THE National Conference on Thursday voted for the creation of 18 more states in the country.
The creation of new states was one of
the decisions taken by the delegates at their plenary while considering
the report of the Committee on Political Restructuring and Forms of
Government.
Apart from the 18 new states proposed,
the conference said a separate state-yet-to-be named should be carved
out of the South-East to bring the number of the states in the zone to
six.
In creating a new state from the
South-East geopolitical zone, the conference said the creation would
correct the imbalance of the zone having the least number of states.
In the existing 36 states arrangement, each zone has six states with only the North-West having seven states.
The new states proposed by the
conference are: Aba, to be carved out of the present Abia State;
Katagum, from Bauchi State; Ijebu, from Ogun State; Amana, from former
Sardauna Province; Apa, from Benue State; Anioma, from Delta State,
Savannah, from Borno State; and Etiti, from South-East.
Others are Njaba/Anim, from Anambra and
Imo states; Gurara, from Kaduna State; Ghari, from Kano State; Adada,
New Oyo from Oyo State; Orachi, from Rivers State; Ogoja, from Cross
River State; and Kainji, from Kebbi and Niger states.
Two other states, one each from the South-East and South-West zones, are also yet to be named.
It was agreed by the delegates that the
18 new states would be shared among the six zones in a manner that no
zone would have more states than the other.
Though it was also agreed that states
were free to have their constitutions, the request to change the name of
Adamawa State to Gongola State was overwhelmingly rejected by the
delegates.
The delegates also voted that the Presidency should rotate among the six geopolitical zones of the country.
They said the rotation should be between the northern and southern regions.
It was also agreed by the delegates that
in the case of death, impeachment or incapacitation of the President,
the deputy would no longer assume office automatically.
Rather, they said that the Vice
President should only act as President for a period of 90 days within
which another election should hold.
“In the absence of the death of the
President, the Vice President shall act as President for a period of 90
days within which an election to the office of the President shall be
held,” the conference said.
The delegates argued that since the
office of the President would be rotated among the six geopolitical
zones, it would be unfair to allow the Vice President to take the turn
of another zone by automatically assuming power.
President Goodluck Jonathan, a
southerner from Bayelsa State, had assumed the Presidency in 2010
following the death of former President Umaru Yar’Adua, a northerner
from Katsina State.
The delegates rejected the proposal that
the President should be in office for a single term of six years, and
favoured the present arrangement of two terms of four years each.
It was also agreed that the President
and his deputy should run on a joint ticket, thereby rejecting the
recommendation that the President should pick his deputy among members
of the National Assembly after he must have won.
The conference also supported the
bicameral legislature. This implies that there would still be the Senate
and the House of Representatives.
It was also agreed that the office of
the governor should rotate among the three senatorial districts in the
state while the office of the chairman of a local government council
should rotate among the components in the local government areas.
The conference also recommended that
that the Independent National Electoral Commission should divide each
council to two or three equal parts as the case maybe for the purpose of
electing the local government chairman.
The delegates rejected a motion that the number of states in Nigeria should not be more than 55.
However, a delegate, Mr. Femi Falana, SAN, condemned the decision to create more states.
He said the action was at variance with
the decisions and resolutions earlier taken by the conference on the
need by government to cut cost.
“Having regard to the several
resolutions of the National Conference on the need to reduce the cost of
governance, I found the recommendation for the creation of additional
18 states rather contradictory,” Falana said.
The conference also said that a
referendum should be conducted in each of the states that want to merge
with 65 per cent of the eligible voters in each of those states
approving merger and that the National Assembly, by resolutions passed
by a single majority of membership, should approve such merger.
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