Friday, 21 September 2018

KEMI ADEOSUN: INTERESTING PERSPECTIVE by Abdul Mahmud.

".......the citizenship by birth granted to Kemi under the 1960 and 1963 constitutions was nullified by section 26 (1) and (3) of the 1979 constitution- "Avoidance of dual citizenship". Recall that under both provisions of subsections 1 years and 3, and more particularly subsection 1 ( ..."a person shall forfeit forthwith his Nigerian citizenship if he acquires or retains the citizenship or nationality of a country other than Nigeria"), the constitution abrogated the right to dual citizenship. So as at 1 October 1979 when the constitution came into effect, Kemi was effectively no longer a citizen of Nigeria, nor was she a citizen when she turned 21 in 1988. Further, by the combined effect of Section 26 (1) and (3), Kemi was not a citizen of Nigeria when she graduated at 22 in 1989 and only became a citizen again in 1999 when her Nigerian citizenship was restored by section 28 of the 1999 constitution. Between the interregnum of 1 October 1979 and 29 May 1999, she was not a citizen, so she wasn't expected to offer herself for call up when she graduated at 22 in 1989 or offer herself for service in 1999 when she was already 32 years old- two years above the limiting age were she a Nigerian citizen by birth.
Some may argue that when the military promulgated The Constitution ( Suspension and Modification) Decree No 1, 1984, the 1979 Constitution was effectively suspended by the military decree. This is an erroneous argument. Decree No 1 of 1984 only suspended and modified parts of the 1979 Constitution, and not the entire Constitution. Chapter 3 which dealt with citizenship and Chapter 4 which dealt with Fundamental Rights were NEVER suspended or modified by Decree No 1, 1984. What this means in effect is that Section 26, which dealt with "avoidance of dual citizenship" was never touched by the decree. And if I recall correctly, our court in the case of the Military Governor of Ondo State v Victor Adegoke Adewunmi ( I will look for the citation later as I am typing extempore) addressed the effect of military decrees and edicts on the unsuspended parts of the 1979 constitution and held that the unsuspended parts had effective operations as if the 1979 constitution was not suspended in the first place. The point I am making here is that during the military interregnum - 1984 to 1999- Kemi was not a citizen of Nigeria by virtue of the unsuspended provisions of section 26 of the 1979 Constitution, so she was not constitutionally entitled to offer herself for service or be called up for service under the NYSC Act. In effect, she was a foreigner!
The purpose of this update is to open a new perspective into the Kemi NYSC imbroglio, while hoping that lawyers on my contact can engage this serious constitutional issue. My hope is that Kemi can approach the court for interpretation of the effect of section 26 of the 1979 constitution on her status as a citizen and her duty to serve under the NYSC Act.
My thoughts!"
(Extracted from Ayo Turton's wall)
L

Thursday, 13 September 2018

BUHARI'S RIGHT TO VETO ELECTORAL ACT AMENDMENT BILL 2018 by Jide Ojo

“The card reader is not in danger of being discarded. It is a sine qua non for credible elections. We appeal to the National Assembly to reconvene as soon as possible to consider and approve the necessary corrections to the amended Electoral Act”
–Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity in a press statement on Sunday, September 9, 2018
Since President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to withhold assent for the third time on the Electoral Act Amendment Bill 2018 was made public on Monday, September 3, 2018, a lot of motives have been read into his action. Critics believe that the President does not want credible elections in 2019. They claim that the President is afraid of allowing the law to recognise the use of Smart Card Reader for voter accreditation. Not even the explanation of clerical errors, inelegant drafting and cross-referencing issues in the bill as advanced by the President’s aide on legislative matters (Senate), Senator Ita Enang, are tenable to the members of the opposition.
I was on the Nigerian Television Authority’s “Nigeria Today” on Tuesday, September 4, 2018 to discuss the President’s withholding of assent to the bill. I was on the programme with Enang. I have also had the privilege of discussing the matter on several media channels and even wrote my last week’s column on the matter. However, as of last week, I was discussing the bill from my earlier review of it in June 2018. Over the weekend, someone who read my last week’s article called me to ask if I had read the version that was sent to the President for assent. I said no. The person thereafter sent me a copy of the bill. Lo and behold, after digesting it, I commended President Buhari for not signing the bill.
Could you believe that as against the version sent to the President in June 2018 which had 41 amendments, the latest alterations passed by the National Assembly on July 24 and sent to the President for assent on August 3, 2018 had only 15 amended sections? Could you believe that the Smart Card Reader which was legalised by amendment to Section 49 of the previous amendment was not even mentioned in the current amendment? Yet, the critics who never read the bill are wrongfully accusing the President of not wanting the Independent National Electoral Commission to use the card reader.
Other notable provisions in the June amendment which are missing in the latest effort include Section 8 which attempts to make the Independent National Electoral Commission staff non-partisan; Section 31(6) which criminalises presentation of false affidavit by a candidate or political party which is supposed to lead to disqualification by the court; amendment to Section 52 which lifts ban on electronic voting; alteration to Section 65 (a) which paved the way for the creation of the National Electronic Register of Election Results; amendment to Section 78 (4) which would have given INEC 60 days instead of 30 days to respond to applications of political associations seeking to register as political parties.
Other omitted amendments are alteration of Section 91 subsection 2 – 7 which increased expenditure ceiling for candidates. The section increased the amount the following candidates can spend on their campaigns: President – N5bn from N1bn; Governor N1bn from N200m; Senate – N100m from N40m; House of Reps. N70m from N20m; State House of Assembly – N30m from N10m; Chairman Area Council – N30m from N10m and Councillorship N5m from N1m. Likewise, amendment to Section 91 (9) which increased individual donations from N1m to N10m while pegging the fine at one per cent of the ceiling or 12 months imprisonment (subsection 10) is also missing.
Similarly, attempt to amend Section 99 to increase the campaign period from 90 days to 150 days has been deleted while penalties for non-compliance with Section 100 subsections 3 and 4 which have to do with media coverage are no longer in the new amendment. Furthermore, amendment of Section140 which imposed stricter penalties of N2m fine or two years imprisonment for omission of party logos and name is no longer there.
In actual fact, only 13 sections of the current Electoral Act 2010 were amended in the bill sent to the President on August 3, 2018. Sections 1 and 15 are title and citation of the bill. The main sections of the law that were amended are sections 18, 30, 34, 36, 38, 44, 51A, 63, 67, 76, 87, 112 and 151. My personal observations, however, are as follows:
One of the glaring clerical errors in the bill is in Section 34 (2). It reads: “Any candidate who observes his name or that of his party missing on the distribution of ballot papers list published …”, This is wrong because Section 34 (1) refers to publishing statement of the full names and addresses of all candidates standing nominated and NOT distribution of ballot papers as alluded to in Section 34(2). In order to deal with the situation that arose in Kogi State during the last governorship election in 2015 where Prince Abubakar Audu, then candidate of the All Progressives Congress, died mid-way into the poll, Section 36 of the bill is asking INEC to suspend the election for a maximum of 21 days and asks the affected party to conduct fresh primary within seven days. Much as this is a good recommendation, it will be better to limit the suspension of the poll and replacement of the candidate to only the leading candidate in the election. This will save cost and other logistics. As we know, many candidates in an election are mere “also ran” or pretenders who have little or no electoral value.
In Section 51, the National Assembly rejected the proposal compelling those who were fraudulently elected into offices from being asked to pay back all they have earned while illegally occupying their usurped positions. Recall that the Supreme Court has on several occasions asked those who illegally occupy elective positions to refund all their emoluments. However, in Section 51(2), the lawmakers say apart from having the usurper remain in office while the appeals are going on, such persons “shall not be sanctioned for the benefits he derived while in office”. This is self-serving!
Another major error in the bill is the obvious cross-referencing error in Section 67 which refers to Section 49 (2) which was not altered by the National Assembly. In the current principal Act, s.49 (2) refers to issuance of ballot papers by the Presiding Officer while it is referenced in the context of electronic transmission of result in the amended bill. In Section 87 (12) of the bill, INEC is given the power to overrule any political party who alters the result of its primaries. However, there is no consequential amendment of Section 31 (1) which says INEC is duty bound to accept whatever list political parties present to it as their nominated candidates. Furthermore, Section 87 (14) gives only a window of 30 days for political parties to conduct their primaries including issuance of 21 days’ notice of the primaries to INEC. That leaves political parties nine days to conduct their primaries and for INEC to monitor them. This contradicts the extant Principal Act which in Section 31 (1) gives 60 days.
Given all the aforementioned, I am of the opinion that the President saved this country’s democracy by withholding assent to this badly drafted bill. I join all well-meaning compatriots to appeal to the National Assembly to cut short its annual recess to come and urgently address the issues raised by the President on this electoral amendment bill as well as approve the funding for the all-important 2019 general election.
(via Punch)