Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, the senator representing Kogi Central, has stated that her suspension from the National Assembly was not a spontaneous decision but rather the result of a politically motivated and premeditated agenda.
During an interview with Adeola Fayehun, a Nigerian journalist based in the United States, Akpoti-Uduaghan described the March 6 episode as part of a “calculated plan” rather than a sudden development.
She dismissed the accusation that she caused a disturbance over her seat as untrue.
“The impression being circulated is that I caused a scene over my seat. That is false,” she said.
She explained that she had raised a point of privilege in line with chapter 4, Item 9b of the Senate rules, which she said required urgent attention.
“But the senate president cut me off, ordered the sergeant-at-arms to remove me, and directed the clerk to begin preparing my suspension letter. That wasn’t a reaction; it was a pre-written script.”
She accused the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, of overstepping his authority by ordering her removal from the chamber without following proper procedure.
“He has no authority to unilaterally suspend any senator on the floor. The way he handled it — like I was a staff member in his living room — was not only unlawful but also degrading,” she said.
She explained that her reaction was in response to a decision that appeared to have already been made before the sitting.
Akpoti-Uduaghan added that her suspension came right after she filed a formal complaint against the Senate leadership.
“I believe my suspension was retaliatory. The ethics report they cited was merely a smokescreen. I had submitted allegations that shook the system, and the next day, I was silenced,” she said.
She also addressed a statement made by Sandra Duru, who accused her of attempting to undermine a government led by someone from the South-West.
Akpoti-Uduaghan dismissed the allegation and said her actions are not driven by ethnic bias.
“People who know me know that I am not a tribalist. I respect and appreciate every tribe in Nigeria, every ethnicity,” she said.
“I am half Nigerian and half Ukrainian — who am I to talk about tribe when I am actually one part of the other world? That is not my nature; that is not my language.”
She alleged that Duru’s comments were influenced by political forces concerned about her widespread support.
“If anybody said that, it’s probably her team, the people who have sponsored her,” she said.
“Her sponsors are the ones who have probably put those words to her because they knew that I had enjoyed a lot of support from Nigerians — not just in Kogi state, but across the country and even in the diaspora.”
Akpoti-Uduaghan said that Senate President Akpabio was displeased with the good relationship she had developed with President Bola Tinubu.
“The senate president, Godswill Akpabio, also knows that I enjoyed a good relationship with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu,” she said.
“I have not said it in the open before, but I am saying it now, and that actually annoyed him because there was a time when the senate president told my husband, ‘Are you aware that your wife goes to see the President?’ and my husband told him he was aware.
“Whenever I have critical issues to raise — like before I brought up the issue of probing Ajaokuta — I did meet with Mr President to make sure he knew the nature of it, and he was okay with it. For other matters too, I have met him in person.
“So, I do not have a hostile relationship with the president, even though I am in the opposition. I keep saying, the good people of Kogi central voted me as a senator to work, not to antagonise or create enmity.
“I want the people to know my issue is with the senate president — not the entire senate, the Nigerian people, the institutions, or the presidency.”
Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended from the Senate on grounds of gross misconduct after a confrontation with Akpabio concerning her seat.
She argued that the suspension was unlawful and unfair, and that it was aimed at silencing her voice.
She further rejected the Senate’s claim that her suspension was unrelated to the sexual harassment allegation she made against Akpabio.