On Thursday, March 06, 2025, former Kaduna Senator Shehu Sani dropped a bombshell on X, revealing he narrowly escaped a six-month Senate suspension in 2018 for spilling the beans on lawmakers’ paychecks. “I disclosed senators’ N13.5 million monthly running costs and N200 million constituency funds,” he wrote. “It nearly cost me six months—divine intervention and Saraki plus Ekweremadu’s quick save pulled me back.” His post lands as the 10th Senate reels from suspending Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan (PDP, Kogi Central) for the same duration, spotlighting a pattern of silencing dissent.
Sani’s 2018 revelation—exposing a hush-hush world of lavish allowances—ruffled feathers in a Senate that guards its finances like state secrets. Colleagues bristled, but then-Senate President Bukola Saraki and Deputy Ike Ekweremadu shielded him from the gavel. Fast forward to 2025, and Akpoti-Uduaghan wasn’t so fortunate. Her six-month ban, rubber-stamped on March 06 after an Ethics Committee report, stems from a February 20 clash with Senate President Godswill Akpabio over a seat reassignment. Things escalated when she accused Akpabio of sexual harassment on Arise TV February 28, claiming her woes began after rejecting his alleged advances.
The parallels are striking—both senators challenged the status quo, both faced the Senate’s wrath. Sani’s disclosure aimed to lift the veil on opaque perks; Akpoti-Uduaghan’s defiance spotlighted alleged misconduct at the top. Yet, where Sani had allies to dodge the axe, Akpoti-Uduaghan’s suspension—despite a court order barring the probe—screams impunity. “We’re not a Banana Republic,” ex-Chief Whip Rowland Owie tweeted, warning the 10th Senate risks sinking its integrity. Sani’s escape proves it’s not the first time the chamber’s flexed muscle to muzzle.
X is electric. “Sani got lucky—Natasha’s paying the price for speaking out,” one user posted. Another jabbed, “Akpabio’s crew learned from 2018: silence the loud ones fast.” Atiku calls it an “attack on affirmative action,” Obi deems it “disappointing,” and Afe Annang demands her recall, defending Akpabio as a wronged son. Legal eagles cry foul—the suspension flouts a court injunction, echoing Sani’s near-miss with unchecked power.
Sani’s reflection isn’t just nostalgia—it’s a warning. “I nearly lost six months for transparency,” he implies; Akpoti-Uduaghan’s losing it for defiance. Her vow to serve Kogi Central “till 2027 and beyond” defies the ban’s legitimacy, much like Sani’s truth defied secrecy. But the 10th Senate’s heavier hand—ignoring courts, brushing off due process—hints at a chamber less tolerant than Saraki’s. On X, the debate rages: Is this discipline or a vendetta? Sani’s salvation by “divine intervention” contrasts Akpoti-Uduaghan’s fall, spotlighting a Senate that spares some rebels and crushes others. As Nigeria watches, one thing’s clear: speaking truth to power still comes with a six-month gamble—luck decides who walks free.
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