Tag: LAW

  • Ekiti’s grazing law

    Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State has just signed a law to regulate grazing activities in the state. Titled “Prohibition of cattle and Other Ruminants Grazing in Ekiti 2016”, the law provides for grazing activities between 7am to 6pm on a daily basis while any herdsman caught with firearms or any weapon whatsoever during grazing will be charged with terrorism.

    An offender is liable on conviction, to six months imprisonment without option of fine.Under the law, farm crops destroyed by the cattle of any caught herdsman, shall be estimated by an agricultural officer and the expense borne by the culprit.

    Emerging reactions to the law vary depending on which side of the divide they are coming from. But most reservations have tended to centreround the provisions of the law rather than the propriety of that piece of legislation. But, implicit in those reactions is a seeming consensus that some form of regulation on the activities of herdsmen is imperative.

    The first issue copiously canvassed is the seeming incongruity of aspect of that law as it relates to terrorism with the constitution of the country. Those who canvass this view, contend it is wrong to classify herdsmen carrying weapons including such light ones as arrows, knives, cutlasses and catapults as terrorists because such categorization runs against the spirits of the anti-terrorism law. For this school, the law on anti-terrorism is very clear and nowhere did it classify carrying such light weapons as an offence under it.

    The other strand of the argument is that exceptions should have been made by the law against these light weapons because herdsmen need some of them to ward off criminals and also contend with the vagaries and harshness of the environment in which they conduct their business.

    In this wise, it is reasoned that apart from attacks from robbers, herdsmen confront all manner of animals in the bushes and will be helpless in the face of attacks from those elements in the absence of such light weapons. There is a point here. There ought to be exceptions to the category of weapons the herdsmen could carry since in our daily lives, such light weapons are not against our laws. Herdsmen need some protection against some of the hazards they face while doing their business in the inclement bush environment.

    There is also merit in the argument that by handing down terrorism charge on any herdsman carrying guns and other light weapons, the Ekiti law is bound to come into conflict with the anti-terrorism prevention law. And to the extent that law is inconsistent with the constitution, it stands to be voided by the courts. When this happens, the state government would be handicapped in approximating the goals for which that piece of legislation was made.

    No doubt,Ekiti State government was goaded to classify carrying arms by herdsmen as terrorism given the pattern and magnitude of destruction that occur each time they attack communities. Such attacks usually leave in their trail sorrow and awe on account of the decimation of populations and properties comparable in terms, to terrorism onslaughts. The law would therefore strike as a desperate therapy to a malignant tumour- the objective being to ensure that Ekiti State is insulated from those ugly scenes that have been the tale of communities each time herdsmen strike.

    But this objective could still be approximated without having to enact laws that will at once, come into conflict with the constitution. The same aim can still be realized by making the carrying of dangerous weapons such as the AK-47 rifle and 24 rounds of ammunitionrecovered from a herdsman in Affa, Udi local government area of Enugu state and in other places, a criminal offence.

    The other issue being canvassed against the anti-grazing law is that it should have allowed herdsmen who want to relocate to do so at night. The argument is that it will minimize the disruption of social activities were the herdsmen to do so at night. With the pattern of the attacks by the herdsmen, which usually take place in the night with near invincibility, it will be difficult to persuade anyone with the above argument. Moreover, that will negate the whole essence of limiting herding between certain hours of the day.

    Ekiti State government must have taken into account the reality of the operational strategy of the herdsmen in arriving at the provision requiring all activities relating to herding to commence and end between 7am and 6pm. It would seem that aspect of the law was well designed. There is the need to regulate the movement of herdsmen so as not to give room for any subterfuge by the unscrupulous ones to attack communities while they are asleep.

    The law also struck the right chord by stipulating that herdsmen caught destroying the crops of farmers will have the value of such farm produce assessed by an agricultural officer for the culprit to bear the cost. This is apt given that at the heart of the conflicts between farmers and the herdsmen has been the wanton destruction of the crops of the former.

    This provision is even more germane and as has been argued in several quarters, the herdsmen are also in business and it will be wrong to despoil the crops of farmers or feed their animals with them the way they had hitherto carried on. The realization that crops destroyed by their cattle will have to be paid for, will make them more circumspect in the way they conduct their business.

    That way, a major source of friction between the farmers and the herdsmen would have been considerably reduced. By the same token, the constant friction that usually aggravates attacks by the herdsmen would have been substantially stymied. It is true that Ekiti State is not among the states where the herdsmen have severally wreaked havoc. But it has taken the bull by the horn by coming out with legislation to curtail the menace of the herdsmen.

    It is a step in the right direction. It is a bold statement that the government will not sit-by while its citizens are mowed down by a band that has scant regard for human lives. It is therefore pertinentthat the law should be despite some reservations especially as it relates to trying those carrying weapons and other light arms for terrorism. At any rate, our courts are there to trash out issues relating to the envisaged conflict between the law and the nation’s anti-terrorism law.

    Perhaps,Ekiti may not have gone this farwere the federal government forthcoming in dealing with the menace of the herdsmen. For, despite the serious danger which incessant attacks by the herdsmen portends for national peace and stability, the attitude of the federal government to it has at best, remained largely tepid.

    Even with the directive from President Buhari to the military and police to stop the recurring killings of hapless Nigerians by Fulani herdsmen, no concrete action seems to have been taken in this regard. That is why rather than abate, the attacks have festered. Matters are not helped by the inability of our law enforcement agencies to bring to book the suspects arrested for the dastardly massacre at Nimbo in Enugu State and elsewhere where such attacks had occurred.

    If things continue the way they are, more of the states that have been at the mercy of the insurgents will have no option than to go theEkiti way to protect the lives of their people. That is the unmistakable signal which the law has sent across. The Buhari regime should take vicarious responsibility for any eventual outcome of such conflicting legislations including the increasing lure of self-help to stem the scourge.

  • A law most welcome

    A law most welcome

    •With the menace of land-grabbers and allied criminals, the Lagos State Properties Protection Law could not have come at a better time

    The relief was palpable, at the gubernatorial assent on August 15, of the Lagos State Properties Protection Law, formally criminalising the menace of land-grabbers and allied muggers, notoriously called the omo-onile.

    For, with clubs and cudgels, invading a site being developed, and demanding illicit payments, these miscreants, who have for too long constituted a menace to lawful and legitimate developers, risk a gaol term of 21 years, if convicted.

    “The Properties Law will eliminate the activities of persons or corporate entities, who use force and intimidation to dispossess or prevent any person or entity from acquiring legitimate interest and possession of property,” Governor Akinwunmi Ambode said at the signing session, and “ensure that the Special Task Force on Land-Grabbers work with all security agencies to ensure enforcement …”

    That was well said, particularly the bit on enforcement. Indeed, the problem in this country is not lack of laws but the lack of will to enforce them. That is why it is even more heart-warming, that as the law was being signed, concrete provisions, in terms of a special task force, had been made for its effective enforcement.

    It is even more laudable that the implementation is anticipating multi-agency collaboration and coordination, in the war against these unscrupulous citizens, personal or corporate, who have made land-grabbing their notorious business.

    Indeed, for too long, not a few have commercialised impunity; and hugely profited from this crime, many a time sending innocent and law-abiding citizens to early graves.  Many a time, however, such brazen crimes are not without the collusion of compromised members of the security forces, many of who are an integral part of the racket; and therefore periodically look upon such breaches as growth areas of their personal economies.

    This new law, if it must be effective from the enforcers’ segment, must therefore come with an accompanying campaign to wean these collaborators, with land criminals, from their sweet poison. It should also come with the dire consequences, should they fail to change.

    With less collusion from the enforcers’ camp, the law would be easier to implement. Its successful implementation holds prospects in many fronts: cheaper and less chaotic increase in Nigeria’s housing stock, particularly in Lagos, where housing shortage is acute; and general better access to land for economic and industrial uses, without cost of production tearing through the roof.

    Still, a parallel campaign to educate the general public on the benefits and perils of the new law is in order. The general public should be the target of the benefits, with the caveat that everyone should imbibe lawful and transparent land transactions, to earn maximum protection under the law. A part of this message should also reach idle and unemployed youth, often ready recruits for violent attacks on lawful developers. That way, the hopelessness of such criminality might just sink in.

    But the peril of the new law should be beamed on putative land-grabbing barons and their pawns. The message should be very clear: the law would have absolutely no mercy on violators.

    This legal framework of criminalising land-grabbing is highly welcome. But the work is incomplete without its vigorous enforcement.

  • Gbajabiamila: why I want new Immigration law

    Gbajabiamila: why I want new Immigration law

    The Majority leader in the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, has said the proposed amendment to the Immigration Act is one every Nigerian should support.

    The lawmaker said the bill would address unemployment and its attendant social consequences, as issues concerning employment of foreign workers were taken care of.

    According to him, the bill was neither discriminatory, isolationist nor inclined to boomerang against Nigerians in the diaspora, free trade and Foreign Direct investment (FDI).

    In a statement yesterday, the Majority leader allayed fears that the bill, if passed into law, might not be implementable, saying the implementation was covered by the constitution, in addition to oversight functions of the National Assembly.

    It reads: “That the Bill is discriminatory and isolationist and our citizens abroad may suffer retaliatory laws based on reciprocity.

    “I do not see this as discriminatory or isolationist. Rather for me it is protectionist. There is no responsible government that will sit with arms akimbo and watch foreign nationals come in and exploit its hospitality by taking away jobs that should ordinarily be available to the locals and citizens. It is the job of any government to protect its workforce.

    “This situation is so extensive in Nigeria that it cuts across all categories of workers from skilled to unskilled. From Phillipino nannies, artisans and tillers to pilots and mariners, to bank MDs and oil workers. Most of our top hotels in Nigeria are managed by foreigners, yet we have Nigerians who are professionally qualified to do same.

    “It is not unusual and is even normal to see Chinese labourers on construction sites. Many have even said(though I find it difficult to believe) that prisoners are brought from other countries to come and work in Nigeria.

    “On the doctrine of reciprocity and fate of Nigerians working abroad, these fears are misplaced. My proposed law obtains in most countries and diligent research into the labour laws of other countries will evidence this. Indeed if there is any retaliatory law it is this Bill that seeks to do that by aligning with international best practices. Same policy obtains in the United States and others. I have provided a comment from a Nigerian in the United Kingdom, Mina Jumbo.

    “This is a brilliant proposal and long overdue. I worked as a Development Geoscientist in the UK, for my company to successfully get my work permit, they had to prove to the UK government that I possessed skills & the diverse set of experience that couldn’t be found in the UK.

    “They had to show proof that they had interviewed several British citizens to no avail. Proof that the role had been properly advertised in reputable job sites & newspapers. These and many more were required before my permit was granted.

    “I don’t see why the rules should be different here. Best of luck with the proposal, and I hope when approved, there will be 100 per cent compliance and stringent penalties for defaulters.”

    “That there are other laws that already deal with this, such as expatriate quota provisions of our Immigration Law and our Local Content Law

    “Again, this is a misread of our laws. Firstly, expatriate quota does not address the issue of foreigners coming to pick up local jobs.  All expatriate quota does is register foreign workers for business organisations based on a quota system which can be increased at any time.

    “It does not restrict what and where they can or cannot work. For instance, an expatriate can get an expatriate quota to come in and work on an agricultural  farm breeding poultry.

    “What this Bill seeks to do is to give two conditions before you can obtain the expatriate quota in the first place. 1. There must be no Nigerian qualified in the field or 2. If there is any, he or she must be unwilling or unavailable to do the job. In other words, even if you have graduates and professionals in the area of agriculture and poultry farming but you do not find one who is interested in doing the particular job, then the employee can give the job to a foreigner.

    “A qualified Nigerian should always get the first dip or right of refusal. It’s that simple.  On the issue of the Local Content Law. It may be similar but not quite the same.”

  • TUC rejects law on social services levy

    The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), Rivers State chapter, has kicked against the law on social services levy before the State House of Assembly.

    Its Chairman, Comrade Chika Onuegbu, told reporters that the union and its affiliates would not accept the reintroduction of the controversial social services levy, or any  new tax law in whatever disguise on  workers in the state.

    He said the position of TUC  on the new tax law before the state House of Assembly is clear, saying a court of competent jurisdiction has previously ruled against that law and similar laws.

    He said the union resisted the law under the previous administration in the state, and that the union shall continue to resist it under the present administration as such law amounts to double taxation of the workers.

    The TUC boss said members of the union and her affiliates never paid the social services contributory levy in the state and were also not part of its Board as previously constituted.

    Onuegbu said the planned reintroduction of the law amounted to additional hardship on the workers, stressing that the TUC in the state will resist the planned imposition of additional taxes by the government.

    He advised the state government to limit the collection of taxes to the Taxes and Levies (Approved list for Collection) Act.

    He enjoined the state House of Assembly to concentrate on making laws that will improve the welfare of the workers and ordinary people in the state.

  • NECA seeks passage of competition law

    NECA seeks passage of competition law

    The Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA) has urged lawmakers to give Nigeria a competition law before the end of this year.

    Speaking at a ‘Walk for Competition Bill’ in Lagos, NECA Director-General Mr. Segun Oshinowo said there was nothing to cheer despite the bill passing second reading in the House of Representatives. According to him, there is nothing to cheer, because previous attempts to pass the bill even passed this stage before they were abandoned.

    “We, therefore, urge the lawmakers to match words with action and give Nigeria a competition law before the end of this year. We also call on the Federal Government to revisit the Draft Competition and Consumer Protection Policy Document and approve it as a matter of urgency.

    “It is this policy that sets out the goal of promoting competition in the economy. We further call on the Federal Government to mainstream competition in broader areas of economic development such as trade and industrial policy, investment policy, privatisation and deregulation policy, among others”  he said.

    Oshinowo noted that with the ongoing reforms in the economy and the privatisation and liberalisation programmes that have been pursued over the past few years, it is important that these programmes are supported with the appropriate regulatory measures and laws to ensure that they deliver real benefits to the citizens.

    In a related event, NECA has condemned the planned picketing of selected banks by the National Union of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions Employees.

    The employers’ association, in a statement, alleged that the union was being emboldened by the directive of the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, on the sacking in the banking sector.

    NECA’s Director-General, Mr. Olusegun Oshinowo, pointed out that the labour law recognised the right of employers to determine their operational policies without approval from the ministry, while respecting the provision of Section 20 of the Labour Act, where and if a labour union existed in the organisation.

    He assured that any employer carrying out retrenchment would meet with the appropriate body in the workplace, including the union where one existed, and would pay redundancy benefits to affected employees.

    According to him, the right to strike or picket is not an opportunity for impunity and criminality.

    “It is most unfortunate that the minister’s comment has been fuelling impunity and gross abuse of rules and principles of industrial relations in Nigeria. The law about dispute settlement is clear in Nigeria. If the union has any issue with the action of the employer, its recourse should be the industrial court rather than take laws in its own hands.

    “We expect the minister to caution the union and urge it to follow due process in seeking justice for its cause. In exercising its right to picket, the union should realise that such an action should not impinge on the right of the enterprise to conduct its business,” he said.

  • Foundation seeks law on sickle cell awareness

    The Executive Director of Sickle Cell Foundation, Dr. Anette  Akinsete, has called on the Federal Government to enact laws to increase awareness about sickle cell disorder (SCD).

    According to her, such law will ensure support for SCD through the provision of health management policy, new born screening and health education.

    Akinsete spoke at Sickle Cell Walk for life, organised by the coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in Lagos State in commemoration of the World Sickle Cell Day by the United Nation. The walk, which started at the Police College, Lagos ended at EKO FM, Lagos.

    The walk tagged Walk for Life was put together by the Sickle Cell Foundation, Dabman Sickle Cell Foundation, Nike Opalemo Foundation, Tony May Foundation, Crison Bow Nigeria, and Genotype Foundation Nirvana initiatives.

    Akinsete said lack of basic new born screening facilities and major drugs in the management of sickle cell can pose a serious threat to livelihood and survival of people with sickle cell disorder.

    She said the need for newborn screening centres is fitting, urgent and would go a long way to support children and families with sickle cell disorder children.

    She said: “We cannot afford to ignore a hereditary disease that affects over four million Nigerians. In fact, roughly 75 percent of the 150,000 children with SCD die before their fifth birthday.

    Beyond the statistics, we cannot continue to ignore the faces of people in anguish, confusion and often neglected both physical and emotionally because they have sickle cell disorder”.

    She continued: “In a country where we have the highest number of people with sickle cell in the world, they are stigmatised and discriminated as they are called lazy by teachers and denied jobs by some employers. There is need for all stakeholders to come together”.

    She lamented non-availability of basic drugs for the average family with sickle cell children, stressing that doctors and nurses have not gotten a total understanding in managing people with the condition.

    The Chairman, Dabman Sickle Cell Foundation, Pastor Emmanuel Ibekwe said the essence of the walk  is for mass enlightenment walk that will lead to change of attitude.

    “We are deploying allavailable resources to campaign for millions who are in pains. To set a largely misinformed and ill-educated public free from the evil of sickle cell disorder,” he said.

    Various information leaflets, handbills, umbrella, face caps, tee-shirts were distributed and songs charted in to raise awareness of sickle cell was part of the walk.

  • TUC rejects law on social services levy

    TUC rejects law on social services levy

    The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), Rivers State chapter, has kicked against the law on social services levy before the State House of Assembly.

    Its Chairman, Comrade Chika Onuegbu, told reporters that the union and its affiliates would not accept the reintroduction of the controversial social services levy, or any  new tax law in whatever disguise on  workers in the state.

    He said the position of TUC  on the new tax law before the state House of Assembly is clear, saying a court of competent jurisdiction has previously ruled against that law and similar laws.

    He said the union resisted the law under the previous administration in the state, and that the union shall continue to resist it under the present administration as such law amounts to double taxation of the workers.

    The TUC boss said members of the union and her affiliates never paid the social services contributory levy in the state and were also not part of its Board as previously constituted.

    Onuegbu said the planned reintroduction of the law amounted to additional hardship on the workers, stressing that the TUC in the state will resist the planned imposition of additional taxes by the government.

    He advised the state government to limit the collection of taxes to the Taxes and Levies (Approved list for Collection) Act.

    He enjoined the state House of Assembly to concentrate on making laws that will improve the welfare of the workers and ordinary people in the state.

  • ‘Executive delaying PIB’s passsage into law’

    ‘Executive delaying PIB’s passsage into law’

    The House of Reprsentatives yesterday lamented that the executive arm of government  was delaying the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) into law through its failure to transmit the document to the National Assembly.

    Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Abdulrasak Namdas, who spoke at the weekly briefing of House reporters, said since the government version of the PIB is not forthcoming, the House would look into the bill from a fresh perspective.

    He however,  praised the Federal Government’s decision on petrol pricing, saying it would stop the spate of diversion of  petroleum products to neighbouring countries.

    Namdas however urged a section of the organised labour and civil society organisations (CSOs) threatening strike action to “pursue other welfarist programmes and let the subsidy be taken away.”

    He said the palliative measures in the 2016 Appropriations Act would help to cushion the effects of downstream oil sector liberalisation.

    According to him, rather than have subsidy, “market forces should be allowed to influence price. Based on this premise, the House Committee will continue to engage labour.”

    In a similar vein, Minority Leader of the House, Hon. Leo Ogor said with the  subsidy removal, the PIB will promote transparency in the oil sector.

    Ogor who spoke withreporters noted that the passage of the PIB by the National Assembly will enhance transparency in the oil sector.

    According to him, with the decision to remove petrol subsidy, the National Assembly would need to consult extensively in the new PIB.

    The Green Chamber, he said, is yet to receive the PIB. What is before the House is a bill seeking the administrative restructuring of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    He said: “There is no way PIB would have solved the issue of fuel imports and consumption. We have made a lot of mistakes as a nation; we have wasted trillions of naira in subsidising what we shouldn’t have subsidised.

    “Subsidy in my opinion is funding the rich, therefore l will appeal to the government to come up with some form of palliatives.”

  • ‘Implement urban planning law’

    The Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB) in Ogun State has called on Governor Ibikunle Amosun to implement the “Revised Ogun State Urban and Regional Planning Law”.

    The NIOB said the law, if implemented fully, would ensure  health, safety and protection of employees and the public.

    The state Chairman, Fidelis Fayomi, said the law would also enable only professionals, and particularly registered builders, to be engaged in the “management and execution of building projects”.

    In a statement titled: “NIOB Ogun State Chapter’s Position on The Recent Building Collapse In The State,” Fayomi stated that the builders are the onesto manage and produce buildings as provided for by the “Building Production  Management Standards (BPMS)”.

    According to him, BPMS ensures adherence to production standards and specifications, protection of lives, adherence to statutory requirements in building production among others.

  • Don’t sign LCDAs bill into law, Oke-Ona Egba rulers warn Amosun

    Don’t sign LCDAs bill into law, Oke-Ona Egba rulers warn Amosun

    Oke-Ona Egba people in Ogun State have warned Governor Ibikunle Amosun against signing the Local Government Creation and Transitional provisions Amendments Law, which was passed into law by the House of Assembly.

    Last Thursday, the 26-member Assembly passed the bill and forwarded same to Amosun the following day for his assent.

    The bill seeks legal backing for the creation of 37 Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) in addition to the 20 local governments.

    But yesterday, the Oke-Ona Egba people urged Amosun not to sign the document because it would unjustly detach them from their “historical and cultural root” and lump them together with Remo people in Remoland.

    Addressing reporters at the palace of the Osile of Oke-Ona Egba, Abeokuta, the state capital,  the Oluwo of Oke-Ona Egba, High Chief Abayomi Jiboku, said they will, within the ambit of the law, resist any attempt to rob them of their “cradle”.

    Jiboku, who spoke in the company of 12 other chiefs, including the Otu Iyalode of Ago -Okoland, Mrs. Olayinka Folarin, advised the governor not to tamper with the sovereignty of the people or do things that could lead to inter-tribal frictions.

    Jiboku said: “The House of Assembly passed the bill into law on May 5.

    “The amended edict is on the governor’s table for his assent. It was taken to the governor’s office by the Deputy Speaker, Kunle Oluomo.

    “You would also have known that the only amendment was the return of Orile Oko to Remo North Local Government.

    “I want to state categorically that we, the people of Oko in Egba land both in Abeokuta, Orile Oko and in diaspora, absolutely reject with all our blood, the return of our homestead, Orile Oko, to Remo North Local Government.

    “We are Egba. We belong to Obafemi /Owode Local Government in Egba land.”

    The Egba chief said he suspects that the government is “under pressure from some quarters”.

    He said his people had earlier voted “yes” to remain with their kinsmen in Egba when the Olusegun Osoba government conducted a referendum in 2002.

    The proprietor of Taidob College, Abeokuta, wondered why the Amosun government and the Assembly will  seek to alter a referendum that had been decided and signed into law in August 2002.

    “By the result of the referendum, no government has the power to obliterate the sovereignty of the people of Orile Oko.

    “That referendum is their sovereignty. It is unalterable. It is immutable. It is undeniable.

    “Governor Ibikunle Amosun must uphold the inalienable right the people of Orile Oko to be merged with Obafemi/Owode Local Government,” he said.