A former Senate President, Senator Adolphus Wabara, has expressed disappointment over the simultaneous foreign trips embarked upon by President Bola Tinubu and his Vice President, Kashim Shettima, describing it as “the height of executive rascality”.
Wabara commented on Sunday while reacting to Tinubu’s trip to France for a two-week working visit and Shettima’s trip to Dakar, Senegal, to represent the President during the country’s 65th Independence Day anniversary celebrations on April 4.
The former Senate President faulted Tinubu and Shettima”for leaving Nigeria headless”.
He described the scenario as “a serious dereliction of duty and display of utter disregard for the people of Nigeria.”
He said, “Mr President has the right to travel outside the country when necessary, he should duly hand over power to his Vice President in an acting capacity.
“It is absolutely not proper for the VP who should be the Acting president to also travel out of the country while Mr President is still away.”
He said if Nigeria must be represented at the event in Senegal, the relevant government official, “in this case, the foreign affairs minister should have been delegated, instead of the vice president leaving the country headless.”
Wabara, who is also the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party, said he found it very strange that the president and his vice president abandoned governance and embarked on foreign trips simultaneously.
He wondered how the president and his vice arrived at placing a two-week vacation in France and participation in Senegal’s independence anniversary above the national interest of Nigeria.
He argued that abandoning the country at a time when so many national issues required the attention of the president and his vice “is to say the least, an insult both to Nigeria and the offices they occupy.”
While advising President Tinubu and his vice to stop toying with Nigerians’ future and face governance, Wabara said, “It’s baffling to hear that the President and his Vice both abandoned governance and travelled out of the country at the same time, thus leaving the country headless.
“How can the country be burning, and the number one and number two citizens of the country be away? This can only happen in Nigeria.
“How else can a leader show disdain for the people he swore an oath to lead and defend? Leaving the country headless at a time when so many boiling issues demand presidential intervention is a misplacement of priority.
“With the rising tension in Edo State and threats of reprisal in parts of the north; the bloodbath in Plateau, Zamfara, Sokoto and Benue; the political apprehension in Rivers and Bayelsa states; plus the festering insecurity in many states, travelling out of Nigeria is the least to expect from any serious-minded, patriotic President and his Vice.
“Tinubu and his vice, have again, clearly demonstrated that either they are overwhelmed or simply not prepared for governance. They have shown that they have little or no regard for Nigeria and Nigerians.”
The former Senate president urged the National Assembly not to fail in its constitutional role of acting as checks and balances to the executive to avoid impunity.
Wabara, who alleged that democracy in Nigeria was under state capture, warned against what he called “executive rascality.”
He advised the President to follow due process and standard governance practices and stop making the nation’s democracy a laughing stock before the global community.