Speaking at the media chat in Abuja on Wednesday, Wike said
politics should not be taken lightly and that removing the governor would not
be a criminal offence.
“Politics is not play. If you have committed an offence to
be impeached, what’s wrong? Is it a criminal offence? It’s provided in the
constitution. Am I a member of the Assembly?” Wike asked.
“If you have committed an infraction of the constitution,
and the Assembly deems it fit to say you should be impeached.
“I have heard people say, ‘Oh, if they impeach him, there
will be a breakdown of law and order.’ Rubbish! Nothing will happen.”
While defending his commitment to legal procedures and
fairness, Wike questioned how a handful of legislators could pass laws and
expect them to be recognised as valid.
“I cannot believe that in this country, we are now at the point where Nigerians are talking about where three members of the House will sit and make a law, and they are talking about going to the Supreme Court,” he said.
“Speakers and Assembly members are not our children; they
were elected; they are not your boys or your girls.
“You sit with them and play with them. I travelled with my
Speakers, and I created relationships. It’s not a master-servant thing.”
On Monday, Tony Okocha, chairman of the All Progressives
Congress (APC) in Rivers state, asked Fubara to resign or face impeachment
proceedings.
Okocha said that the recent supreme court ruling on the
state’s political crisis is final, describing Fubara’s invitation to the Martin
Amaewhule-led assembly faction for a meeting as a “Greek gift”.
BACKGROUND
Rivers has been enmeshed in political crisis following the conflict between Fubara and Wike.
On February 28, the supreme court affirmed the judgment of a
federal high court that barred the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the
accountant-general of the federation from releasing statutory monthly
allocations to Rivers state.
The supreme court also nullified the local government election
held in Rivers state on October 5, 2024.
Fubara had promised to comply with the judgment of the apex
court.
On Sunday, the Rivers governor invited the Amaewhule-led
house of assembly members to a meeting scheduled for Monday.
Fubara’s invitation was viewed as a step towards resolving
the Rivers assembly crisis that began in 2023.
The FCT minister, however, criticised Fubara for writing to
the state house of assembly, stating that he should have called Amaewhule and
his team to arrange a meeting. He also described the letter from Fubara as
“useless”.