General News of Wednesday, 26 March 2025
Source: www.mynigeria.com
A former minister of education Oby Ezekwesili has revealed why she told the lawmaker representing Ebonyi North, Onyekachi Nwebonyi, to shut up
Both of them engaged in a shouting match during the Senate ethics committee hearing on the sexual harassment allegation levelled against the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, by suspended Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan.
During the heated exchange, Ezekwesili told the Senator to shut up. In return, the lawmaker, said, "You're an insult to womanhood."
Speaking during an interview on Arise TV, Ezekwesili explained how the drama began.
She said,“The petitioner had insisted that he would not proceed with his main petition until he received assurances regarding the two objections he had raised.
“However, the panel interpreted this stance as a sign that we were not ready to engage in the matter.
“Then, suddenly, they also argued that the case was sub-judice because there were two related cases in court.
“They mentioned the case filed by the wife of the senate president and suggested that, based on that, proceedings should not continue.
“At that point, Dr. Abiola questioned the very basis for convening the jury. While all of this was unfolding, a certain senator—whom I will not acknowledge by name—spoke up (referring to Nwaebonyi).
“He declared that since we were unwilling to provide any testimony, he was present as a representative of the senate president, who was the respondent, and that he was prepared to speak because, in his view, we could not continue in this manner.
“In response, ‘I said to him, can you please shut up?’ because we had just been informed that we were not allowed to speak, yet he was doing so freely without any form of an equivalent treatment.
“The justification for silencing us was that we were unwilling to proceed without first addressing our objections.
“When I told him to be quiet and that remark provoked the senator, though he was already agitated.
“He was already provoked, his anger stemmed from the belief that we were not taking the matter seriously.”
ASA