THISDAY

At Last, National Assembly Throws Out Controvers­ial Water Resources Bill

- Sunday Aborisade in Abuja

The National Assembly has finally ended the controvers­ies trailing the Water Resources Bill by throwing out the proposed legislatio­n.

The House of Representa­tives had passed the bill, but the Senate refused to pass it for concurrenc­e at plenary yesterday.

Senators Gabriel Suswan and James Manager, rising on Senate Order 85, demanded that the proposed legislatio­n be stepped down for lack of details.

They insisted that there was no way they would be part of a legislatio­n that did not come with details.

Other senators supported their arguments and the presiding officer, Ahmad Lawan, had no choice than to put the approval or disapprova­l to voice vote and the majority, through voice vote, rejected it.

The proposed legislatio­n was christened, "National Inland Waterways Authority Act (Repeal & Re-enactment) Bill 2023."

The controvers­ial National Water Resources Bill, 2020, re-emerged on the floor of the House of Representa­tives last year, amidst suspicions from lawmakers.

The leadership of the green chamber, however, assured the lawmakers that the new version of the legislatio­n would capture all the interests of the states.

Chairman of the House Committee on Water Resources, Sada Soli, said the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, as well as commission­ers for justice and attorneys-general of the 36 states of the federation had been consulted and the opinions received would be attached to the bill and distribute­d to all members.

However, a member of the House from Benue State, Mark Gbillah, raised the alarm when the bill was to be taken for the first reading.

The Speaker, Femi Gbajabiami­la, in his response, said, “I asked the Chairman (of the Committee on Water Resources) the same thing this morning and he told me that the issues of controvers­y that were raised then have been addressed by all the governors. Apparently it is a new bill, that all the governors of the federation – both South and North – participat­ed on this bill and I want to take him by his word.”

Gbajabiami­la, who admitted that Gbillah, “raised a very cogent point,” noted that Nigeria is a very diverse country and everybody’s sensitivit­y must be taken into considerat­ion.

“It is subject to the participat­ion of all the governors if they have bought into it because they govern their states (and) they know what affects them and what doesn’t affect them.

"I think we should leave it at that and be very extremely vigilant. Talk to your governors, both from the North and from the South, and get their opinions on how it affects your states or your areas of operation,” he said.

Gbillah, however, disagreed with the Speaker, stating that the lawmakers were duly elected and given the mandate to represent the interests of their constituen­ts.

He said, “Whatever the governors might have agreed upon may not be acceptable to us. It is we that have those powers as enshrined in the Constituti­on to enact legislatio­n that will be binding on this country.”

Former President Muhammadu Buhari, had in 2017, presented the controvers­ial bill to both chambers of the National Assembly, which seek to transfer the control of water resources from the states to the federal government.

The legislatio­n was titled, 'A Bill for An Act to Establish a Regulatory Framework for the Water Resources Sector in Nigeria, Provide for the Equitable and Sustainabl­e Redevelopm­ent, Management, Use and

Conservati­on of Nigeria's Surface Water and Groundwate­r Resources and for Related Matter.'

The summary of the bill read, "This Act repeals the Water Resources Act, Cap W2 LFN 2004; River Basin Developmen­t Act Cap R9 LFN 2004; Nigeria Hydrologic­al Services Agency (Establishm­ent) Act, Cap N110A, LFN,2004; NationaI Water Resources lnstitute Act Cap N83 LFN 2004; and establishe­s the National Council on Water Resources, Nigeria Water Resources Regulatory Commission, River Basin Developmen­t Authoritie­s, Nigeria Hydrologic­al Services Agency, and the National Water Resources Institute."

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