--Advertisement--
Advertisement

We’ll override Buhari on Peace Corps bill, say reps

The house of representatives says it will override President Muhammadu Buhari on the Peace Corps of Nigeria establishment bill as well as nine other bills.

Abdulrazak Namdas, spokesman of the house, announced this during a press briefing on Wednesday.

He said the lawmakers have commenced the process of overriding the president on the 10 bills.

Buhari had rejected the Peace Corps bill, citing duplication of functions and lack of funds as his reasons.

Advertisement

“We are in the process of overriding the veto of the president on ten bills, excluding the electoral act, but which includes the Peace Corps bill,” Namdas said.

He listed the 10 bills to include a bill for an act to establish the Chartered Institute of Treasury Management, a bill for an act to establish the Nigerian Council for Social Works, a bill for an act to amend the currency conversion, freezing orders act to give discretionary powers to the judge of high court to order for forfeiture of assets of affected persons, and a bill for an act to establish the police procurement fund.

Others are a bill for an act to amend the environmental health officers council registration act, a bill for an act to establish the Chartered Institute of loan and risk management of Nigeria, a bill for an act to establish the Chartered Institute of Public Management of Nigeria.

Advertisement

Also included are a bill for an act to establish the Chartered Institute of Exports and Community Brokers of Nigeria and a bill for an act to establish the Federal University, Wukari.

Regarding the bill on the amendment of the electoral act which Buhari also rejected, Namdas said the lawmakers will address areas of the bill the president disagreed with and re-introduce it for passage.

He said the house agreed with the president that section 138 of the amended electoral act unduly limits the right of the candidate to a free and fair election.

He also said the lawmakers agreed with the president on his position that the section 152 of the act regarding the competence of the national assembly to regulate local government elections.

Advertisement

“We will re-gazette the electoral act and expunge the areas which the president mentioned and which we are in agreement with the president and in line with the constitution,” he said.

“We will then bring it back for debate and re-transmit it to the president for assent.”

2 comments
  1. It is a well known fact that engaging the youths productively would drastically reduce to the barest minimum crime and other social vices prevalent in the country. The Corps is needed now more than before considering the incessant attacks in our educational institutions which the Corps has as their core mandate to secure. The National Assembly should go ahead and do the needful.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error: Content is protected from copying.