Alleged sex scandal: House clears three Reps of misconduct
The House of Representatives on Tuesday 
cleared three of its members of the sexual misconduct allegations 
levelled against them by a former United States Ambassador to Nigeria, 
Mr. James Entwistle.
Those accused are House Deputy Chairman,
 Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream), Mr. Terse Mark-Gbillah 
(APC, Benue); Mr. Samuel Ikon (PDP, Akwa Ibom); and Mr. Mohammed 
Garba-Gololo (APC, Bauchi).
The US authorities had accused the three
 senators of committing the alleged misconduct during a leadership 
training visit to the US last April, prompting the House to call for an 
investigation.
Its Joint Committees on Ethics/Privileges and Foreign Relations had conducted the investigation.
The committees were jointly chaired by Mr. Nicholas Ossai and Ms. Nnena Ukeje.
The tide of the allegations changed in 
favour of Mark-Gbillah, Garba-Gololo and Ikon after the Minister of 
Foreign Affairs, Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama, appeared before the committees on
 July 21 to testify that the US did not produce any concrete evidence to
 prove the allegations.
Entwistle too failed to appear before 
the committees while a female maid in a US hotel, who alleged that 
Garba-Gololo “grabbed” her, also declined to testify.
A report of the committees, which was 
considered and approved by the House in Abuja on Tuesday, cleared the 
members of any wrongdoing in the US.
The report made three recommendations to the session, which was presided over by the Deputy Speaker, Mr. Yussuff Lasun.
It read, “That Hon. Mohammed Garba 
Gololo, Hon. Mark Terseer Gbillah and Hon. Samuel Ikon are cleared of 
and exonerated from the allegations levelled against them by the United 
States Ambassador to Nigeria in his June 9, 2016 letter to the Rt. Hon. 
Speaker for want of evidence.
“That in the light of the foregoing, the
 Hon. Minister of Foreign Affairs do engage with the United States 
Ambassador to Nigeria, with a view to finding a seamless resolution of 
the domestic fallout of this unfortunate incident as it relates to Hon. 
Mohammed Garba-Gololo, Hon. Mark Terseer Gbillah and Hon. Samuel Ikon.
“That the Ministry of Foreign Affairs do
 write to remind the United States Embassy of the need to always adopt 
the official channel of communications in its dealings with any organ or
 institution of government.”
The House adopted all three recommendations soon after Ossai briefed members on the findings of the investigation.

 
 
 
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