Nigeria president still out: VP Goodluck Jonathan takes over
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| Abuja, Nigeria
A federal court handed Nigeria鈥檚 vice-president the power to carry out state affairs while his boss, President Umaru Yar鈥橝dua, continues treatment in a Saudi Arabian hospital.
Seven weeks of constitutional confusion have followed Mr. Yar鈥橝dua鈥檚 sudden departure because he did not tell the National Assembly that he was going and did not officially pass the baton to his deputy, Goodluck Jonathan.
A judge in the capital, Abuja, on Wednesday ruled that Mr. Jonathan had the authority to take the reins in a judgment which immediately brought claims of skulduggery from demonstrators and those in the political opposition. Nigeria's political crisis has not been solved by this ruling, say analysts.
Opponents have been increasingly pushing for prescribed constitutional mechanisms designed to pass on power in case the president is incapacitated.
Three separate court cases were due to open in Abuja on Thursday, all aimed at forcing the president鈥檚 office to concede control to Mr. Jonathan. But Wednesday鈥檚 surprise hearing 鈥 few in Abuja knew that the case was scheduled 鈥 led to each of the other three legal hearings being adjourned.
Officially, power has not been handed to the vice president, a little known former governor of one of Nigeria鈥檚 oil-producing southern states. Instead, Wednesday鈥檚 court ruling simply stated that other sections of the constitution allow Mr. Jonathan to carry out the functions of the presidency even if powers have not officially been handed over.
Yar'Adua spoke publicly Monday
鈥淭his is completely illegal,鈥 said Benedict Ezeagu, an Abuja barrister and national secretary of the newly-formed Lawyers of Conscience pressure group.
鈥淚t may seem very technical, but it鈥檚 of crucial importance 鈥 we now have no idea who really is in charge of this country, who can enact laws, who represents us at this very trying time."
鈥淭he constitution, such as it is, is there to assist us at exactly times like this,鈥 says Ezeagu.
Yar鈥橝dua has been plagued with health problems since before he was elected in a disputed poll in 2007. He left for the King Faisal hospital in Jeddah on Nov. 23. He was not seen or heard from for 50 days until he gave a brief interview to the BBC鈥檚 Hausa language radio service late on Monday. Hausa is widely spoken across Nigeria鈥檚 majority Muslim north, where Mr. Yar鈥橝dua is from.
He sounded weak, but said he was "getting better" and promised to return to work as soon as his doctors agreed to it. No date was given.
His absence has thrown Africa鈥檚 most populous nation, which supplies almost a fifth of US oil, into even more of a political tailspin than it was before he left, when claims of inaction were regularly leveled at the presidency.
Since the president left, a peace process in the Niger Delta has effectively ground to a halt, with one militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, declaring it 鈥榙ead鈥 and threatening to rescind their ceasefire.
Gas supplies have almost run out, because extra import licenses sit unsigned on the president鈥檚 desk. Almost no new legislation has been approved.
鈥淛ust because a court says that the VP can carry on where the president left off does not mean that the crisis is past,鈥 said a Western diplomat in Abuja.
鈥淭here鈥檙e likely to be series of legal challenges to anything Goodluck signs or agrees in the next few weeks, from people keen to agitate this situation to their political profit. We鈥檙e not out of the woods yet.鈥