The
National Conference sitting in Abuja has recommended death penalty for
people who rape minors, 50 years imprisonment for corrupt judges, and
life jail term for those who rape women.
Also, the
Committee on Civil Society, Labour, Youth and Sports proposed an
amendment to the effect that public office holders or public servants
entrusted with public funds, who have being found to have
misappropriated money meant for pension or other public funds are to be
sentenced to life in prison, without an option of fine.
Meanwhile, a proposal to control the influx of some Nigerians into some
parts of the country was greeted with divergent reactions that further
exposed the crack at the council chamber along ethnic and regional lines
among the citizens.
The motion brought by a delegate from
Rivers State, Sargent Awuse based his concern on recent reports of
insurgents trying to infiltrate “his home state.”
Awuse
continued: “Recall on Monday, June 16, 2014, about 486 suspected
insurgents from the northern part of the country, who according to media
reports claimed to be immigrant traders, were nabbed on their way to
Port Harcourt.
“For those of you who are familiar with Port
Harcourt, when you enter the city, either from Omagwa from Aba Zone, you
will find oil installations dotting the landscape, so, we are worried
because any attempt in sabotaging the oil installations will not only
cost the economy of this nation some money, but it can also cause
monumental environmental disasters that we may not be able to handle.
His position drew different reactions from some of the delegates as the
response was spontaneous, occasioned by discordant shouts of “migrant
killers,” “can’t traders travel,” “is there a restriction on where some
Nigerians cannot go?”
Bashir Dalhatu, a delegate from Jigawa
State said the nation is indeed at a crossroads as a result of the
consequences occasioned by security concerns in the country. So, he
suggested that there should be restraint when some sensitive issues are
to be discussed.
He said, “we must exercise caution when we
address very serious national issues. Since the arrest of these nearly
500 northerners, which tagged Boko Haram, we have heard all sorts of
insinuations. But they claimed to be traders, calling on delegates not
to give serious regard to media reports on the matter, as some reports
might not be authentic.
Dalhatu said when the news of the
arrest reached the north, “a lot of us were scampering around to
actually authenticate this information.”
He explained that
information gathered from diverse reliable and independent sources
revealed that the acclaimed suspects “are migrant traders who in their
usual tradition migrate to the South to carry out their business
activities.”

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