President Muhammudu Buhari |
The Senator representing Abia North in the National Assembly, Senator Mao Ohuabunwa, has assured Nigerian youths that President Muhammad Buhari would gladly assent to the Bill establishing Nigerian Peace Corps.
The Bill, which was overwhelmingly supported and passed at the National Assembly last year, was submitted to the presidency for assent on 27th December 2017.
Though the President has remained mute on whether he would sign the Bill or not, but a report from a Nigerian newspaper generated heat on Saturday, suggesting that the President may have refused to append his signature.
Reacting to the rumour on Wednesday, Senator Ohuabunwa said the President had no reason not to sign the Bill, saying it was people’s Bill which tended to create employment.
“Speaking to the fact, I don’t really see the President withholding his assent. This is the people’s bill. This is a bill that will create employment for the youth and remember, when we were discussing insecurity, I made an allusion to the fact that, even this young men and women can be trained as intelligent officers like we have seen. Security now has gone beyond matchet and guns, we need a lot of intelligence, technology.
“This guys can be trained and I think this is also an avenue to reduce not only employment, but even underemployment. I want to believe that the President will jump at this and definitely assent to this Bill”, he said.
How Recession Made Me Discover How To Extract Silver From Wastes For Insane Profits The lawmaker also emphasised that the National Assembly could exercise its constitutional powers to override the President should he refuse to assent to the Bill.
He said, “if the contrary happens, there is always a channel of communication, he will send it back to us then we definitely know what to do from there.”
“I don’t want to preempt, but if it is true the President has withheld his assent, then we have our statutory responsibility either to veto or override the President veto”, Ohuabunwa added.
The lawmaker also frowned at the continuous siege on the office of the Corps by the Nigeria Police, saying he was misinformed that the Police had vacated the office, otherwise, he would have moved a motion to that effect on the floor on Wednesday.
He, however, said he would not hesitate to bring the matter up to the knowledge of his colleagues, should the Police continue to lay siege on the office in the coming weeks.
Meanwhile, the Public Relations Officer of Peace Corps of Nigeria, Patriot Millicent Umoru, has said the national headquarters of the Corps located at Jabi, Abuja, was still under lock and keys, contrary to the rumour that the Police had vacated the premises.
Umoru while addressing newsmen on Wednesday, said despite the two court orders given recently and the directive of the House of Representatives that Police should unseal the office, the FCT Commissioner of Police, Sadiq Bello, pleaded last week that the office would be open within 7 days, but the status quo had remained up till the 7th day.
“This promise was made last week Thursday and till now, the office is still under lock and key.
“We were there today and it was confirmed that the police men are still there and the van is still stationed there so there is no indication that they are even ready to leave as at the time we went there”, the PRO said.
Umoru said the Corps would return to the National Assembly “and pass the information to them that up till now, the place is still sealed up.”
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