The Senate on Thursday confirmed the nomination of a former Vice-Chancellor of Federal University of Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE), Prof. Abayomi Fasina, as a non-career ambassador.
Newsextra24 reports that the confirmation followed the presentation and adoption of the report by the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, chaired by Sen. Sani Bello, which recommended Fasina’s confirmation after screening.
Presenting the report, Sen. Simon Lalong (APC-Plateau South) said the committee interviewed Fasina, who answered questions satisfactorily regarding his public service experience, qualifications and suitability for the ambassadorial appointment.
Lalong said the committee found the nomination consistent with Section 171(4) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), requiring senate confirmation before ambassadorial appointments by the president could become legally effective.
He said the committee received petitions opposing and supporting Fasina’s nomination, and carefully reviewed every submission before reaching its recommendation after considering available evidence and relevant official reports.
The senator said that allegations of sexual harassment against Fasina at FUOYE were investigated by the university’s Governing Council and the Nigeria Police without substantiation.
He added that the Department of State Services (DSS) and the Nigeria Police Force also cleared the nominee, while committee members found him articulate and satisfactory during the screening exercise.
The committee, therefore, recommended Fasina’s confirmation, noting that all constitutional requirements had been fulfilled and that no official findings disqualified him from serving as Nigeria’s non-career ambassador.
NAN reports that during the debate, Sen. Adams Oshiomhole (APC-Edo North) opposed the former vice-chancellor’s immediate confirmation, citing allegations reportedly involving two women and matters he said were pending before competent courts for judicial determination.
Oshiomhole maintained that although Fasina remained innocent until proven guilty, confirming him before judicial resolution could appear insensitive to women raising concerns about the alleged misconduct and accountability question.
Responding, Lalong said the committee received no court documents or evidence confirming pending legal proceedings involving the nominee during screening, making allegations alone insufficient to deny confirmation.
He argued that the senate consistently upheld the constitutional principle that every accused person remained innocent until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction before punishment or sanctions.
Sen. Cyril Fasuyi (APC-Ekiti North) opposed the nomination, saying the university where Fasina served as vice-chancellor was located in his constituency and the allegations were widely discussed within the state.
Fasuyi said the complainant personally narrated her experience to him and urged the senate to mandate further investigation before taking a final decision on the ambassadorial nomination.
