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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
By Camillus Eboh

Nigerian opposition Senators urge Buhari's impeachment over security problems

FILE PHOTO: Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari arrives for the Leaders' Retreat, on the sidelines of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting at the Intare Conference centre in Kigali, Rwanda June 25, 2022. Dan Kitwood/Pool via REUTERS

Nigerian opposition Senators pushed for President Muhammadu Buhari to face impeachment, 10-months before the end of his second term in office, over the country's spreading security problems, the Senate minority leader said on Wednesday.

Nigerians go to the polls in February 2023 to elect a new president in a hotly contested vote where security and the state of economy will be the main issues.

At a closed Senate session, Senators of the People's Democratic Party (PDP) tried to introduce a motion giving Buhari six-weeks to improve the country's security or face impeachment, Senator Philip Aduda said.

"Nowhere is safe in Nigeria, even Abuja. Urgent steps need to be taken ... we have given the president six weeks to resolve the issue or we impeach him," he said.

Aduda said the motion was blocked by the Senate President, prompting a walkout by opposition Senators. Parliament is controlled by the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) party and any move to impeach Buhari would require support by two thirds of Senators.

The presidency in a statement backed the Senate President for not "entertaining the ridiculous motion to impeach our President".

Nigeria is struggling with security problems across its vast territory, including armed robberies by criminal gangs, an Islamic insurgency in the northeast and a spate of mass school abductions in the northwest.

The government's information minister Lai Mohammed said the impeachment move was propaganda.

"We are working round the clock ... to make sure the situation is brought under control," Mohammed said.

Nigerian authorities ordered schools in the capital Abuja to close on Wednesday two days ahead of summer holidays to avoid them becoming soft targets for terror as insecurity spreads, highlighting the country's security challenges.

Islamic State this month claimed responsibility for a prison raid in Abuja which freed around 440 inmates.

(Additional reporting by Felix Onuah; Writing by Chijioke Ohuocha; Editing by Richard Pullin)

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