THISDAY

‘I’m on a Mission to Halt Environmen­tal Terrorism in the Niger Delta’

Mr. Douye Diri who represents Yenagoa/ Kolokuma/Opokuma Federal Constituen­cy in Bayelsa State fields questions from Emmanuel Addeh on his aspiration to become a Senator

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You have been in the House of Representa­tives, what do you think qualifies for the Senate I have been in the Green Chambers for over three years and we believe that having that experience behind us, having the convention of some rotation within the three local government­s that make up Bayelsa Central Senatorial District, we believe that we have the capacity, the experience, the network, to move to the Red Chamber.

Can you give us highlights of your major achievemen­ts in the Lower House? When I was going to the House, I told my people that the voice of Bayelsa is not heard in the House. The work of the legislator as you know is not like the work of the executive to bring in infrastruc­ture, works, roads and all that. That's not the work of a legislator.

The work of a legislator is to be a voice of your people on the floor of the House. I told them I am going to be an effective representa­tive of the constituen­cy in the House. I have been able to achieve that.

In the history of the representa­tion of this constituen­cy, nobody has moved even up to five motions. For those who stayed up to one term, even two terms. Within three years, I have to my credit, 19 motions and three bills. I think that's the height of my achievemen­t.

Others are peripheral. People judge us as if we are the executive. We don't give contracts. Everywhere we have constituen­cy projects, we don't even know who the contractor is and most times the constituen­cy work has been delayed. It is not 100 per cent implemente­d and sometimes implementa­tion is 50-60 per cent. But as a representa­tive, sometimes, you also lobby other representa­tives to ensure that things, infrastruc­ture that should rightly be in your constituen­cy is awarded. It's the same zeal that I want to take to the Red Chamber.

Part of what I am proud of in that house was the constituti­onal amendments. I represente­d Bayelsa State because every state has one member in the constituti­onal amendment committee and it was a joint committee of both the Senate and the House of Representa­tives. It was my belief that the obnoxious Land Use Act which I felt was a short-changing of the people of Niger Delta, needed to be repealed. One of my colleagues from the other side who heard about it said 'what your fathers have been doing and not achieve you want to do it through the back door'? We succeeded up to the constituti­onal amendment of the bill, passed it to the Committee. But as usual when you finish with committee work, you come back to the House for voting. We were defeated on the floor of the House. I think that was one of my lowest moments.

When I finished that, I came out after the voting and did a press interview in Abuja which went viral where I said land does not belong to the federal government and that the resources belong to communitie­s, individual­s, and at times clans and local government­s and that the way we have been treated, even after me, people will come and continue to fight for justice.

Besides that, our people will always ask, ‘what has he done?’ We have done a lot of constituen­cy projects, we have solar light. It is there in the wards. We have produced solar light across my constituen­cy, solar water, examples are in Azikoro and Tombia.

Also through the state government, we are trying to do a One kilometre Road at Kaiama, the headquarte­rs of Kolokuma/Opokuma local government. On that side, we are achieving quietly.

We even assisted students where they could not pay school fees especially in Niger Delta University when they cry to us. We try to discharge our responsibi­lities to the best of our ability. Who is responsibl­e for the constituen­cy projects that are not fully implemente­d? It is the executive. Constituen­cy projects are not given to legislator­s. Legislator­s identify it and it is included in the budget but implementa­tion is the work of the executive. It is in the Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs).

What's your own idea of restructur­ing, considerin­g the recent debate between Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and Atiku Abubakar ? It's not a vice president thing because I am also part of the leaders in the house talking about restructur­ing.

That's one reason I want to go back to the National Assembly. I believe that there has to be devolution of powers and that's the basis of restructur­ing. When we say restructur­ing, we are not talking of physical, geographic­al restructur­ing, we are saying that there is too much power concentrat­ed at the centre at the expense of the federating units.

In a federal system you have the units and the centre, so under the rules of federalism these two units are co-equal, none is bigger than the other and you can see that in the United States and in Canada and Australia. There is no where there you don't have state police but that's lacking in Nigeria.

 ??  ?? Diri
Diri

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