John Ameh and Bayo Akinloye
Barely 48 hours after he gave the nod to investigate the alleged sex scandal 
involving three members of the House of Representatives, Speaker Yakubu
 Dogara has said that his colleagues remain innocent until proven guilty.
He said neither his office nor the 360-member legislature would rush to pass 
judgement on its  Deputy Chairman, Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream),
 Mr. Mark Gbillah ( APC, Benue); Mr. Samuel Ikon (PDP, Akwa Ibom); and
 Mr. Mohammed Garba-Gololo (APC, Bauchi), who are the accused lawmakers.
Dogara in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs,
 Mr. Turaki Hassan, in Abuja on Saturday, also advised Nigerians to borrow a
 leaf from him by not condemning the three embattled members until the 
outcome of an investigation by the House.
“Judgement can only be passed when an allegation is proven,” Dogara maintained.
According to the speaker, he still believes that the three lawmakers would have
 known the implications of bringing “dishonour” to Nigeria by committing any of the 
alleged acts.
The speaker expressed the readiness of the House to work with the US Embassy in 
Nigeria to unravel the truth and punish offenders when proven guilty, but maintained
 that until the investigation proved their guilt, the three members were free and 
innocent citizens.
In a related development, in a series of tweets on Saturday, the Speaker staunchly 
rose to the defence of the lawmakers saying that the US should provide proof of the 
allegations of sexual misconduct against the House members.
When asked by a Twitter user, Poju, @pojugreat, who should provide evidence 
of sexual misconduct against the lawmaker, Dogara tweeted, “He who alleges 
must prove. That’s the law.
“As we speak, no evidence has been put forward other than the letter sent to my
 office and copied to many others.”