The Guardian (Nigeria)

Interrogat­ing Southern Lawmakers’ Representa­tion Of Constituen­cies

- By Gbenga Salau

LAWMAKERSI­N Nigeria are elected to represent a constituen­cy to protect their people’s interest and take constituen­ts’ grievances to the centre for effective representa­tion. Though they are to be committed to the unity and welfare of Nigeria, their constituen­ts expect that they engage issues on the pillars of equity, fairness, justice, progress and peaceful co- existence.

But recent activities of lawmakers from the Southern part of the country in the National Assembly seem to pass them off as failing in taking the interest of their constituen­cies to heart.

For instance, a political analyst recently asked as to how the Special Status for Lagos and the South East Developmen­t Commission did not scale through the National Assembly, yet the North East Developmen­t Commission, which came after the demand for Special Status for Lagos and the South East Developmen­t Commission scaled through.

Also, until the governors from the Southern part of the country made a very strong pronouncem­ent on the PIB, the lawmakers looked unperturbe­d in spite of the content of the bill having been strongly watered down on the floor of the National Assembly.

Speaking on the seemingly untroubled nature of southern lawmakers to issues that appears to be shortchang­ing their constituen­ts, the spokesman of Pan Niger Delta Forum ( PANDEF), Ken Robinson, said a number of factors are responsibl­e for what is going on at the National Assembly, where the lawmakers from the southern part of the country are not pushing bills that will positively affect their constituen­cies through. He identified historical, political and primordial constrains.

“From historical perspectiv­e, the 19 states of the north were a region, while we had the western, eastern and mid- west regions in the south. Already, the south is fragmented.

So history is in the north’s favour. And of course, culturally too, they are almost the same people. We are different; we are Yoruba, Ibo, Ijaw and Urhobo.

“Again, the numbers are not in the favour of the southern lawmakers. When we have conversati­on with them ( lawmakers), that is what they often throw up, particular­ly in the House of Representa­tives. The truth is that everything in Nigeria is lopsided.”

Robinson, nonetheles­s, noted that in terms of commitment to representi­ng the people, there had been a lackadaisi­cal attitude among some of the representa­tives at the National Assembly. He, however, said that there was a new awakening among them, having realised that things cannot continue the old way.

“For the first time we have seen 17 Southern governors coming together. It is a good sign. We are hoping to see the senators and House of Representa­tives members from southern Nigeria also meeting regularly.

“Just before the PIB was passed, the Northern senators had a retreat, they met with the leaders of Arewa Consultati­ve Forum and I understand the Sultan of Sokoto was represente­d and they took a common position. And that reflected in what they did at the plenary on the PIB and the electoral amendment act. They work together and have a common agenda. It is for us as a people in southern Nigeria to also begin to forget that we are Yoruba, Ijaw, Ibo to see that we have a common problem and from one section of the country and begin to develop common agenda,” Robinson stated.

Asked if it is for lack of negotiatin­g skills and lobbying that the lawmakers have not been able to push some bills through, considerin­g they could have done trade- offs in supporting and getting their bills passed, Robinson said it is not the lack or absence of the skill, as many of them are enlightene­d and educated.

According to him, it is more about lack of awareness and synergy with multi- cultural stakeholde­rs. “Let us begin to talk more to ourselves. We see a lot of competitio­n among National Assembly members, the ministers and the governors. It should not be, you are a minister because you are from a state. So, they should stop this political bitterness and work together.”

On his part, the Executive Chairman, Centre for Anti- corruption and Open Leadership ( CACOL), Debo Adeniran said the south has had a problem with representa­tion for long, noting that most of the people in the National Assembly prefer to represent themselves rather than the people.

“There have been several calls, apart from special status for Lagos, the recognitio­n of the 37 Local Council Developmen­t Areas ( LCDAS) that was put together, which the Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion rejected. The issue has not been resolved even when it is the same party at the federal and state. So, if they are truly representi­ng the interest of the south, a lot could have been done. It is not just for them to say they are representi­ng us, they must show what exactly they are doing to represent our interest.

“Even the so called PIB, they were there when it was being watered down, even our representa­tives from Ondo State, a oil producing state, did not do anything significan­t to protect that interest. So, we believe that they can do better than they are doing.”

Adeniran, however, maintained that the constituen­ts are also partly at fault, because if they insist that if they do not deliver the good, they should not come back to the constituen­cy, they would have done things differentl­y. “We should call for accountabi­lity, how do they spend their time in the National Assembly, is it just to line their pockets?

“Look at Gbajabiami­la, he travelled to all corners of Nigeria while trying to become the Speaker of the House of Representa­tive. He has become the speaker now, what influence has he wielded to safeguard the interest of Lagosians and Southwest. We should put our house in order. Civil societies like ours should raise questions; we should mount pressure on what is dear to our heart and give advice that can help bills scale through. If we continue to welcome them the way we have been welcoming them, asking them to give a share of the largesse from Abuja, may not help.

“The 37 LCDAS should be a priority. The special status for Lagos is because Lagos is a mega city that is beyond the capacity of Lagos State government to cope with and the amount of work load is beyond what it can handle. Unless we force them to be more alert to their duties as legislator­s, they may be using us to negotiate for their own selfish benefits.”

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Gbajabiami­la
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Amosun

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