Some
members of the House of Representatives have begun collation of
signatures to veto President Muhammadu Buhari’s assent in rejecting the
Nigerian Peace Corps Bill.
New Telegraph investigation
revealed that so far, 173 lawmakers have appended their signatures to
the document, which is being coordinated by four lawmakers.
The
President had, in a letter dated January 25, 2018 to the House, cited
financial implications and duplication of duties of existing security
agencies, as reasons for withholding his assent to the bill, which
thousands of jobless youths have been patiently waiting for.
A top member of the group from Rivers State, who spoke to New Telegraph on condition of anonymity, said they are hopeful that before the expiration of the 30-day window provided for in the constitution, they will be able to garner the required two-thirds majority to override the president’s assent. According to him,
A top member of the group from Rivers State, who spoke to New Telegraph on condition of anonymity, said they are hopeful that before the expiration of the 30-day window provided for in the constitution, they will be able to garner the required two-thirds majority to override the president’s assent. According to him,
“We
need just 240 members to overturn the table against him (president) and
we are double sure that in the next two weeks, we will convince more
members to join this movement. So far, I can confirm to you that we have
173 members already on our list and this is authentic.
“What
we are doing is not about party or religion or region; it is about
Nigeria; it is about the future of our youths who are roaming about the
streets due to lack of jobs. “The Peace Corps is a veritable platform to
create employment and reduce corruption in Nigeria. Mr. President
cannot be telling Nigerians, ‘we don’t have money’ when the country is
contributing to many bodies.”
Asked
whether they will be able to get the required two-thirds in the Senate,
the lawmaker expressed confidence that their colleagues in the upper
chamber were working round the clock to secure the required number. “Our
colleagues in the Senate are very much in tune with what we are doing;
they are as concerned as we are because Nigerians are suffering; our
youths are being held hostage by an insensitive government. I can assure
you, we are going to get the two-thirds and we will go ahead and create
the Peace Corps for our youths.”
The
lawmaker, however, declined to disclose the identity of those who have
appended their signatures to the paper, saying “we are keeping our list
close to our hearts and we will not like to make it public now. But what
I can assure you is that, there is a group, we have gotten 173
followers as at today and we are ready to override his (president’s)
assent, and there is no going back.
At the
appropriate time, we will make our identity known,” he stated. Another
PDP lawmaker from Kogi State told New Telegraph that “they are lobbying
and mobilising other lawmakers to ensure that Peace Corps becomes a
reality.” “Just imagine the number of jobs it can create.
I must
say Dickson Akoh (the commandant) has done a good job and we must
encourage him,” he stated. The National Assembly is empowered by the
provisions of section 58(5) of the 1999 Constitution as amended, to
override the President’s veto on Bills. While the House requires 240
members to make up its two-thirds, the 109-member Senate requires 81
members to veto the president’s assent. Section 58 (5) provides that
“Where the President withholds his assent and the bill is again passed
by each House by two-thirds majority, the bill shall become law and the
assent of the President shall not be required.”
While
Order 12(b)(c) of the Standing Orders and Rules of the House of
Representatives (2016), also provides that the rejected Bill could be
looked upon by the House (through a motion) and if supported by
two-thirds of the Reps, the Bill is proclaimed law without the assent of
the President. It will be recalled that after the president’s letter
withholding his assent was read on the floor of the House by Speaker
Yakubu Dogara last week, many lawmakers picked holes in the development
and expressed the willingness to veto his refusal.
One of
the lawmakers and chairman of the House Committee on Ethics and
Privileges, Hon. Ossai Nicholas Ossai (PDP, Delta) told journalists that
the President’s refusal to assent to the Peace Corps bill was misguided
and would rather aggravate the security challenges in the country. The
lawmaker said the House was going to review the president’s decision and
chart the way forward. According to Ossai, “If the reasons given by Mr.
President are not germane, I will personally lead a lobbying process to
make sure the House veto him.”
NewTelegraph
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