Business Day (Nigeria)

Bill to protect Nigeria’s sovereignt­y passes second reading in Reps

- JAMES KWEN, Abuja

The House of Representa­tives Thursday passed for second reading, a bill for an Act to repeal Treaties (Making Procedure) Act, Cap 120, Laws of Federation of Nigeria 2004 and to re-enact new Treaties (Making Procedure) to protect Nigeria’s sovereignt­y and economic power.

Sponsored by Nicholas Ossai (PDP, Delta), section 8 of the bill makes it mandatory for approval of the two chambers of the National Assembly to first be sought and obtained before any ministry, department and agency (MDA) or person signs any treaty or agreement for and on behalf of Nigeria with any country or foreign based company or foreign body.

This, according to Ossai will forestall the repetition of the seeming ‘crisis’ seen in the Nigeria and China loan agreements and others.

Section 9 of the bill equally makes it mandatory for MDA, body or person who is a party in any signed treaty or agreement with any country to, within one month, transmit same to the federal ministry of justice, which is the depository of all treaties and to the two chambers of the National Assembly.

It also seeks to avoid conflict with the constituti­on and ensure conformity as some of the provisions of section 3 of the Principal Act that talks of “Classifica­tion of Treaties” is in conflict with section 12 of the 1999 Nigerian Constituti­on which provides for “Implementa­tion of Treaties and Agreements.”

The bill removes the word ”Classifica­tion” as provided in the Principal Act and only extends the implementa­tion provision of the constituti­on.

It adopted the provisions of section 12(2) of the Constituti­on by including both the Concurrent and Exclusive Legislativ­e Lists as matters to be legislated upon by the National Assembly.

Section 8 of the bill which provides for approval of the National Assembly before any treaty or agreement entered into by MDAS should be signed, upholds Order 18 Rules 93 of the house standing orders which direct the committee on treaties, protocols and agreements to be “Liaising with all the relevant MDAS before treaties are entered into by the Federal Government pursuant to section 12 of the constituti­on”.

In a debate before the bill scaled second reading, the sponsor, Ossai argued that: “considerin­g the role of Nigeria both in bilateral and multilater­al agreements in the West African sub-region, in the politics of Africa Union and the United Nations, and the impact of Nigeria adhering and imbibing global best legislativ­e practice and procedure with regards to treaty making procedure, it is obvious that repealing of the Principal Act and re-enacting a new one is long overdue and there is no better time than now”.

 ??  ?? L-R: Nduka Obaigbena, president, Newspaper Proprietor­s’ Associatio­n of Nigeria (NPAN); Lai Mohammed, minister of informatio­n and culture; Olusegun Osoba, life patron, NPAN, and Sam Amuka, patron, NPAN, during minister’s meeting with members of NPAN at their office in Lagos. NAN
L-R: Nduka Obaigbena, president, Newspaper Proprietor­s’ Associatio­n of Nigeria (NPAN); Lai Mohammed, minister of informatio­n and culture; Olusegun Osoba, life patron, NPAN, and Sam Amuka, patron, NPAN, during minister’s meeting with members of NPAN at their office in Lagos. NAN

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