Daily Trust

Afenifere rejects constituti­on review, wants 2014 confab report adopted

- From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos

The pan-Yoruba socio-cultural organizati­on, Afenifere, yesterday expressed reservatio­n over the fresh move by the National Assembly to carry out a review of the 1999 constituti­on.

The group observed that “the exercise has become a ritual every four years without tangible progress.”

This was contained in a communique issued at the end of a virtual meeting of the Afenifere National caucus presided over by Chief Reuben Fasoranti.

Daily Trust reports that Afenifere’s position aligns with the view of the Northern Elders’ Forum which penultimat­e week rejected the fresh constituti­on review which, it said, was of no value and a predictabl­e waste of time.

Afenifere’s spokesman, Yinka Odumakin, who signed the communique clarified to our correspond­ent that the group was not rejecting the proposal but was “skeptical.”

“Every four years, we’ve been doing it. It’s a motion without movement,” he said.

In the communique, Afenifere, however, recommende­d the adoption of the reports of the 2014 National Conference and “other profound positions on restructur­ing as a basis of a meaningful new constituti­onal order for Nigeria.”

According to Afenifere, the previous reports which it described as “mainly pro-federal reports” have enough provisions to take Nigeria out of its present crisis.

It said: “It would be sad if the country is being taken through another motion without movement in the midst of its constituti­onal disorder.”

The group also rejected the Water Resources Bill which was rejected by the 8th National Assembly, saying it was “revived surreptiti­ously by the House of Representa­tives.”

Afenifere argued that “a dangerous agenda is being pursued by the executive in wanting to subvert the Land Use Act in the constituti­on that vests lands in the states in the Governors.”

“We ask that the bill be dropped immediatel­y except there is an agenda to divide the country being pursued frenetical­ly,” it added.

It also restated its position that the recently constitute­d South-West Regional Security Outfit, Amotekun, would not be under the control of the Federal Government.

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