News
Shift to Parliamentary system Bill: It will stimulate Nigerians in all walks of life-Pa Bisi Akande + Photos
- /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 27
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/pasyb1-1000x547.jpg&description=Shift to Parliamentary system Bill: It will stimulate Nigerians in all walks of life-Pa Bisi Akande + Photos', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
- Share
- Tweet /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 72
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/pasyb1-1000x547.jpg&description=Shift to Parliamentary system Bill: It will stimulate Nigerians in all walks of life-Pa Bisi Akande + Photos', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
… it’s a Nigerian Bill-Caucus leader, Chinda
Foremost politician and ex-Governor of Osun State and chieftain of the ruling party, APC, Chief Bisi Akande has said the proposed shift to Parliamentary system of government by 60 members of the House of Representatives will stimulate Nigerians from all walks of life.
He disclosed this when the group led by the Minority Caucus Leader, Rep Kingsley Ogundu Chinda visited him in Abuja to table the proposal, Akande said:
“You are welcome, my leaders, the Nigerian leaders, Nigerian lawmakers and parliamentarians. I’m happy to welcome you.
“The most stimulating aspect of democracy is discussion. And what you have started now is to test the waters from the ideas of the Nigerian people.
“And now that you put it on the table, I know it will stimulate Nigerians of all walks of life to discuss, to review, to assess, and then advice. And at the end of it, I don’t see how your system will not be productive.
“I wish you the best in your endeavor, and I wish Nigerians the enjoyment of your good ideas. And in the end, I know you will come up with something that will do all of us good.
Earlier leader of the House of Representatives Minority caucus, Chinda chronicled what the Bill stands for noting that: “Our father, our leader, a de-tribalized Nigerian, a quintessential leader of the highest esteem, before you are your children, members of the House of Representatives, cutting across political party, tribe and religion. We have been elected to make laws for the good governance of our country,
“Sir, we sat down, looked at our country, where we’re coming from, where we are today, and we felt that country should develop based on her knowledge, environment, and circumstance.
“We have been besieged by several issues as a nation and we must state that we believe in this country, Nigeria, we believe in the indivisibility of our country, but we also believe that we must be dynamic, we must not shy away from change and so we felt that we need to introduce something new on the table.
“And having considered the pros and cons, advantages and disadvantages, we think it is necessary for us to start the process to rejig our system, to start the process to move from the present American typed presidential system to a Nigerian typed parliamentary system.
“Sir, we are not talking about a water type parliamentary system, not the textbook parliamentary system but we’re talking about one that will suit our country better for purposes of accountability, reduction of costs of governance, removal of that toga or aura that is built around public officers and our leaders who ordinarily are servants of the people.
“For us to understand government better and make decisions faster and easier for all of us in the interest of our nation, and so we have proposed three bills, sir.
“The bills have gone through the first reading to take us from the local government to the state up to the national, back to a parliamentary system of government and this process will be gradual.
“We do not expect that the change will come almost immediately. We must begin to test run the system and continue to make consequential amendments to all other laws so that we’ll all be in sync.
“We have come today to you, sir, considering your position in our country today, your wealth of experience, we know that we cannot succeed without tapping from the knowledge of those that have seen it all, and you are one of such persons in our country today.
“That is why we have come to you, to seek for your advice, to seek for your direction, to also tap from your inexhaustible wealth of knowledge in this sector, in public governance, both parliamentary and presidential system, and in fact the Nigerian system, which we know that you are very deep in understanding her workings.
“That’s why we have come, sir, to seek your support for this project, to also get advice from you, which will help us in moving this forward.
“But finally, I will say, sir, that at the end of the day, it is not our bill, it’s a Nigerian bill, so whatever Nigerians say will be the final result of this.
“But as legislators, we are dropping it on the table for Nigerians to deliberate and take a decision on it.
News
PDP welcomes Iyabo Obasanjo, hands her Ogun senate ticket
The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Ogun State, on Wednesday officially received former Senator Iyabo Obasanjo, following her exit from the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC.
Recall that Iyabo, daughter of former Nigerian President, Olusegun Obasanjo, represented Ogun Central in the Senate between 2007 and 2011.
She lost her re-election bid in 2011 and left the country to pursue a career in academics in the United States of America.
In January this year, Senator Obasanjo returned to active politics after 15 years and joined the ruling APC, where she declared her ambition to run for governor.
However, on the 31st of May, the former senator resigned from APC after losing the governorship ticket, citing disrespect, betrayal, and unfair treatment by the APC leadership.
She was officially received into the PDP fold at a massive rally held at the party secretariat in Abeokuta on Wednesday.
The State Chairman of the PDP, Dr Abayomi Tella, presented the PDP flag to Senator Obasanjo, welcoming her back to the party and announcing her as the PDP candidate for Ogun Central in the next election.
“On behalf of our National Chairman, Alhaji Abdulrahman Mohammed, and the entire National Working Committee of the PDP, I, Abayomi Tella, PhD, the State Chairman of the PDP, and on behalf of PDP Ogun Central, present to our revered sister, Prof. Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, this flag as the authority of the party for her candidature for the Senate in Ogun Central,” Tella said.
Taking the party’s oath, Senator Obasanjo pledged her loyalty and allegiance to the PDP, its constitution, manifesto, and code of conduct.
“I commit myself to the ideals of the PDP. I shall serve the people of Ogun State and Nigeria with integrity, humility, and dedication, prioritising their welfare above personal and sectional interests,” she declared.
She declared that she remains the candidate to beat in the next election, saying she remains the best senator to have represented Ogun Central.
On his part, Adebutu vowed that, if elected governor, his administration would ensure the viability of local government areas by implementing local government autonomy.
He also promised to be prudent and transparent in the management of public funds.
“I, Oladipupo, son of Adebutu, won’t steal your money. Local governments will get their funds accordingly, and we shall be transparent in all our dealings,” he said.
News
I’m Fully Vindicated of 11-Year-Old Case That Tormented Me and My Family – Diezani Celebrates UK Court Acquittal
Former Nigerian Minister of Petroleum Resources Diezani Alison-Madueke, has reacted to her acquittal of all corruption charges, on Wednesday by a United Kingdom (UK) jury.
Diezani who was found not guilty following an 11-year legal battle, is celebrating what she called “a decade of relentless vilification.”
Southwark Crown Court in London had cleared Alison-Madueke, 64, on all five counts of accepting bribes and one count of conspiracy to commit bribery after more than 46 hours of jury deliberations.
The verdict closes a case that began with her arrest in London in October 2015.
Speaking after the ruling, Diezani said the decision had restored her reputation.
“I am deeply relieved. My name is cleared. This nightmare is over,” she said in a statement. “I thank God Almighty for His faithfulness and for completely vindicating me.”
“For eleven long, gruelling years, this case has hung over my head and has tormented me and my family,” she added.
“Today, the past decade of relentless and unjust vilification, condemnation and scrutiny has finally come to an end.”
Prosecutors had alleged that while serving as minister under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan from 2010 to 2015, Alison-Madueke received more than £100,000 in benefits from oil and gas executives seeking lucrative contracts.
The benefits cited in court included private jet flights, chauffeur-driven vehicles, luxury goods, use and maintenance of a London property, and payment of her son’s school fees.
She was tried alongside co-defendants Ayinde Olatimbo Bukola and Agama Doye.
The trial began in January 2026, with Alison-Madueke maintaining her innocence throughout proceedings.
Despite the UK acquittal, legal challenges remain for the former minister in Nigeria, where she still faces pending corruption and money laundering cases.
Alison-Madueke’s tenure as petroleum minister made her the first woman to hold the position in Nigeria and later the first female president of OPEC in 2014. Her arrest in 2015 marked the start of one of the most high-profile corruption investigations involving a Nigerian public official.
News
Appeal Court Knocks Out NBC’s Bid To Revive Broadcast Fines
The Court of Appeal in Abuja has struck out the National Broadcasting Commission’s (NBC) latest attempt to overturn a Federal High Court judgment restraining it from imposing fines on radio and television stations, handing the broadcast regulator another significant judicial defeat.
In a unanimous judgment delivered on Wednesday, the appellate court ruled that the NBC’s appeal was fundamentally defective and incompetent, holding that it lacked the legal foundation required for the court to exercise jurisdiction.
Justice Jane Inyang, who delivered the lead judgment, identified a fatal discrepancy in the identity of the appellant. While the original suit at the Federal High Court was between the Incorporated Trustees of Media Rights Agenda and the National Broadcasting Commission, the notice of appeal was filed in the name of the “Nigerian Broadcasting Commission” – an entirely different legal entity.
According to the court, the inconsistency rendered the appeal incurably defective.
“The notice of appeal and the accompanying briefs are fundamentally defective and do not and cannot confer jurisdiction on this court to hear and determine the appeal,” Justice Inyang ruled.
The court stressed that a valid notice of appeal is the bedrock of appellate proceedings and a mandatory condition for invoking its jurisdiction. It consequently held that there was “no appeal in fact and in law” before it and struck out the case for incompetence.
The appeal arose from the January 17, 2024 judgment of Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court, who held that the NBC acted unlawfully and unconstitutionally by imposing N5 million fines on MultiChoice Nigeria Limited (DStv), TelCom Satellite Limited (TStv), Trust TV Network Limited and NTA StarTimes Limited over documentaries on banditry and insecurity in Zamfara State.
The commission had argued that the broadcasts threatened national security, but the trial court ruled that the sanctions violated the constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression under Section 39 of the 1999 Constitution and Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which protects the right to receive and disseminate information without undue interference.
Wednesday’s verdict marks yet another courtroom setback for the NBC in its prolonged legal battle over its sanctioning powers.
In April 2026, the Court of Appeal also dismissed another appeal filed by the commission against the May 10, 2023 judgment of Justice James Omotosho, which held that monetary fines are criminal sanctions that can only be imposed by a court of law and not by an administrative agency. The appellate court had earlier rejected the NBC’s attempt to set aside that judgment in November 2023.
The latest decision further entrenches judicial limits on the NBC’s authority, reinforcing the position that broadcast organisations cannot be subjected to monetary penalties by the regulator without due judicial process.
-
News24 hours agoNCC begins telecom pricing review after eight years
-
News21 hours agoFG Rubbishes Reports of New Telecoms, Fuel Taxes
-
News21 hours agoRay of hope as Oborevwori moves to restore power in Isoko, Ndokwa communities
-
Politics24 hours agoNDC mandates all candidates to sign affidavits against defection
-
News37 minutes agoAppeal Court Knocks Out NBC’s Bid To Revive Broadcast Fines
-
News19 hours agoPIGD Lauds Mutfwang’s Bold Push To Make Plateau Livestock Hub
-
News17 hours agoMinority Caucus Sounds Alarm Over Insecurity, Judiciary and 2027 Politics
-
News37 minutes ago‘If You See Something, Say Something’ — Oborevwori Rallies Deltans Against Terror, Kidnapping at Security Summit
