Nigeria

House Of Representatives Recommends Additional Legislative Seats For Women

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The House of Representatives Ad-hoc Committee on Constitution Review has recommended the creation of two additional seats per senatorial zone to be reserved for women in state Houses of Assembly and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

It also recommended the creation of 111 additional legislative seats in the National Assembly to be occupied solely by women beginning from the next general election.

The Chairman of the Committee, who is also the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep Ahmed Idris Wase is to be submitted to the entire House for adoption before the end of February.

The law would create an additional Senate seat for women in each state of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory and two additional seats for women in the 36 states and the FCT reserved for women.

The proposed law also stipulates that these additional seats would be in addition to the existing seats in both the Senate, House of Representatives, and state Houses of Assembly, which women shall still be entitled to contest.

The law is also proposing three additional seats for women in state Houses of Assembly to be produced on senatorial basis and will take effect from the next general election, after the life span of the current Assembly.

It also proposed that no Nigerian shall be discriminated against on the basis of sex, age, disability or health status.

He, however, noted that the provision had sailed in the Senate.

At its meeting, which was attended by its consultants, the committee adopted changes to sections 48, 49, 71, and 91, which deal with the composition of the Senate, House of Representatives, and state Houses of Assembly to create additional seats for women.

The Adhoc committee however stepped down consideration of the clause which deals with immunity for Presiding Officers of the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly as well as judicial officers.

It also stepped down consideration of provision which tends to take away the powers of the National Assembly to ratify or domesticate international human rights treaties.

It would also prevent security agencies from parading suspects arrested and accused of offences, describing it as a form of torture, inhuman or degrading treatment.

This would amend Section 34 of the constitution to read “for the purpose of subsection 1(a) of this section, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment include parading arrested persons by the police or any other law enforcement agency.”

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