We are all colleagues, you can’t stop me from speaking – Chinda tells Gbajabiamila

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Hon. Chinda

Kingsley Chinda, the factional Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, has said Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila, has no right to stop him from speaking on the floor of the chamber.

Gbajabiamila had in the plenary of Thursday, blocked every attempt by factional Minority Leader to raise a point of order.

At different occasions, the Speaker said the lawmaker, who was in the seat reserved for the Minority Leader, would not be allowed to speak from a wrong seat. The Speaker had also warned the Chinda against testing the resolve of the House by insisting on speaking during the session.

Chinda and Ndudi Elumelu had emerged as factional Minority Leaders earlier on Wednesday, with the House and the Speaker recognising the latter.

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But speaking with newsmen over the weekend, Chinda said, “Part of my assignment as a legislator is to speak for the people of Obio/Akpor in particular and Nigerians in general. So, ordinarily I will not feel good that I am not given the opportunity to express myself no matter the issues.

“By the way, the issue I wanted to raise was that there were errors in the votes and proceedings, which is like the minutes of the previous sitting. I saw some mistakes in it and I wanted to correct it before the speaker approved it. In his words, even before I was heard, I was overruled and he adopted the votes and proceedings with the errors.

“I will still make attempts to correct them because I am under a duty to so do; maybe if given the opportunity or by a motion or notice.”

Chinda said, “I have a right to raise issues and he is just first among equals. We are all colleagues. I also understand the fact that he is human, perhaps his temperament went a little bit higher than the normal bounds that it should be. I don’t think that he will be in the same mood the next time we sit.”

He said, “I believe that his own feeling is that the appointment by my party was not done properly and that was why he took that position. But even at that, you also saw that with me on that front roll were some APC members who, of course, were not allotted that space. I insisted on laying emphasis on that seat because that was a minority roll; the seats for minority leaders. So, there is nothing an APC member will be looking for there. But he still recognised one of them to second a motion that was moved the same day. So, what is the issue of ‘you are not seated in your proper seat.’”

Asked if he still believed that he was the authentic Minority Leader, the lawmaker said, “The party had intervened; the party has asked that we should all stay action, that the party would take care of the issues. So, I am obedient to my party; having been told that, I will stay all actions until the party resolves. If the party says, ‘Hon. Chinda, ‘A’ is our Minority Leader,’ I will not raise a finger. It ends there because I was elected first as a parliamentarian, not as a minority leader. It is nothing to me. But I will always defend the position of my party.”

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