Politics
Constitution review: Governors stalemate NASS efforts
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By Adeleye Kunle
The Constitution review by the ninth National Assembly may have been caught up with the conflict of interest between the lawmakers and the State Houses of Assembly, given that seven months after transmission of the document in line with the provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 as amended, only 11 out of 36 States of the Federation forwarded their resolutions to the National Assembly.
Chairman of the Constitution Review Committee and Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, penultimate week at a press briefing expressed frustration over the refusal of 25 State Assemblies which he believed were working in cahoots with their governors to react either in favour or against which is within their statutory responsibility.
Omo-Agege opined that the issue of Constitution review posed a credibility crisis to the ninth parliamentarians, having promised Nigerians of a Constitution amendment that would be acceptable to all. His fears were also at the likelihood of effluxion of time and the ninth National Assembly has seven months to exit.
He explained that the document transmitted to the various State Houses of Assembly on 26th March, 2022, for their attention constituted 44 bills that were earlier approved by the joint Committee of the upper and lower legislative Chambers out of the 66 bills recommended. Sadly, after a long wait, he said his Committee became inundated with calls over the fate of the proposed amendment.
More worrisome was the antecedent of failed attempts to amend the Constitution in the past under the Committee Chairmanship of the now embattled Senator Ike Ekweremadu, when he was the Deputy Senate President from 2011 to 2019. To change the narrative and rewrite history, Omo-Agege said his Committee expeditiously transmitted the bills to State Houses of Assembly.
He argued that the proposed amendment as detailed in the 44 bills would enhance democratic governance in Nigeria, wondering why some governors and State Assemblies were at a loss with what the nation stands to benefit. Citing an alteration of some provisions of the Constitution between 2003 and 2007, that bothers on the Electoral Act, the lawmaker averred that it enhanced the conduct of elections in Nigeria.
He said: “Between 2003 and 2007, successive Assemblies have employed an incremental approach to altering the Constitution. Hence, the First, Second, Third and Fourth Constitution (Alteration) Acts were passed and enacted.
“These amendments undoubtedly improved our electoral management and adjudication systems, fostered political participation and addressed other fundamental good governance issues.”
According to Omo-Agege, the move to amend the Constitution was notoriously triggered by relentless agitation by the citizens, who believed the amendment would solve some contemporary social and political challenges, stressing that the process was subjected to the citizen participation so as to capture their agitation.
The citizens’ participation, in all intents, according to him, was to give the proposed Constitution ”a people-oriented working document, hence, the Committee received submissions from socio-cultural, socio-political, Civil Society and interest groups from across the entire geopolitical zones of the country. Agitations, as contained in various submissions, formed the fulcrum of the 44 bills that were transmitted to the 36 State Houses of Assembly on 29th March 2022 for approval in line with Section 9(2) stipulations of the Constitution.”
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