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By Myke Agunwa
The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has condemned the continued obstruction of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s return to the Senate, describing it as a breach of the constitution and a flagrant affront on Nigeria’s democratic values.
In a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, the party accused the Senate leadership of defying both legal precedent and moral responsibility by refusing to allow the Kogi Central lawmaker to resume her duties after serving a six-month suspension.
The ADC further warned that the ongoing blockade reflects a broader APC-led government’s anti-democratic temper which has sought to silence opposition voices and punish dissent. The party said that singling out Senator Natasha for such harsh treatment may further suppress women’s political participation.
It reminded the leadership of the Red Chambers that “the suspension of Senator Natasha was imposed by the Senate, not by a court of law. And whether one agrees with the basis for that decision or not, the tenure of that disciplinary action has lapsed. Any further attempt to prevent her from resuming is therefore both illegal and morally indefensible.
“This is not about partisan politics. It is about a dangerous precedent being set within our legislative institutions, one that reduces democratic representation to the whims of a few individuals rather than the will of the electorate. It is about a political culture that appears more invested in punishing dissent than in upholding justice”.
ADC lamented that her constituency elected her to speak on their behalf and denying her access to the chamber is, by extension, denying her constituents the right to be heard.
“It is especially troubling that during the course of her suspension, Senator Natasha was denied her salaries, legislative aides, and access to her office. These are not privileges, but instruments of public service. To strip an elected senator of these tools is not discipline, it is institutional mugging.
“Even more disturbing is the posture of the Senate leadership, which has continued to act as though legislative power can be exercised without accountability. We challenge the Senate President and his colleagues to explain why a suspension that has run its course should be made indefinite by stealth” ADC stated.
The party told the Senate leadership that several respected Senior Advocates of Nigeria are in agreement that Senator Natasha’s suspension, having fully lapsed and it can no longer be used as a justification to deny her return.
According to the coalition party, “A pending legal appeal does not suspend constitutional rights, nor does it grant any official the power to override the mandate of the electorate. To continue barring her from office is therefore a violation of the constitution. The Senate, as the nation’s highest lawmaking body, must not be seen to violate the very laws it exists to uphold”.
The party deflated the comment by the Clerk of the National Assembly that the step down on processing her resumption was on the grounds that the matter is subjudice.
“While the Clerk may claim administrative caution, what is being projected is administrative complicity. His role is not to adjudicate but to facilitate. When the administrative machinery becomes hostage to political interests, the institution itself is diminished,” the party said.
The ADC noted the broader implications of the Senate’s treatment of one of its very females for the cause of women’s political participation generally.
“Senator Natasha is one of only four women in a Senate of 109 members. Nigeria’s paltry female representation of 2.7 % is already among the worst record of women political participation even in Africa. Any action that resembles gendered intimidation of the few women in the Senate would only discourage women participation and make Nigeria appear even worse in the eyes of the world. Nigeria cannot claim to be a democracy while marginalizing half of its population from its most critical spaces of decision-making. The soul of democracy lies in its capacity to accommodate dissent, protect the minority voice, and uphold the rule of law, no matter how inconvenient. What is at stake here is not just one Senate seat, but the integrity of our democracy itself” the party stated.
The ADC reaffirmed its commitment to defend democratic principles and women’s political participation.