The Guardian (Nigeria)

Measures to mainstream human rights in law- making process

- Www. guardian. ng By Ebun- Olu Adegboruwa Adegboruwa is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria ( SAN).

Dealing with legislator- electorate apathy

THE starting point of any genuine move at mainstream­ing human rights in the legislativ­e process must begin right from the source of legislativ­e authority. The fountain head from which any meaningful endeavour at mainstream­ing human rights in legislativ­e process may flow is the electorate, constituti­ng the masses at the grassroots. Power resides in the people, at least under section 14 ( 2) ( a) of the 1999 Constituti­on as amended. This power they donate through the ballots in elections.

They elect their representa­tives to represent their interests in government. However, there is no gainsaying the unfortunat­e fact that no sooner are certain lawmakers elected into office than they put as much distance as possible between themselves and those who elected them. The only time they get in touch with the members of their Senatorial Districts or Constituen­cies is electionee­ring seasons! This is unacceptab­le. Whatever transpired within the service years remains completely out of reach to the people.

How then can the felt needs of the people be appreciate­d? How can their pulse be felt when there is a great chasm fixed between them and their leaders? If the needs of the people are not even felt or appreciate­d how will their human rights be mainstream­ed by lawmakers? There is an indivisibl­e wedlock between the basic needs of the people and their Human Rights. What then providence has joined together, let no lawmaker put asunder!

Organic law making begins right from the embryo of the electorate­s’ interests. A good law is an articulati­on of the welfare and interest of the greatest number of the people for good. Lawmakers must take it upon themselves to ensure frequent periodic robust engagement with the people who elected them in the first place. They may do this through organising periodic accountabi­lity town hall meetings where the people will feel free to engage with them; through dialogues, debates, referendum­s, symposiums, etc.

It is from such contacts that the quintessen­tial legislator gleans his raw human data based purely on organic substance of real human rights, needs and interests. It is only then that the ideal lawmaker can serve as a channel to mainstream human rights in the law- making process through sponsorshi­p of Bills which directly address and cure issues of the Human Rights of the people.

Extensive training and retraining of lawmakers

Law making is systematic, having its own science and art. It is even more sophistica­ted today in a world that is fast becoming a global village and in which global best practices with technology- driven competence have become the drive- train of modern civilisati­on. It is recommende­d that lawmakers must devote ample time to unlearning, learning and relearning about their legislativ­e calling, especially on the global best practices in the area of human rights. A situation where a lawmaker has little or no idea about the tenets of the complexiti­es of law making and has no interest in continuing education, he or she is incapacita­ted to achieve the vision of mainstream­ing human rights in the law- making process.

Acting on and legislatin­g judicial decisions on human rights

Another very rich database of raw tools for mainstream­ing human rights in the process of law making is the legislatio­n of sound decisions of superior courts of record on human rights. Over the years, a lot of gray matter has gone into judicial interpreta­tion birthing laudable decisions on human rights. Activist and progressiv­e judges and justices have come up with landmark cases and pronouncem­ents which tend to redefine certain critical aspects of the Constituti­on particular­ly Chapter 4 and our juris corpus in general. It is suggested that such worthy judicial pronouncem­ents should be collated, carefully studied, transmuted to bills with a view to freezing the contents thereof into permanent legislatio­ns.

Championin­g constituti­onal reforms to make chapter two of the constituti­on justiciabl­e

Chapter 2 of the Constituti­on which is on the Fundamenta­l Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policies actually embodies in detail the substratum of fundamenta­l rights that are basic necessitie­s of life and social amenities which in effect are the essence of human rights. Consequent of such constituti­onal review, human rights legislatio­ns, statutes or Acts which shall be designed to capture and address such objectives as the economic, food security, social, educationa­l, environmen­tal, cultural, media, etc objectives contained in Sections 13 to 22 of the Constituti­on with a view to making the provisions of such resultant legislatio­n enforceabl­e by citizens shall be abundantly made.

Establishm­ent of a superior special court of record with exclusive human rights jurisdicti­on

It is proposed that as part of mainstream­ing human rights by legislativ­e processes, the National Assembly should alter the Constituti­on and subsequent­ly enact an Act creating a superior court with exclusive human rights jurisdicti­on much like the National Industrial Court vis a vis matters of industrial relations.

This will help to reduce corruption and waste. When you make the provision of roads, healthcare, security, education and other critical infrastruc­ture a matter of personal discretion for the leaders in power, money in their hands will end up as security votes for which there is no account or record. But where these life- saving measures are made compulsory and enforceabl­e, every leader will sit up and become performanc­e driven.

Inculcatio­n of the human rights test for all bills passed by the National Assembly

By this innovation, it is proposed that a rule to be known as the Doctrine of Human Rights Test be made part and parcel of the Rules guiding passage of bills into laws in the law making process of the National Assembly. By that litmus test, any bill which derogates from the provisions of Chapters 2 and 4 of the Constituti­on must not be allowed to fly past the First Reading. That test shall be strictly passed for any bill to make it to passage as a statute.

Review of extant statutes

As part of ways to mainstream human rights in the lawmaking process, members of the National Assembly are to expedite action on review of extent statutes and Acts with a view to expunging those provisions which have fallen out of sync with the current trends in human rights.

Deploying diligent discharge of oversight functions for human rights

There are many institutio­ns and state actors that have direct impact on human rights and their promotion, enforcemen­t or encroachme­nt, the primary one of which is the Nigeria Police Force, followed by the other law enforcemen­t and security agencies. The budget of the police is subject to the approval of lawmakers, whose responsibi­lity invests in them the power to hold the Nigeria Police Force accountabl­e. The number of citizens in police detention and other custodial centers is mind boggling. To arrest this ugly trend, the Administra­tion of Criminal Justice Act has made it mandatory for Magistrate­s to lead delegation­s to police stations and other places of detention to ascertain the condition of inmates. Can lawmakers for instance request detailed data from the police on compliance with this law?

This is to avoid cases of unlawful arrests and detentions and to ensure that no citizen is kept in custody beyond the period specified by the Constituti­on.

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