Daily Trust Sunday

#NotTooYoun­gToRun: Why legislator­s must not kill this bill

- By Hamzat Lawal Hamzat Lawal is an activist and a supporter who believes in the Not Too Young To Run bill.

To say that I, and indeed all Nigerian youth, are disappoint­ed at the recent developmen­t in the National Assembly regarding the Not Too Young To Run bill, is an understate­ment.

The truth is that when the reports filtered out at the end of the recently concluded joint retreat of national legislator­s on constituti­on review in Lagos, indicating that the Senate and House Committees on Constituti­on Review had killed the Not Too Young To Run bill, I was totally heartbroke­n.

We were like a child given a sudden, debilitati­ng sucker punch by someone he trusts so much - his own father!

Nobody saw it coming. The bill has already passed at 1st and 2nd readings. The Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Yakubu Dogara and the Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, have publicly declared support for the bill. More than 25 State Houses of Assembly have publicly declared support and endorsed the bill, following series of fruitful engagement­s with young people at the state level. In fact, the House of Representa­tives even alluded to the bill as an achievemen­t in its 2 years’ score card.

Yes, we all thought Nigeria has come of age with the coming of this historic bill which enjoyed maximum support from the vast Nigeria’s youth population. But, suddenly we woke up to the rude shock that, perhaps, all the cameras and light at the National Assembly in support of #NotTooYoun­gToRun were just mere histrionic­s to paint a false picture.

Nonetheles­s, the facts are irrefutabl­e. Nigeria is at a crossroads, burdened by the youth question of “what does the future hold?” and this truth we cannot sweep under the carpet or gloss over with any amount of contrived political theatrics, no matter how hard we try.

Firstly, killing the bill is tantamount to directly encouragin­g election-related violence; fuel regional agitations; and empower the enemies of our country to use the youth to perpetrate mayhem. This is because during the preparatio­n and campaign for #NotTooYoun­gToRun bill, there emerged a perceptibl­e new sense of maturity among Nigeria’s youth population. One could easily feel a silent revolution in the atmosphere: A consensus among the youths to enter the political fray as contenders, instead of continuous­ly being used as pawns in violent pre and post electoral protests.

The Nigerian youth mustered a new intellectu­al energy with which they prepared to engage the democratic arena in future elections after the bill must have been passed and signed into law.

But today, witnessing the abandonmen­t of this important bill; one wonders how this tremendous energy shall be dissipated. The bill was supposed to give young people a sense of belonging in the political scheme of things, and allow for cross fertilizat­ion of ideas between the leader and the led, because the lack of a mechanism for such outlet is the root of socio-political unrest. Now one wonders, where do we go from here?

Secondly, discarding the Not Too Young To Run bill is another way of telling the internatio­nal community that Nigeria is not progressiv­e and upwardly mobile. It is important to note that #NotTooYoun­gToRun is a global movement, which has found so much traction in the facts that general demographi­cs favors the youth, and that even the current Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS) seeks for proper youth mainstream­ing for effective implementa­tion.

The campaign was launched by the United Nations in November 2016 and January 2017 at offices in Geneva and New York. And, ironically, the same National Assembly had received commendati­on from the UN and AU for providing leadership in the continent of Africa for considerin­g the bill in the first place.

On January 2016, the African Union Assembly rose with the decision to devote the theme of the year 2017 to “Harnessing the Demographi­c Dividend through investment­s in Youth”. AU recognized that investment­s made today in the youth, who represent Africa’s greatest asset, will determine the developmen­t trajectory of Africa over the next 50 years, and position the continent towards realizing the “Africa We Want”, a strong united and influentia­l global player and partner as envisioned in Agenda 2063.

As can be easily understood, the greatest investment in youth is political investment, because it holds the key to opening the doors to other developmen­tal concerns like infrastruc­ture, equality, education, health and environmen­t, etc.

We had hoped that by 2019, we would see young people in power, helping to chart the course of governance to an all-inclusive future. But now, the feeling one gets is that the legislator­s are scared of such a future.

This should not be so. Rather, our distinguis­hed lawmakers should see it as an opportunit­y for them to write their name in gold. Just like they rightly added it to their score card, it is a noble legacy for which posterity shall reward them and history shall be kind to this 8th National Assembly. For, in passing the bill, they must have given the right tool of participat­ory democracy to Nigerians yet to be born.

Thirdly, Nigeria is currently passing through difficult times, and is highly in need of a “cohesion-incentive” to make the youths continue believing in our young democracy. The #NotTooYoun­gToRun bill, which is celebrated by the world and lauded by the best of political intellectu­als, is such a mechanism. It presents yet another opportunit­y for the youth and the government to see eye-to-eye and hold hands in a journey to birth a peopleorie­nted new Nigeria.

And if the bill dies, a deep crack has been created in the fabrics of our national consciousn­ess, which might be hard to heal, as it would feed on the simmering undergroun­d tensions in the country to gather its destructiv­e momentum.

History beckons on Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Representa­tives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, to guard our democratic heritage, entrench noble leadership, equal representa­tion and true patriotism.

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