Delegates
to the National Conference resumed Monday to debate the draft rules of
procedure, which they agreed should be considered clause by clause.
However, the delegates during the debate failed to agree on how to
reach a consensus on their decisions, prompting the conference Chairman,
Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi, to defer further discussions of the matter
for another time.
The debate on the consensus brought to the
fore one of the fault lines in the country as it pitted delegates from
the north against their southern counterparts.
While the northern delegates said resolutions of the conference should
be reached based on the vote of 75 per cent of the 492 delegates, their
southern counterparts pushed for a two-thirds majority vote,
representing 66 per cent of the participants.
The controversy
over resolutions of the conference through a consensus arrangement began
when Chief Mike Ozekhome called for a review of Order 6, Rule 4 and
Rule 11 as well as Order 11, Rules 1 and 2 of the Conference Procedures,
which state that a resolution at the conference will be reached through
a 75 per cent vote of the delegates.
The chairman of the
conference, Justice Idris Kutigi, had also ruled to adopt the resolution
but Ozoekhome in a motion supported by Chief Adeniyi Akintola, urged
the conference to adopt the best parliamentary practice of two-thirds of
the delegates.
Ozekhome argued that in a conference of 492
delegates, to pass a resolution through a 75 per cent majority vote
would be near impossible and would only enthrone a tyrannical minority.
He said adopting such a voting system would make it impossible to pass
resolutions on issues such as resource control, regionalism, state
police, type of government and other critical matters that agitate the
minds of Nigerians.
According to him, a two-thirds majority is
the global parliamentary practice adopted in passing resolutions and the
National Conference will do well to embrace global best practice.
Supporting Ozekhome, Akintola said if President Goodluck Jonathan had
decided to force the 75 per cent vote on the delegates to pass a
resolution, there would be no need for them to continue with the
national discourse.
Also contributing to the debate, a former
Secretary of the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Olu Falae,
and Mr. Bisi Adegboye advanced the position of the southern delegates
that resolutions should be reached based on a two-thirds majority.
Afenifere chieftain, Chief Ayo Adebanjo and leader of the Odua People's
Congress (OPC), Chief Gani Adams, also supported the argument for a
two-thirds majority vote.
Adebanjo said the argument to use
consensus might be an avenue to prevent decisions from being reached at
the conference, as it would amount to setting impossible conditions for
the delegates to meet.
But
Professor Awwal Yadudu, a delegate from the North-west, faulted the
arguments of Ozekhome and Akintola, saying as much as everybody believes
in the indivisibility and indissolubility of Nigeria as a sovereign
nation, it would be better if decisions are reached by 75 per cent of
the delegates.
Also, a former Inspector General of Police,
Mohammed Gambo-Jimeta, who warned delegates against intimidating others,
spoke in the same vein.
He urged all the delegates to support the the 75 per cent majority vote in the overall interest of the conference.
He said: “If we want to get anything perfect here, it will not be
possible based on the way the delegates were selected. Although no one
is trying to destroy what has been put together for the conference, no
one should try to force his will and subsequently spoil this opportunity
to chart a new course for the country.”
Hajia Naratu Babajo, a
delegate from Kaduna State, reiterated the position of the northern
delegates on the adoption of a 75 per cent majority vote in passing
resolutions on all issues.

No comments:
Post a Comment