National Assembly Needed For Restructuring To Be Possible- Tambuwal
The Chairman
PDP Governors Forum and Governor of Sokoto State Hon Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, on
Monday said that the current efforts at restructuring of the country though
desirable will not achieve success if they were not channeled through the
National Assembly as amendments to the 1999 constitution.
Tambuwal was
speaking at the opening plenary of the 26th Nigerian Economic Summit tagged
“Building partnerships for resilience.” He said the nation must avoid a repeat
of the mistake of 2015 when a robust attempt by the House of Representatives to
amend the constitution was rejected at the last minute.
Speaking
alongside Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State; Funke Opeke; Chief Executive
Officer, MainOne; and Chidi Ajaere; CEO, The GIG Group in Abuja, Governor
Tambuwal who was Speaker of the House of Representatives when the attempt at
constitution amendment was made, said restructuring could only be done by constitutional
amendments.
“As it were
at the moment, whatever you are going to do about the constitution, has been
prescribed by the constitution, how you are going to do it, the Grundnorm, ” he
said pointing out that “the constitution has prescribed how a word in that
constitution is going to be amended
“Except of
course we are saying we are going to jettison the National Assembly and the
State Assemblies, in getting it done, which is not possible,” he added.
According to Governor Tambuwal, “you can only do that through the introduction
of bills at the National Assembly, debates at the National Assembly, public
hearings and getting the concurrence of the 36 States Houses of Assemblies”
He said this
was what the House of Representatives did in 2015 when it elaborately debated
the issues after Nigerians had first debated them and their views collated and
synthesised into an Act that was presented to President Jonathan for assent.
He said that
President Obasanjo and President Jonathan’s constitutional conferences failed
because their Resolutions were not translated into legislation.
“So you
cannot go outside of the constitution to amend the constitution, so we better
come to terms with this realisation and agree to come together and agree on how
best we can work together to achieve what the nation desires, ” Tambuwal told
his audience at the summit opening.
“In that
effort that we made, we attempted to reduce the items we have in the exclusive
legislative list and move them to the concurrent legislative list, things like
power, power generation, and distribution, railway, and a host of others to move
them because we realised their importance to sub-national development.
“Because as
it is today you have to get the permission of the federal government to
generate, transmit and distribute power, but if you amend the constitution and
move that item to the concurrent legislative list, a state like Sokoto may
begin the process of establishing a solar plant with capacity to generate say
20 – 30 Megawatts of electricity and set up another hydro plant and have a mix
of power generation that can generate up to 60 Megawatts of electricity enough
to power the entire state,
“So also with
railways, if you take it off the exclusive legislative list, states or zones in
terms of the 6 geopolitical zones that we have in the country, may come
together and establish railway for their people
“We also
removed policing from the exclusive legislative list to the concurrent
legislative list, which would have allowed states by now to have state police
but as it is now you cannot have state police without constitutional
amendment”, he said.
According to
the Chairman of the PDP Governors Forum, “What we did then was a multifaceted
approach to address the lists of challenges Nigeria was facing as at that time
in terms of security, power, central and general development
“Even by
removing the issues that had to do with basic education and primary healthcare
from chapter 2 that is not justiciable to chapter 4 that is, were landmark
decisions that were all made by the 7th House of Representatives to make things
easy and possible for implementation by sub-national and federal governments”.
Governor
Tambuwal said the proposed amendments were still on paper and presents away
out for the nation at this time.
He said,
“Yes a way out, for now, will be to get the bill and represent it to the present
National Assembly for enactment.”

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