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Why Nat’l Assembly wants to strip FG of some powers –Ekweremadu

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INSECURITY: Spend all the money in CBN on police, army, nothing will change —Ekweremadu

Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu on Saturday disclosed to newsmen that some of the contentious issues in the 1999 Constitution would be reviewed to meet the yearnings of the generality of Nigerians.
With that position, the Federal Government is bound to lose some of the powers it currently wields under the 1999 Constitution.

Ekweremadu, who stated this in Lagos at the end of the annual joint retreat of the Senate and House of Representatives Committee on the Review of the 1999 Constitution, assured that some of the proposed amendment which had more power devolve to the states, will be eventually adopted.

According to him, with the growing demands for the restructuring of the country and other agitations, the 1999 Constitution requires fundamental reforms in the interest of the nation’s development.
The deputy Senate president said that the lawmakers broke all the issues into specific bills and that between Friday and Saturday they were able to look at about 23 separate bills with separate issues.

According to him, “The idea is to ensure that by the time we vote, each of them succeeds or fails on its own. When we conclude the work, we’ll send it to the house to approve. We will collate and ensure that the provisions of the constitution have been fulfilled regarding the alteration, and we will send it to the president for his assent. And the president will decide which one to assent to or not to assent to.

“The implication therefore is that if he assents to some, then those one become part of the constitution. And the one he refuses to assent to, then we might decide whether to override the veto.

“So, we want each of them to have a separate life of its own. And this is based on our own experience in the last exercise where everything was in one single bill and when the president withheld his assent, all of them collapsed.
“This is just an improvement on what we did last time. It is something we innovated based on our experience in the last exercise.”

Other issues the committee put into consideration according to Ekweremadu, was the time frame within which the president or state governor has to assent to a bill and the issue of restructuring.

“You know we have been talking about the restructuring of Nigeria. One of the components of restructuring is that they are saying that there is too much power in the hands of the federal government and we need to strip some of them from the federal government.

“What we have done is to look at the issue. Some items will be removed from the exclusive list to the concurrent list where the federal and the states can make laws regarding some of those items. And where there is a conflict, the laws of the National Assembly will prevail.

“So, things like railways will have to be moved to the concurrent list. The idea is that states can build railways within their territory and then a couple of states can even decide to build railways across their states. The federal government can also build railways across the country and make policy around it.

“There should be minimum wage for both the public sector and private sector, which is to say that, if it is N5000 don’t pay any person less than N5000 but can be increased. If Lagos has more money, it can pay beyond the minimum wage. All those who don’t have money cannot pay below the minimum way no matter how poor they are.

“So, in that way we have a minimum standard for workers in Nigeria,” he said.

Read also: Northern elders go after Presidency cabal, ‎vow to resist plans to hijack power‎

On the committee’s plans to hold more consultations on the possibility of scrapping the joint local government account, he said, “The challenge there has been how you take care of the issue of teachers’ salaries because it is from the joint local governments/state account that primary school teachers’ salaries are paid.

“So, we want to be sure that if we remove the joint local government- state account we will not jeopardize the payment of teacher salaries.

“That is a very contentious issue, so we said we have to do further consultations with the National Union of Teachers (NUT) and other stakeholders before we can take a decision on that to be sure that we don’t create more problems when we are trying to solve an existing problem.

“So, that is not part of what we are going to present to the National Assembly when we get back.
“We believe we have done sufficient work. This is an incremental approach that we have adopted in the amendment of the constitution. So, what we are saying that after we have finished with this, if we still have more time before election, otherwise maybe the next assembly will decide what to do.”

 

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0 Comments

  1. JOHNSON PETER

    July 16, 2017 at 2:00 pm

    Don’t bother stripping the federal government their power Mr Ekwe, Biafra is seceding and that’s the final

    • Anita Kingsley

      July 16, 2017 at 8:30 pm

      That’s their the senate are there for, let them do their job, itvstill wont stop Biafra from moving out of nigeria, if they don’t politicize their ammendmanets, it will be good for The people of Nigeria

      • yanju omotodun

        July 16, 2017 at 9:44 pm

        See Two mumu contradicting themselves. You people are confused.

  2. Animashaun Ayodeji

    July 16, 2017 at 8:28 pm

    Very impressive on the part of salary, however, the senate should make sure the minimum wage is mouthwatering enough to cater for people’s need in times of recession like this.

  3. Abeni Adebisi

    July 16, 2017 at 8:45 pm

    Amending the constitution isn’t the problem, the problem is are those who will amend the constitution going to be true to Nigerians and not make the amended version one sided?

  4. yanju omotodun

    July 16, 2017 at 9:46 pm

    Our constitution is never our problem but our strict flouting of the constitution and lack of proper interpretation of the constitution

    • seyi jelili

      July 17, 2017 at 5:30 am

      The constitution is also a problem, it granted more powers to the Senate which is militating our democracy

  5. seyi jelili

    July 17, 2017 at 5:29 am

    It’s the Senate that will be denied some powers and not the federal government.

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