Odogwuemekaodogwu reports
that the national conference, on Thursday, approved the creation of 18
additional states across the country, as a way of meeting the yearning and
aspirations of the people.
The conference also
resolved that the office of the President of Nigeria shall now rotate between
the North and South and revolve among the six geopolitical zones of the
country.
Delegates also agreed
that the office of the state governors shall be rotated among the three
senatorial districts of each state, while that of the local government chairmen
shall be rotated within the local government areas.
The resolutions were
arrived at during the plenary, while considering reports of the committee on
political restructuring and forms of government.
The delegates also
said the six geopolitical zones should be enshrined in the constitution of the
country.
They rejected the
proposal that the president should run for a single term of six years and favoured
the present arrangement of two terms of four years.
It was also agreed
that the president and his deputy should run on a joint ticket, thereby
rejecting the recommendation that the president should pick his deputy among
the members of the National Assembly after he must have won.
The conference also
supported the unicameral form of government. This implies that there would
still be the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Though it was also
agreed that the states were free to have their constitutions, but the request
to change the name of Adamawa State to Gongola State was overwhelmingly
rejected by the delegates.
The committee was
mandated to primarily examine the extant structure and forms of governments in
the context of the peculiar circumstances of Nigeria’s diverse and multi-ethnic
setting.
It was also expected
to examine Nigeria’s attendant challenges and the need to lay a solid
foundation for an all-inclusive and cost-effective system of government which
would serve the best interest of Nigeria and Nigerians.
Where the president
dies in office, incapacitated, impeached or where he resigns, the conference
agreed that the vice president shall operate in acting capacity for a period of
90 days, during which an election to the same office would be conducted.
The decision was taken
to help each zone run the full course of the constitutionally allowed tenure
without undue disruption, while the delegates also said when a president leaves
under any of the circumstances stated earlier, another president would be
elected from the same zone where the previous one came from.
The delegates also
voted in favour of modified presidential form of government as recommended by
the committee, which they described as home-made model of government that
combines the attributes of parliamentary and presidential systems.
The president elected
under the new system shall exercise full responsibility for his government and
shall select ministers, not more than 18, from the six geopolitical zones of
the country.
On the creation of new
states, delegates also unanimously agreed with the recommendation for the
creation of an additional state for the South-East zone, to put it at par with
other zones of the country, this is aside the 18 more states proposed.
The proposed states
are Aba, from the present Abia State, Katagum from Bauchi State, Ijebu from
Ogun State, Amana from former Sardauna Province, Apa from Benue State, Anioma
State from Delta State and Savannah from Borno.
Others are Etiti from
South-East, Njaba/Anim from Anambra and Imo states, Gurara from Kaduna, Ghari
from Kano State, Adada, New Oyo from Oyo State, Orachi from Rivers State, Ogoja
from Cross River State and Kanji from Kebbi and Niger states.
It was agreed that the
two states from both the South-South and South-West would be determined later.
They rejected a motion
that the number of states in Nigeria should not be more than 55.
However, a delegate to
the conference, Mr Femi Falana, condemned the decision to create more states.
He said the action was
at variance with the decisions and resolutions earlier taken by the conference
on the need by government to cut cost.
On states that wanted
to merge, the conference said a referendum should be conducted in each of the states
with 65 per cent of the eligible voters in each of those states approving
merger and that the National Assembly, by resolutions passed by a single
majority of membership, must so approve.
In another
development, former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice,
Senator Kanu Agabi, has revealed that corruption in Nigeria first reared its
ugly head with the state creation exercise of 1966, which he said led to acute
shortage of manpower in the country.
The development, he
reasoned, culminated in the subsequent appointment of unqualified people into
serious positions of authority in the various states created.
Senator Agabi stated
this while delivering a lecture, with the theme: “The Challenge of Combating
Corruption in Nigeria,” organised by the Law Students Association (LAWSA) of
the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), in honour of the late Justice
of the Supreme Court, Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, at the Public Service
Institute, Kubwa Expressway, Abuja.
The former AGF and
Minister of Justice stressed that the problem of acute shortage of manpower
that came with the creation of states in 1966 was further compounded by the
civil war which ravaged the nation between 1966 and 1970 and thus sent the
remaining few qualified expatriate packing.
Nigerian
Tribune
Confab Approves 18 More States, Adopts Rotational Presidency, Governorship
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Friday, July 04, 2014
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