Again, lawmakers postpone voting on constitution review

Again, lawmakers postpone voting on constitution review

After weeks of rescheduling, our House of Representatives
suspended voting on the 1999 constitution review on Thursday, once more
deferring by an extra week, the crucial exercise needed to conclude the amendment.

The Deputy Speaker, Usman Nafada, said the process will now be
completed next week, but gave no reasons for the new date.

“We will stay here till 6pm today to conclude the consideration
today and then start the voting on Tuesday next,” he told about 200 members who
attended yesterday’s plenary session.

In a schedule released last week by the House and confirmed by
the Deputy Speaker, the lawmakers were billed to debate the separate provisions
of the amendments on Tuesday and Wednesday this week, while the electronic
voting was planned for Thursday, April 22, 2010.

Ita Enang, the Chairman House committee on Business and Rules,
who announced the plan, said the sundry legislative business will be suspended
during this week, while the House, already behind the Senate in the exercise,
focuses on its completion.

“It is exclusively a week we devote to the consideration and
passage of the amendment of the constitution and we will do all we can to avoid
anything that will be like a distraction,” he affirmed.

Through the week, the House has hardly adhered to its timetable,
admitting motions and other deliberations during the three days that always
commenced with hours of closed door sessions.

On Tuesday, it adjourned shortly after the executive session. On
Wednesday, lawmakers commiserated with Poland over the death of its president
and considered a motion on wind storm damage in Gombi town of Adamawa State on
Wednesday, before beginning a late afternoon debate on the amendment, drawing
past 6pm.

The lawmakers also took scores of minutes debating a
controversial remark of a colleague, Femi Gbajabiamila, who said the House
leadership has led the House away from the interest of Nigerians.

By Wednesday afternoon, Mr. Nafada affirmed that voting will
still hold Thursday.

Waiting till Tuesday

The exercise will now hold on Tuesday, April 27, 2010, he
announced again on Thursday, after voting cards were earlier assigned to
members and a mock voting carried out. He offered no explanation.

He only pleaded with all members to be in attendance during the voting next
week. “Your constituency will be watching you, so we should all try and be
present during the voting,” he advised, highlighting the suggestion that the
exercise was shifted since the House could not make for the required minimum of
240 members to pass a clause.

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