachment proceedings.
It is expected that Onyebuchi’s
replacement as the deputy governor will be announced very soon.
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