Tag: Senate

  • Senate blames terrorism on porous borders

    The Senate on Tuesday blamed increasing rate of terrorist activities and human trafficking on the country’s porous borders.

    The upper chamber attributed the high rate of human trafficking in the border communities to the inability of government to meet the social needs of the inhabitants.

    Senate President, David Mark, stated this while inaugurating a public hearing on a bill for an Act to amend the border communities development agency Act cap B10 laws of the federation of Nigeria and for related matters, 2013.

    The bill sponsored by Senator Olufemi Lanlehin (Oyo South) seeks to strengthen the agency to make it perform its functions.

    The agency has the responsibility of improving the social and economic lives of Nigerians living in various settlements, villages and towns spread across 96 local government areas in 21 states along Nigeria’s international borders.

    The Act enacted in 2004 was first amended in 2006 to reposition the agency to cope with operational inadequacies.

    Lanlehin observed that in spite of the amendment, the condition of Nigerian border communities was yet to improve.

    Mark, who was represented by Senator James Manager, noted that the situation had worsen, especially with the influx of mercenaries, terrorists and other armed groups through the country’s porous borders.

     

  • Senate endorses emergency rule

    Senate endorses emergency rule

    The Senate on Tuesday unanimously endorsed the proclamation of state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Though there was no debate by Senators, the deal to approve the contentious emergency rule in the three northeast states was sealed at a closed session of the upper chamber that lasted about one hour.

    Senate President, David Mark, announced the decisions Senate reached at the closed session.

    After laying what could be called the background to the proclamation of emergency rule in the states, Mark announced that “at the end of the day, we would like to support the Federal Government in this proclamation of state of emergency in the three states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States.”

    The seeming tension in the Senate gallery evaporated immediately Mark declared the support of the upper chamber for the proclamation.

    He noted that the lawmakers were conscious of the fact that there was lawlessness, anarchy and mayhem in most of the places that were involved in the declaration of state of emergency.

    He also said that they appreciated the fact that government must take every possible step to bring the unfortunate situation to an end as quickly as possible with minimal loss of lives and materials.

    The Senate President noted that 100 Senators out 109 Senators sat and approved the proclamation.

    Mark said, “During the closed session, we extensively discussed some of the issues that we think are very important to this proclamation of state of emergency.

    “We want to emphasize very emphatically that all the democratic structures must be left in place and must be allowed to operate fully and actively and they must also be involved in all the efforts that the federal government is putting up to bring this ugly situation to an end.

    “We also would like to emphasis that the Armed Forces are issued a proper code of conduct where they are humane and benevolent and make sure that all citizens are treated with utmost respect so that they do not lose their respect as human beings.”

     

  • ‘Why Senate is not in a hurry to pass supplementary budget’

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriation, Senator Ahmed Maccido, has said the National Assembly is not in a hurry to pass the 2013 supplementary budget.

    He said the need for the National Assembly to undertake a thorough consideration of the supplementary budget as presented by the Presidency was necessary.

    The Senate Appropriation Committee Chairman spoke at the weekend in Abuja, following insinuation that the National Assembly might have abandoned the supplementary budget.

    He noted that the amendments sought by the executive arm of the government touched on all aspects of the budget as passed by the parliament.

    The Sokoto State-born lawmaker said the amendment bill created the impression that all the inputs made by the National Assembly in the main budget were rejected by the Presidency.

    He said: “We should therefore take time to look at the proposed amendment.

    “The amendment we are working on is just like another budget altogether.

    “It seems as if the whole inputs of the National Assembly into the earlier budget have not been agreed to by the executive.

    “They want us to look into our input as a whole.

    “So, we have to sit down again and re-examine it.

    “It is not something we are going to rush because we are going through the whole of the budget again.”

    Maccido said the fiscal document was still being studied by senators, a situation that would delay early passing of the bill.

    The lawmaker, who gave a time frame of about three weeks or more to pass the bill, added that “most senators are still not prepared for the amendment bill yet because they are still going through it.”

    “Until such a time when they are through, we cannot just put the bill in the Order Paper,” he said.

    Senator Maccido said the delay in passing the supplementary budget would not affect the economy and governance since there was a budget being implemented at the moment.

    “The time we are taking will not cause any problem for the economy because we still have a budget that is operational.

    “That one has been passed into law and it is the one being implemented at the moment.

    “Until such a time when we pass this amendment bill, the budget that has been signed remains the budget to be implemented,” he said.

  • Senate seeks FG’s action on flooding

    Senate seeks FG’s action on flooding

    The Senate on Thursday mandated its joint committee on Water Resources, Environment, Marine Transport and Special Duties to find out the level of preparedness of the Federal Government to avert flooding during the year.

    The directive followed a motion on “emergency preparedness for 2013 flood and rainfall prediction.”

    It was sponsored by Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Senator Ita Enang (Akwa Ibom North East) and 80 others.

    Enang in his lead debate noted that excessive rainfall in 2012 in the country coupled with release of water from the Lagdo dam in Cameroon led to devastating flooding in most part of the country.

    He said the water released from the dam flowed through River Benue and merged at the confluence of River Benue and Niger at Lokoja leading to massive flooding, death, submerging of houses and farmlands in Lokoja, Kogi State.

    He noted that the flooding also affected Delta and Bayelsa States estuary where there are many tributaries, most of the tributaries silted and filled with sand such that the large volume of water from River Benue and Niger could not find sufficient dept to channel the volume of water to the Atlantic Ocean.

    Enang said that unless concerted effort is made by the Federal and state Governments and relevant agencies to clear the water routes such as bridges and channels, obstruction of flow of water to the ocean will continue.

    He said that there was an urgent need to dredge the coastlines of major rivers and ocean within the country’s inland territories where sand has accumulated in order to further reduce the impact of the restriction of water channels on seasonal flooding.

    Senate President, David Mark, who summed up contributions by senators, said that there was no local government in the country that did not suffer flooding in 2012.

    Mark noted that the implication of the massive flooding in parts of the country was the inability of the country to prepare for emergency situations.

     

  • Dismissal: Maina drags HOS, six others to court

    Dismissal: Maina drags HOS, six others to court

    The former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team, Abdulrasheed Maina, on Wednesday dragged the Head of Service of the Federation and six others before the National Industrial Court, for alleged unlawful dismissal.

    The others are the Federal Civil Service Commission, Ministry of Interior, the Attorney-General of the Federation, the Senate, the Clerk of the Senate and the Clerk of the National Assembly.

    Maina is praying the court to make a declaration that his purported dismissal as chairman of the task team was illegal, null and void.

    He is also praying the court to order the defendants to reinstate him into the service.

    The News Agency of Nigeria recalls that Maina was dismissed by the Head of Service for allegedly absconding from duty and attempting to evade arrest.

    When the case came up for mention on Wednesday, the claimant was not in court. He was represented by his counsel, Mr. Mahmud Magaji (SAN).

    NAN also reports that two of the seven defendants were represented in court when the case was mentioned.

    Mr. Polycap Hamman, a Principal State Counsel, who represented the office of the Head of Service, told the court that he had filed all his processes.

    However, Counsel to the Federal Civil Service Commission (second defendant), Mrs. Ebuk Ekpo, informed the court that she filed her processes “out of time.’’

    Ekpo asked the court to adjourn the matter to enable her regularise her position in the interest of justice.

    The President of the court, Justice Babatunde Adejumo, adjourned the case to May 28 for adoption of written addresses.

     

  • Senate, Reps back action

    Senate, Reps back action

    The National Assembly last night endorsed the emergency declaration in three states.

    The Senate is ready to stamp the Presidential action, its spokesman Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe said yesterday.

    According to him, the lawmakers will not hesistate to approve the request when it is presented.

    The House of Representatives gave a conditional support.

    House spokesman Zakari Mohammed giving the official position of the House said: “As long as it will guarantee peace and security. if you recall, our motions and bulls have always show concern for the state of security in the country.

    “All our activities if taken in the right direction, were geared towards making the situation better and if taken earlier would have corrected some of this anomalies long before now, but its better late than never.

    “We invited the President on the issue sometime last year and the Senate also invited Service Chief, on the same issue.

    “So, as long as it will bring peace and security, the House of Representatives has no problems with that”.

    The chairman, House Committee on Justice Ali Ahmed said: “The security situation of this country should be of paramount concern to everyone and in my view the country is in clear danger of breakdown of law and order.”

    Lawyers yesterday expressed mixed reactions to the declaration of state of emergency.

    Niyi Akintola, Yusuf Ali, (SAN) Joseph Nwobike (SAN) and Sebatine Hon (SAN) gave different views yesterday. They were however unanimous that the President was right in not sacking elected officials and dismantling democratic institutions.

    They described the practice under former President Olusegun Obasanjo as an aberration.

    Akintola dismissed the measure adopted as being inadequate to curb the rising wave of insecurity in the country.

    “Certainly not. I have my doubt whether the measure will not aggravate the current security situation,” Akintola said.

    He however agreed that by not sacking elected officials in the affected states, the President was within the law.

    He frowned at the tactic adopted by the President, and argued that President Jonathan ought to first seek the approval of the National Assembly.

    “What he has done is in anticipation of the National Assembly’s approval. Of course, he has no power to sack any governor or dissolve the State Assembly without the consent of the Federal Legislature.

    It is a sign of impunity,” Akintola said.

    Ali argued that the President was in order in not sacking elected officials of the affected states. He contended that it would have amounted to punishing the wrong people for the failure of security institutions, over which the President alone has control.

    “What happened under President Obasanjo was an aberration. It was wrong to have sacked governors who were not directly found to be the cause of the crisis.

     

  • Senate asks Fed Govt to raise  $14b to save Lake Chad

    Senate asks Fed Govt to raise $14b to save Lake Chad

    The Senate yesterday asked President Goodluck Jonathan to take steps to raise $14 billion to save Lake Chad from drying up.

    This followed a motion entitled: “Urgent action to save the Lake Chad”, sponsored by Ahmed Lawan (Yobe North) and 40 others.

    Although the lawmakers hailed the Federal Government for its financial and moral support to the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC), they underscored the need to raise the fund to undertake Inter Basin Water Transfer (IBWT) from the Ubangi River.

    The upper chamber also resolved that the National Assembly should provide legislative support to the Federal Government to continue with its leadership role in the LCBC and quest for sustainable resuscitation of the lake, the promotion of peace, stability and security in the region as a foundation for a durable and sustainable development.

    It urged President Jonathan, in consultation with the LCBC Summit Chairman and other leaders to champion the donor conference and constitute a robust team of eminent citizens drawn from the member-states to embark on a sensitisation programme of potential donors.

    The Senate asked President Jonathan to provide financial and logistic support to embark on the sensitisation programme and organise the donor conference.

    Lawan in his lead debate noted that Lake Chad is the fourth largest lake in Africa, with a surface area of about 25,000 square km in 1960.

    He recalled that heads of governments of Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad came together in 1964 and established via the Fort Lamy Convention, the LCBC with the objective of harmonising the activities of member-countries for the management of the basin’s resources.

    The lake, Lawan said, is a repository of bio-diversity, playing an important socio-economic, political and cultural role to over 30 million people in the four countries sharing border and providing habitat for a variety of wildlife, including migratory birds.

    He noted that due to a combination of natural and human factors, the lake has been drying up over the last 50 years, leading to the reduction of the surface area from 25,000 square km in 1960 to about 2,500 square km.

    The fear, Lawan said, was that the lake might disappear in the 21st century.

     

     

     

    He noted that the drying up of the lake would plunge the sub-region into ecological and humanitarian crisis, with global consequences.

    Lawan said the already high level of poverty in the region would further exacerbate and degrade the fragile ecosystem, thereby triggering mass population displacements as environmental refugees and worsening the social and security challenges in the region and beyond.

    He said the challenge of the drying up of the lake led heads of government of member-countries of LCBC in 1994 to mandate it to explore options for resuscitating the lake to reverse the ugly trend.

    Lawan noted that the Inter Basin Water Transfer (IBWT) from Ubangi River in the Central African Republic to the lake was identified as a viable option leading to a feasibility, which cost over $6 million.

    The lawmaker said following a motion by the House of Representatives in 2004, the Federal Government under former President Olusegun Obasanjo contributed over $5 million of the $6 million required to fund the feasibility study.

    Lawan observed that due to the favourable outcome of the feasibility study conducted by a Canadian firm, CIMA, the Heads of State of the LCBC member-states approved the IBWT in 2002 at a summit held in Ndjamena, Chad.

    He said the feasibility study revealed that the IBWT was estimated to cost over $14 billion.

    The LCBC secretariat, Lawan said, was mandated by the summit’s of Heads of State to convene a donor conference to mobilise the required funding from the private sector/international community and the member-countries for the execution of the investment plan.

    The senator said he was concerned that the member- countries lacked the financial, technical and logistic capabilities to execute the project, hence the urgent necessity to mobilise support from the international community to save the lake from extinction and avert catastrophe.

    Underscoring the fact that mobilising $14 billion is an enormous task, he raised the need for President Jonathan to initiate in consultation with the Summit Chairman and other Heads of State of the LCBC to put together a powerful team of eminent citizens from the member- states to go round the world and mobilise support for the IBWT project.

    Most lawmakers including Senators Barnabas Gemade, Ben Ayade, Magnus Abe, Ayogu Eze, and Buka Abba Ibrahim, who contributed, supported the motion.

    Ibrahim noted that if urgent action was not taken, the lake would disappear in 10 years.

    Senate President David Mark described it as a necessary motion.

    He noted that although the Federal Government was already doing something, “what we need to do is urge them to move faster so that the action will not be belated.”

  • Senate to treat emergency rule request on its merit – Ndoma-Egba

    Senate to treat emergency rule request on its merit – Ndoma-Egba

    The Senate on Tuesday said it has not received the request for declaration of emergency rule in any state from the Presidency.

    But the upper chamber declared that it would treat any such request on its merit if it comes.

    Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, stated this after an emergency meeting of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Senate caucus in Abuja.

    He also said the caucus resolved to constitute a committee to intervene in the crisis tearing the party apart in Rivers and Akwa Ibom States.

    It was reported that the Federal Government was contemplating declaration of emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Nasarawa to stem the spate of insecurity in the states.

    Notable Nigerians, including governors of the affected states, have already rejected such move.

    But Ndoma-Egba told journalists that though the Senate has not received any request for declaration of state of emergency in any state, emergency rule does not envisage dissolution of elected structures.

    He said, “We have not received any request from Mr. President but one thing is certain.

    “Everybody has agreed that a state of emergency as envisaged under our Constitution does not contemplate the dissolution of elected structures.

    “We agreed on the import but we have not received any request from Mr. President on emergency rule.

    “When we receive a request, if it does come at all, then we will treat it on its merit.”

     

  • $14b required to save Lake Chad – Senate

    $14b required to save Lake Chad – Senate

    The Senate on Tuesday asked President Goodluck Jonathan to take steps to raise $14 billion to save the Lake Chad from drying up.

    This followed a motion entitled: “urgent action to save the Lake Chad” sponsored by Ahmed Lawan (Yobe North) and 40 others.

    Though the lawmakers commended the Federal Government for its financial and moral support to the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC), they underscored the need to raise the fund to undertake Inter Basin Water Transfer (IBWT) from the Ubangi River.

    The upper chamber also resolved that the National Assembly should continue to provide legislative support to the Federal Government to continue with its leadership role in the LCBC and quest for sustainable resuscitation of the lake, the promotion of peace, stability and security in the region as foundation for durable and sustainable development.

    It urged Jonathan, in consultation with the LCBC summit chairman and other leaders, to champion the donor conference and accordingly constitute a robust team of eminent citizens drawn from the member states to embark on sensitization programme of potential donors.

    It asked Jonathan to provide financial and logistic support to embark on the sensitization programme and to organize the donor conference.

    Lawan in his lead debate noted that Lake Chad is the fourth largest lake in Africa, with a surface area of about 25,000 square km in 1960.

    He recalled that heads of government of Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad came together in 1964 and established via Fort Lamy Convention, the LCBC with general objective of harmonizing the activities of member countries for the sustainable management of the basin resources.

    The lake, he said, is a repository of bio-diversity, playing an important socio, economic, political and cultural role to over 30 million people in the four countries sharing border and provides habitat to a variety of wildlife, including migratory birds.

    He noted that due to a combination of natural and human factors, the lake has been drying up over the last 50 years leading to the reduction of the lake surface area from 25,000 square km in 1960 to about 2,500 square km.

     

  • Senate dashes hope of NPA, Shippers’ Council as technical regulators

    The Senate Committee on Marine Transport has dashed the hope of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) and the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) to become the technical regulators at the nation’s sea ports.

    The bill for the creation of a Technical Regulator is at the National Assembly.

    In their efforts to facilitate trade and stop arbitrary charges by terminal operators, both the NPA and the Shippers’Council have been jostling for the juicy position of regulator at the port as the legislative body is trying to create a technical regulator that will promote the interest of importers and other port users.

    But the two agencies are unlikely to get the nod of the Senate to take the position.

    Speaking in Houston Texas, United States, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Marine Transport, Senator Zainab Kure, said the Senate would not consider the two agencies in their efforts to create a technical regulator for port operations in the country.

    Kure said the Senate is not in support of any of the two agencies to regulate the industry.

    Kure said that before the bill which will soon go through second reading would be passed, it will first go to the public for their input.

    According to her, “We are not going to take any of the existing establishments, it is going to be thrown to the public to decide and whatever they decide will stand.”

    She frowned at the fact that there is uniform process for checking arbitrariness of port charges and further noted that the earlier the technical operator is put in place, the better there would be sanity in that sec maritime industry.

    On local shipping capacity, the senator said that she was not happy that the Cabotage law has not been implemented and blamed its non- implementation on the poor economic situation of the country.

    She, however, advised the Federal Government to float a shipping line that would help in the practical training of cadets across institutions in the country.

    On the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF), the law maker said people were not accessing the fund.

    She advised those who have applied for the Fund, and to do so to enable her committee to take action to ensure disbursement.

    She said a letter would enable them determine whether the non-disbursement of the fund is deliberate or based on other issues. “We are going to look into it and we will be able to sought it out,” she said.