The Nasarawa State House of Assembly Thursday served Governor Umaru Tanko Al-Makura impeachment notice through the media, since he had been elusive to be personally served the notice since Monday, according to the House.
The governor had been accused of 16 offences summed up as “gross misconduct”.
Al-Makura was reported to have rushed to the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Wednesday to plead with President Goodluck Jonathan to intervene so that the impeachment noose could be staved off, but the public service of the notice yesterday indicated that his plea caught no ice with the presidency.
Section 188 of the 1999 constitution as amended stipulates that “the Speaker of the House of Assembly shall, within seven days of the receipt of the notice cause a copy of the notice to be served on the holder of the office and on each member of the House of Assembly, and shall also cause any statement made in reply to the allegations by the holder of the office to be served on each member of the House of Assembly.”
However, the Speaker of the Nasarawa House of Assembly, Alhaji Musa Mohammed, directed the Clerk of the House, Mr. Ego Abashe, to serve the governor through a substituted means should he remain unreachable in person.
“In the event that His Excellency, Governor Tanko Al-Makura, cannot be reached for service, the clerk is directed to serve him with the impeachment notice through the media,” he said.
To dissuade the lawmakers from going ahead with the impeachment plot, thousands of youths had trooped to the streets of Lafia, the state capital, and to the state house of assembly to protest the attempt to oust the governor. But that did not stop 20 out of the 24 lawmakers in the House from endorsing the impeachment notice which was also published in the newspapers.