Even
as Nigerians continue to complain about the earnings of their lawmakers
and other public office holders, the National Assembly, yesterday,
completed the amendment of the 1999 Constitution with approval of life
pension for anybody who has held office as President or Vice President,
Senate President or Deputy Senate President, Speaker or Deputy Speaker
of the House of Representatives.
But beneficiaries of this
gesture must be occupants who successfully concluded their terms in
office without removal or impeachment.
The
amended constitution, which was presented as motion, to the floor of the
Senate by the Chairman, Senate Committee on the Review of the 1999
Constitution, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, for onward transmission to the
president for assent, also made it mandatory for the president to appear
once a year before the joint sitting of the National Assembly to
deliver an address in respect of the state of the nation.
But
the president, in the expected constitution, loses the power to solely
assent to bills passed by the National Assembly. The same applies to
state governors.
The amended Clause read: “Any person who has
held office as President or Deputy President of the Senate, Speaker or
Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, shall be entitled to
pension for life at a rate equivalent to the annual salary of the
incumbent President or Deputy President of the Senate, Speaker or Deputy
Speaker of the House of Representatives, provided that such a person
was not removed from office by the process of impeachment or for breach
of any of the provisions of this Constitution.
“The president
shall attend a joint meeting of the National Assembly once a year to
deliver an address in respect of the state of the nation. He may attend
any joint meeting of the National Assembly, either to deliver an address
on national affairs including fiscal measures, or to make such
statement on the policy of government as he considers to be of national
importance.”
Credit: Vanguard
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