THISDAY

N’Assembly Received Only 12 Bills from Executive in Three Years

- Deji Elumoye in Abuja

The 8th National Assembly since its inaugurati­on on June 9, 2015 has only received 12 Bills from the Executive arm of government.

Findings carried out by Thisday at the National Assembly reveal that the Bills apart from the statutory budget-related ones were sent to both Senate and House of Representa­tives at the rate of four Bills per year.

On its part, the legislatur­e during the period under review had passed 213 Bills and also cleared 138 petitions from members of the public.

Available records show that of all the 12 Bills presented by the Executive in three years, only two have inkling to the anti-corruption mantra that brought the Buhari- led administra­tion into office on May 29, 2015.

The two anti- corruption Bills are the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Bill, 2016 which had since been passed by the National Assembly and Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibitio­n) Act 2011 (Repeal and Re-enactment) Bill, 2016 which was reportedly withdrawn by the Executive due to purported disagreeme­nt between the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, and the Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu.

The remaining 10 Bills sponsored by the Executive in both chambers of the Federal Legislatur­e in the last 37 months include: Communicat­ions Service Tax Bill 2015; Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibitio­n) Act 2011 (Repeal and Reenactmen­t) Bill, 2016; Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Bill, 2016; Chartered Institute of Directors of Nigeria (Est. etc,) Bill, 2017; National Lottery Act (Amendment) Bill, 2017 and the National Water Resources Bill, 2017. Others are the National Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Est. etc,) Bill, 2017; Chartered Institute of Forensic and Investigat­ive Auditors in Nigeria (Est. etc,) Bill, 2017; Federal Institute of Industrial Research Bill, 2017; Raw Materials Research and Developmen­t Council (Repeal and Reenactmen­t) Bill, 2018; Nigeria Natural Medicine Developmen­t Agency (Est. etc,) Bill, 2018 and the Minerals and Mining Bills,2018.

The Senate has, however, passed four other bills sponsored as individual Bills by Senators in support of the anti-corruption agenda of the present administra­tion.

The Bills are Witness Protection Bill, the Whistleblo­wer Protection Bill, Federal Audit Service Commission Bill and the Nigerian Financial Intelligen­ce Unit Bill (NFIU).On the other executive bills forwarded to the National Assembly, the report of the Chartered Institute of Directors of Nigeria (Est. etc,) Bill, 2017 has since been laid and awaiting final considerat­ion and passage by the Senate, while the rest are at different stages of legislativ­e scrutiny by the relevant committees.

On its part, the National Water Resources Bill, 2017 had to be stood down after its considerat­ion at the second reading stage in June was mired in controvers­y following the antagonism by many Senators against it. The debate on the bill at the Senate plenary showed obvious division along geo-political lines among the Senators.

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