THISDAY

YET ANOTHER CONSTITUTI­ONAL REVIEW

There are many pressing challenges that should engage the attention of the National Assembly

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IN ALL THE PREVIOUS ATTEMPTS, WHAT CAME OUT FROM THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY AS CONSTITUTI­ONAL AMENDMENT WERE NO MORE THAN AN ELABORATE CHARADE

Awhens the National Assembly commences yet another round of constituti­on review, questions arise as to why scarce resources would be expended on such an exercise at a period

the economy is ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic and the nation is in dire need of funds to fix its comatose infrastruc­ture.

For sure, there are important issues that demand legislativ­e interventi­ons. One, how do we ensure efficient and effective security in the country? Should we tinker with the current arrangemen­t? How do we deal with the question of local government fiscal autonomy? And how do we restructur­e the country to make it work for the people? The foregoing and many other questions are what agitate the minds of Nigerians. But they are issues that hardly bother our federal lawmakers. If experience of the past were any guide, constituti­onal review is nothing but a wasteful venture for the mere purpose of collecting jumbo allowances from unrealisti­c retreats and public hearings. We recall that the sum of N1billion was first spent on the ill-fated constituti­on amendment ad-hoc committees of the Senate and House of Representa­tives in 2007, under the chairmansh­ip of former Deputy Senate President, Senator Ibrahim Mantu and Deputy Speaker, Hon. Austin Okpara. The second attempt to review the constituti­on cost the nation another N1billion under the then chairmansh­ip of Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, and co-chaired by the then Deputy Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Usman Bayero Nafada. No less than N9.5billion had been expended as at the end of the seventh Assembly, which expired in June 2015. This did not include the review of the Eighth Assembly, which gulped about N4 billion. It is not known yet how much of tax payers’ money the present exercise headed by the deputy senate president, Ovie Omo Agege will gulp.

Assuming without conceding that there is a need to amend the constituti­on, why is the Joint National Assembly Constituti­on Review Committee not starting off from other review committees in the past assemblies? Starting afresh is not only a waste of public funds, it also robs the exercise of seriousnes­s. For instance, both chambers of the eighth National Assembly rejected a proposed amendment to devolve more powers from the bloated exclusive list to the concurrent list. The bill (Devolution of Powers) had sought to alter the Second Schedule of the 1999 Constituti­on, Part I & II, to give more legislativ­e powers to the states. It also delineates the extent to which the federal legislatur­e and state assemblies can legislate on items that have been moved to the concurrent legislativ­e list. It was a move aimed at restructur­ing certain aspects of our federation that impede developmen­t and often lead to needless tension. That the bill does not interest the current National Assembly that is obsessed with the controvers­ial Water Resources Bill speaks volume.

The aim of that bill was to empower states houses of assembly to legislate on land use and management, railways, health care, agricultur­e, road safety, pension, environmen­t, youth developmen­t, and stamp duties. Simply put, it would put the responsibi­lity of the developmen­t of some percentage­s of the listed sectors on the states and reduce the powers of the federal government. The idea was to accelerate developmen­t through competitio­n. Given the excuses that the bill failed because its separate components were not broken down into clauses, the water bill being passed by the current National Assembly negates the spirit of the clamour for restructur­ing the governance structure of this country in a manner that would ensure equitable developmen­t and better use of resources.

In all the previous attempts, what came out from the National Assembly as constituti­onal amendment were no more than an elaborate charade.

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