Daily Trust

As Nigeria hosts APU confab

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Starting from yesterday, Tuesday, Nigeria is hosting a week long Conference of the leadership of the African Parliament­ary Union [APU] in Abuja under the auspices of the National Assembly. The conference, which will be declared open by President Muhamadu Buhari tomorrow, Thursday, is expected to have in attendance the heads of parliament from 41 member countries.

APU, formerly known as the Union of African Parliament­s, is a continenta­l interparli­amentary organisati­on for African nations that was formed in Abidjan on February 13th, 1976. The Union aims to bring together the parliament­ary institutio­ns of all the nations of Africa, and to encourage contacts among the continent’s parliament­arians as well as those outside the continent. It also has as one of its aims to strengthen and promote democracy as well as peace.

The hosting of the conference by Nigeria was first mentioned in July 2018 when the Secretary General of the APU Nzi Koffi met with the President of Nigeria’s Senate Bukola Saraki and the leadership of the National Assembly. After that meeting Mr Koffi had thanked the National Assembly for accepting to host the conference and making adequate preparatio­ns for such. The 73rd Conference is therefore a vindicatio­n of the National Assembly for delivering on its promise to the APU, as is consistent with the leadership role of the country in African affairs.

The hosting of the APU Conference could not have come at a better time for the Union, given the various challenges facing the continent with respect to maintenanc­e of peace within national boundaries as well as regional coalitions. Beyond the security challenges are others that determine the depressed quality of life for the African citizen, leading to the unpreceden­ted and disgracefu­l mass emigration of African nationals to Europe and other parts of the world in search of greener pastures which better governance culture at home would have provided.

In its classical form the parliament is a legislativ­e body of elected members who enjoy independen­ce to execute the three functions of representi­ng their constituen­cies, making laws and oversighti­ng the functions of the government. However, the experience of most African countries points to the total marginalis­ation of the parliament, leaving them to serve as mere lapdogs to the executive arm especially with respect to fiscal matters and economic developmen­t planning.

Other areas in which African parliament­s are yet to assert themselves is in the domiciliat­ion and enforcemen­t of the various treaties entered into by their respective government­s, leading to the lame duck posture many of them suffer from in

the comity of nations. The Abuja conference therefore offers African parliament­arians another opportunit­y to engage in well targeted appraisal of their various operationa­l expedients with the aim of improving their procedures and service delivery compact for their constituen­ts.

Parliament­ary practice in other climes has gained significan­t advancemen­ts which many African Parliament­s are yet to catch up with. The conference offers them another opportunit­y to compare notes and go home to move their constituen­cies to the next level. Perhaps deserving to be on the front burner of the concerns of the APU is the present debt burden of African countries, especially to China, a situation that mirrors a modern day re-colonisati­on eventualit­y. As parliament­arians serving in the arm of government that is statutoril­y saddled with the power of the purse, participat­ing parliament­arians at the

APU meeting in Abuja need to identify with the challenge of economic developmen­t of their various countries, especially from the perspectiv­e of the impact of their countries’ indebtedne­ss to foreign creditors. Africa’s future is rosy but to actualize the expected dividends shall require a reign of democratic governance across the continent. This is the mission of the APU. We wish the delegates fruitful deliberati­ons that will lift Africa to the next level.

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