The representative of Lagos-Central
Senatorial District in the Senate, Chief Oluremi Tinubu, said as a
Christian she has forgiven her Kogi-West counterpart, Senator Dino
Melaye. But she added that she would not be intimidated by anybody.
Mrs Tinubu said this on Wednesday when a
delegation of the Lagos State House of Assembly members from
Lagos-Central and members of the All Progressives Congress caucus in the
Senate as well as some party leaders paid her a solidarity visit at the
National Assembly Complex, Abuja, on Wednesday.
The Lagos-Central caucus was led by Senator Muniru Muse, while the National Assembly caucus was led by Senator Gbenga Ashafa.
Mrs Tinubu had accused Melaye of assaulting her verbally during an executive session of the Senate last week Tuesday.
Melaye, who denied the allegation, had also made counter-claims that the female lawmaker also assaulted him verbally.
Mrs Tinubu said she shed tears for the first time after she thought about what transpired in the Senate for some days on Wednesday, on her encounter with Melaye.
She said, “When the Senate President
invited me yesterday (Tuesday) and I gave my word. You can see the
channel I have taken in the aftermath of the event. I reported to the
IGP; I wrote to him also, after I waited for one week. When it happened,
it was him I went to. I waited for one week and nothing was done. I
also wrote to the party (the APC) chairman.
“I met with the Senate leadership
yesterday (Tuesday) after one week; I met with him (Senate President
Bukola Saraki) yesterday. And as a Christian, I said I had already
forgiven him (Melaye) for the way I was treated. But the point is that
what people don’t realise is that I am a very reserved person.
“After I gave my word to him (Saraki) yesterday, I told myself that at 55 I am not a wimp of anybody.
“I witnessed the Sani Abacha regime and I
know what I saw and why I am committed to this cause. But now, my hands
are tied to say I forgive people. I am a Christian; when I give my
word, I must abide by it. But I am not scared to follow this through.
“I am not championing a cause for women.
I am only standing in my space and if my space is encroached upon, I
have to fight back. Rosa Parks wasn’t an activist; she just decided to
sit in her space and not give up her space to anybody in a bus. And that
sent a message.
“I want to use this opportunity to thank
all Nigerian women who rose up; the women rights groups who are
calling, conducting press conferences and doing a lot of things.”
The senator also denied sponsoring women
groups to protest on her behalf against Melaye. She stated that she had
given her best to her constituency in the past five years and that
inspired the protests that had trailed the verbal assault on her.
“I didn’t give anybody anything; I don’t
even have N80m in my personal salary account in the Senate. And I don’t
think if I have any other savings I want to use it to mobilise women to
protest. What about the investments we have put into politics? How much
has that done for this country?” Tinubu said.
Earlier on Tuesday, hundreds of women
from various groups had besieged the main gate of the National Assembly
Complex, asking the leadership of the federal legislature to act on the
matter.
The Woman Leader of the APC in
South-West, Mrs. Kemi Nelson, stated that the assault on Tinubu was not
only on the lawmaker alone but an insult to the women fold.
She argued that the protests were not
all about Tinubu but in the general interest of women, more of whom,
Nelson said, were now becoming victims of abuses and assault.
She said, “Enough is enough of such
assault from Melaye to any woman in the society and the Senate must take
a disciplinary action against him. This is impunity and it has to be
stopped. We must be accorded out rights.”
Earlier, some members of the Lagos State
House of Assembly on Wednesday besieged the National Secretariat of the
APC to protest against Melaye.
The protesters including Desmond Elliot were led by the Deputy Speaker of the state House of Assembly, Mr. Wasiu Sani.
They said they were at the party headquarters to register their displeasure over Melaye’s alleged verbal assault on Mrs. Tinubu.
They also alleged that there appeared to
be a conspiracy of silence by the leadership of the Senate over the
incident, noting that as loyal party members, they could not fold their
hands and watch the party’s cherished values of loyalty and respect for
leaders being denigrated.
Sani, who later addressed newsmen after
the closed door meeting with the party’s National Chairman, Chief John
Odigie-Oyegun, said, “We are here to pay solidarity visit to Senator
Oluremi Tinubu, that we condemn the act, she should not be intimidated
and she should not yield to verbal assault.”
In response to allegations that the
protest was sponsored, the lawmaker said, nobody sponsored them as “we
are buoyant enough to sponsor ourselves.”
He also commented on allegations that Mrs. Tinubu was fond of causing trouble in the Senate.
The deputy speaker said, “For us, these are mere allegations. They are unproven.”
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