INEC to conduct local council polls as Senate grants full autonomy to LGAs

Nigeria’s Local Government system has received a massive boost as the National Assembly on Tuesday, granted full financial, administrative and political autonomy to all the 774 local council authorities across Nigeria by amending section 124 of the nation’s constitution.

The section provides a subsection that makes the local councils, a full third tier government without undue interference from the state governments.

The amendment was one of the 22 others approved by the House of Representatives last week and ratified by the Senate on Tuesday.

Both chambers through a conference committee harmonised versions of the amendments into the constitution carried out by each of them last month.

By the development, the National Assembly had ratified all the 23 clauses and sections that had been amended by both chambers.

The newly amended document which would be sent to States Houses of Assembly, for approval, also approved the creation of the Office of Auditor General of the Local Government as well as the State Local Government Service Commission.

The section equally deleted the State Independent Electoral Commission (SIEC) from the constitution thereby vesting the powers to conduct council elections on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

It however, retained the immunity clause in the constitution for the President and Governors by adopting the Senate version of the amendments on the issue and rejected the House of Representatives version which removed the immunity clause.

The National Assembly also made provisions for Independent Candidacy in future elections in Nigeria by amending sections 65 and 106 of the 1999 Constitution.

source

National Assembly okays autonomy for local governments, INEC to be in charge of Local Government elections!!!

The National Assembly on Tuesday, granted full financial and administrative autonomy to all the 774 local council authorities across Nigeria by amending section 124 of the nation’s constitution.

The section provides a consequential provision for the making of the local councils, a full third tier government without undue interference from the state governments.

The amendment was one of the 22 others approved by the House of Representatives last week and ratified by the Senate on Tuesday.

Both chambers had through a conference committee harmonized versions of the amendments into the constitution carried out by each of them last month.

By the development, the National Assembly had ratified all the 23 clauses and sections that had been amended by both chambers.

The newly amended document which would be sent to States Houses of Assembly, for approval, also approved the creation of the Office of Auditor – General of the Local Government as well as the State Local Government Service Commission.

The section equally deleted the State Independent Electoral Commission from the constitution thereby vesting the powers to conduct council elections on the Independent National Electoral Commission.

It however, retained the immunity clause in the constitution for the President and Governors by adopting the Senate version of the amendments on the issue and rejected the House of Representatives version which removed the immunity clause.

The National Assembly also made provisions for Independent candidacy in future elections in Nigeria by amending sections 65 and 106 of

the 1999 constitution!!!

source: The Nigerian Voice

LGA Economic Forum Admin. Secretary and ASELGON Admin. Secretary visit Chairman Senate Committee on Local Government and State Affairs to brief him on the LGA Economic Forum taking place in March 2020

L-R Barrister Opia, Barrister Ekenji Admin Secretary LGAEF,Senator Mustapha, Mr. Agbetuyi Admin Secretary ASELGON, after the meeting with the Senate Committee Chairman on LGA and State Affairs on 11-12-2019.

L-R Barrister Opia, Barrister Ekenji Admin Secretary LGAEF,Senator Mustapha, Mr. Agbetuyi Admin Secretary ASELGON, after the meeting with the Senate Committee Chairman on LGA and State Affairs on 11-12-2019.

Admin Secretary of Local Government Economic Forum Barrister Chiemezie Ekenji and the Admin Secretary of ASELGON Mr. Anthony Agbetuyi during their visit to the Chairman Senate Committee on Local Government and State Affairs Senator Lekan Mustapha to brief him on the LGA Economic Forum taking place in March 2020 in Abuja.

Local Governments Must Be Powerful Engines of Economic, Environmental, Social Transformation, Secretary-General Tells Global Forum

PRESS RELEASE

SG/SM/19442-ENV/DEV/1919

24 JANUARY 2019

  • SECRETARY-GENERAL

 

  • STATEMENTS AND MESSAGES

Local Governments Must Be Powerful Engines of Economic, Environmental, Social Transformation, Secretary-General Tells Global Forum

Following is UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ message to the Global Forum of Local Governments (Ii Foro Global De Gobiernos Locales), being held in Sevilla, Spain, from 24 to 26 January:

I am pleased to greet the Global Forum of Local Governments.

I commend the participating cities and local authorities for their efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, advance the New Urban Agenda and implement the Paris Agreement on climate change.

Having been involved in local government for many years in my home country, Portugal, I know that local governments and authorities can — and must — be powerful engines of economic, social and environmental transformation.  Indeed, local government networks around the world are already taking important steps to bring the 2030 Agenda closer to the people.

We need greater ambition to fight climate change, the defining issue of our time — ambition on mitigation, adaptation and innovation.  And we need more concerted efforts to reduce poverty and inequality, build a fair globalization and deliver robust and inclusive economies while safeguarding the environment.

Achieving all of these goals will require mobilizing additional finance.  And much of that finance will need to be localized, to ensure that those taking action on the ground have the means to do so.

Your actions and solutions will be front and centre at several high-level events this year, including the Local2030 high-level event on localizing the Sustainable Development Goals, which will also take place in Seville; the Local Action for Commitments Forum; the Local and Regional Governments’ Forum and the Climate Summit I am convening in September.

Let us use these occasions to strengthen our partnership as we strive together to build peaceful, prosperous and inclusive societies for all on a healthy planet.  Please accept my best wishes for fruitful discussions.

© https://www.un.org/press/en/2019/sgsm19442.doc.htm

Marte Local Government Totally Deserted, Laments Chairman

Marte, a local government in northern Borno, is totally deserted, the chairman of the council, Alhaji Ali Shettima has cried out.

Speaking to journalists in Maiduguri, Shettima said as a result of frequent attacks of Boko Haram insurgents, the residents of the local government had all relocated from the area and are now living in camps.

Shettima, who decried the living condition of the people from the local government forced to live sub-human lives, said many of “my people would have loved to be home now even with the risk of Boko Haram if the military clears us to go.”

He said: “Marte local government is totally deserted, you cannot find anybody in Marte. Many of them are now displaced and in camps in Maiduguri.

“About 70,000 others are in Monguno, we have some at Gajiram and others in Gamboru. Many of the families are divided and the main challenge is bringing the divided families together.

“Because of the insurgency, many of these people who are farmers cannot till the ground and have been made to depend on stipends from others to survive, this is just enough to live and be well.”

Shettima lamented that: “Most of them (people from Marte) have not been captured under the enumeration system of the camps because they arrived at the camps in batches and most times singularly. There are a large number of them without support from government and all the aid agencies. Their complaints have been made to SEMA and the local government, which do assist but this is definitely not enough. The resources at the disposal of the local government and SEMA are not enough to take care of them.”

He said the challenges had been, “how to feed them, how to bring them together and how to return them to their ancestral home.”

He said: “We can only return them subject to clearance from the Army, the people want to go back despite the risk because they are fed up with the condition they are living right now.

But however as a chairman, I cannot risk the life of anybody unless I receive assurance from the military authority that the place is safe and that they will provide security upon return.”

Shettima said: “Until after this is done, then we can move in and provide them with means of livelihood to allow them quickly settle down.”

He disclosed that: “I cannot say the place is safe now for the information I have now is so sketchy, I know we have Boko Haram there now, and these people are merciless and can even kill 50 people at a time without blinking an eyelid. We are appealing to the military to clear them. And it is after the place is cleared of Boko Haram and de-mined that we can move in.

“We as a government we now move to provide the needs of the people, as I am talking to you, the clinics are all bad, the boreholes are all broken down and need to be either resuscitated or perhaps rebuilt.

“We equally need to have a temporary school for the returnees. Our intention is to start the relocation with about 500 families for it will be difficult to return everyone at the same time. We start with a camp and once it is a success, we move into another village.

“We are presently looking at a centre location, a formal ideal location to return them. We have already identified GSS, New Marte and we will use all the infrastructure there, although almost all the classrooms have been burnt down but we will use the premises to accommodate them, it should be able to accommodate 500 families.”

He noted that he has been running the affairs of the council from the state capital Maiduguri.

He said: “You see I am moving around, I move around where we have the people from the local government. I move from one camp to the other to attend to their needs. We have 42 different locations where the displaced persons are staying in Maiduguri alone. Many of these are communities camps. We have 13 camps in Monguno, with people of Marte and Monguno living side by side.”

source: www.thisdaylive.com

Ekiti APC suspends local government primary elections indefinitely

The All Progressives Congress (APC) Ekiti State Chapter on Saturday said it has postponed the local government primary elections in two local government areas of the state.

The ruling party’s shadow primary which was scheduled to hold yesterday was suspended indefinitely in Ado and Ikole Local Government over security concern while the elections held in other 14 local councils.

The party spokesperson, Ade Ajayi, who stated this in Ado Ekiti in a telephone chat with newsmen, said the decision was reached by the party’s high decision making organ following the emergence of a security report that some hooligans were plotting to tinker with the political atmosphere and disrupt the exercise.

Ajayi said that a new date would be communicated to all concerned stakeholders as soon as report shows that the coast is clear.

“The reason for the postponement in respect of the two local governments is due to security concerns. We had it on record that there would be breakdown of law and order. And it was on this basis we decided to postpone the election in the two local governments until further notice.

The remaining 14 Council election will hold today as scheduled”, he said.

The indefinite postponement has created fear and re-awakened the suspicion of some aspirants who alleged the party leadership of plotting to impose its anointed candidates on the people.

Two of the aspirants who spoke to newsmen at the venue of the primary, Alhaji Tajudeen Gidado, and Tosin Aluko, expressed displeasure over the suspension of the party’s shadow election.

They accused the leadership of the party of being undemocratic, warning that they would resist any attempt to impose on the party. In her reaction, Mrs Aluko, an aspirant in the election lamented that the leadership of the party were determined to impose a candidate. But the party spokesman described the allegations as a conjectural statement that lack content of validity in all its measure.

source: thenationonlineng.net

Rivers APC Cancels Ward, Local Government And State Congresses

The All Progressives Congress in Rivers State has cancelled the ward, local government and state congresses slated for September 17, 21 and 28 respectively, according to a report by PUNCH.

This is coming days after a Rivers State High Court ordered the party to refrain from conducting the exercise pending the hearing and determination of a suit marked PHC/3098/19 and filed by Ibrahim Umah and 22 others.

Publicity Secretary of the APC in the state, Chris Finebone, said the congresses were put on hold as a result of the court order.

He said, “The congress for tomorrow will not hold. For whatever it is worth, you cannot defy the court order.

“For the fact that you are compelled not to hold the first one, you cannot contemplate holding the second one because the second congress is dependent on the outcome of the first.

“The court has issued an ex-parte injunction, which many of us have not even seen the prayers because we have not sighted the processes.

“But whatever it is, it will be addressed by our lawyers. Our lawyers will be in court and they will address the issue.”

source: saharareporters.com

Buhari administration vows to free LG finances from state govts

The Nigerian government says it will free local governments’ finances from the control of state governors, describing the move as necessary for grassroots development.

The government said it will achieve this by abolishing state and local governments joint accounts “through constitutional means”.

The Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha, said this at a conference on Nigerian local governments, organised by SEGNIP Promotions Limited and the Department of State and Local Government Affairs, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF).

This is not the first time the government is making similar accusations on the state governments.

Earlier this year, directive to banks to stop transactions on such accounts by the newly established government body, the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), met stiff opposition from the governors, leading to at least two law suits.

However, with the latest statement from the SGF, it appears the Buhari administration is poised on going on with its agenda on the local government finances.

Mr Mustapha, who was represented by the Director of Special Duties in the SGF office, David Attah, at the event described the joint accounts as inglorious.

He said the accounts have been grossly abused, leading to major frictions.

The SGF said such abuse gave rise to the agitation for fiscal autonomy of local governments.

SGF Boss Mustapha

SGF Boss Mustapha

He said states have starved local governments of needed funds to discharge their statutory responsibilities as an independent tier of government.

“After so many ruinous years of our recent past, we certainly cannot live with the continued mismanagement of public funds (joint account) any longer.

“Most of us know too well the dangers and consequences of this sustained degradation of our local government system which manifest in increased wave of crimes and social maladies like terrorism, kidnapping, cultism, neighbourhood gangs, human trafficking, baby factories, dilapidated primary schools and primary health facilities, influx of youths to urban centres and pernicious rural poverty which have dovetailed into various dimensions, agitations, and unrests,” he said.

Mr Mustapha linked the starvation of the local governments to the spate of insecurity in the country.

“More so, it is uncanny that most of us fail to see the connection between moribund local governments and Boko Haram insurgency, for instance.

“Suffice to say that no ‘baby factory’ or incidence of kidnapping would find space where local government councillors are fully involved in governance and work with landlords associations and town unions. “In the midst of all these, there is no state, not even one, that showed an example by devising a system that made the local governments work or gave a proper account of the local government funds.

“All of us, directly, or tangentially, are exposed to the impact of local government administration daily. Therefore, mismanagement and mal-administration at this level of governance will connote impacting negatively on our people with direct implication for banishing a large number of the population to abject poverty and penury,” he said.

The SGF said with the introduction of the Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) Act and the new local government administration account reporting system, the present administration of President Buhari has taken steps to upgrade the anti-graft or money laundering regulations to reduce vulnerabilities created by cash withdrawals from local government funds throughout the country.

Gboyega Oyetola, Governor of Osun State

Gboyega Oyetola, Governor of Osun State

Addressing the event, Osun Governor, Isiaka Oyetola, said successive military governments complicated the problems of local councils by investing in them with controversial and unworkable allocation templates and difficult constitutional amendment procedures.

The governor, who was represented by his Chief of Staff, Charles Akintola, said the nation’s local councils have been victims of various forms of government with their attendant challenges from independence to now.

Though Mr Oyetola was not frontal in confronting the position of the SGF, he made strong cases for the maintenance of status quo in which governors control the allocation to the local governments through the joint account.

Tug of War

On May 6, the NFIU issued a directive to commercial institutions via a document it tagged ‘Guidelines to Reduce Vulnerabilities Created by Cash Withdrawals from Local Government Funds throughout Nigeria’.

The document sought to ban financial transactions on state/local governments joint account, and placed cap on cash withdrawals from local government accounts in Nigeria.

The guideline immediately drew ire of state governors who opposed the move, describing it as usurpation of their constitutional powers.

The governors accused the NFIU of “stoking mischief and also deliberately seeking to cause disaffection, chaos and overheat the polity.”

However, the Senate backed the NFIU directive at the time, saying it will free the Financial System from being “flooded with cash which criminals use to escape transparency, accountability, and criminal investigation”.

Applications filed before two different courts to stop implementation of the guidelines were refused by the courts.

In May, a suit filed before federal high court in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom state capital, by local government aeas alongside the state government failed to secure injunctions against the guidelines as the judge refused prayers of the applicants.

Another judge, John Tsoho of the federal high court in Abuja declined similar request.

© Premium Times

 

Rivers: Three killed, LGA chairman escapes, monarch beaten as cultists sack two communities

Despite appeals by stakeholders and re-enforcement of police personnel, cult gangs have continued to run riot in Khana Local government area of Rivers state.

Two communities in Bangha clan, Khana Local Government Area were sacked over the weekend by suspected members of rampaging cult gangs in the area.

Sources told DAILY POST that cult gangs invaded Luu-Mene community, killed unknown number of persons, destroyed houses and beat up the Paramount Ruler, identified as Mene BARISUA, and then extended their attack to Kere-Bangha community where they also committed arson.

An indigene of Kere-Bangha, Lucky Deekae, who confirmed the attack, said several inhabitants of his community and their neighbouring Luu-mene community fled their homes for fear of reprisal attacks.

Meanwhile, the Rivers state Police Command has denied that the number of casualties recorded in the attack in communities in Khana LGA was high.

Spokesman of the Command, DSP Nnamdi Omoni was reacting to reports that 16 persons lost their lives in the gang attack on the two communities.

Omoni, in a statement made available to DAILY POST, said the figures being bandied in some sections of the media, is fake news capable of stirring disaffection and causing panic and tension in the State.

However, while confirming the incident, Omoni stated that three persons were killed in the two attacks but officers were able to capture two suspected cultists; thirty-three-year-old, Demwua Karagbara and twenty-three year Old, Dinee Prince.

The statement reads, “The attention of the Rivers State Police Command has been drawn to the above ‘Caption’ making the rounds on Social and Traditional media on the State of affairs in Opuoko and Lumene Communities in Khana LGA.

“Ordinarily, this distorted news should have been ignored as the Command is not given to frivolities and fake news capable of stirring disaffection and causing panic and tension in the State.

“However, in order that the public will not be immediately misinformed and hold erroneous impression resulting from the fake news, we have therefore deemed it necessary to put the records straight and state as follows.

“That today 18/8/19 at about 0630Hrs, information got to us that a group of Cult boys invaded two Communities in Khana (Opuoko and Lumene) where they attacked and killed one person in Opuoko and two in Lumene, altogether three persons died.

“The houses of the LGA Chairman and the former Youth Leader came under attack.

“The attackers on sighting the Police took to flight but were chased and two of them arrested, while the trail for others is still on.

“Exhibits recovered from them include: Assorted Phones and Military Camouflage.

“So far, calm has returned in both Communities.

“The CP has ordered Investigation into the incident with a view to ascertaining the remote and immediate causes of the attack and to bring perpetrators to justice.

“We are again appealing to the public to help us with useful information that can lead to the arrest of these mindless criminals.”

source: dailypost

LGA Funds: Court deals another blow to state governors

The Federal High Court on Monday declined to restrain the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) from implementing its recent guidelines on local government funds.

The judgment by John Tsoho of the Abuja Division marked yet another setback to the nation’s 36 governors in their effort to keep control of local government finances in their respective states.

In a guideline that took effect on June 1, the NFIU directed banks not to honour transactions in the joint accounts of state and local governments. It said such accounts should only be used to distribute allocations to accounts of local governments directly.

The Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) recently sued the NFIU, saying the directive was illegal because it contradicted the Constitution.

The Constitution prescribed joint ownership of account between a state and all local government areas under it, but there have been claims that the governors have been mismanaging the funds by bullying local authorities into silence.

At the resumed hearing on the matter on Monday, Mr Tsoho declined to allow the governors continue to draw funds from local government accounts until the matter had been concluded by the court, which could take several months or even years.

Further hearing on the matter could not continue on Tuesday, after the lead lawyer for the governors, Lateef Fagbemi, failed to appear in court on excuses that he was handling another matter at the Presidential Election Petitions Tribunal.

Although there was an initial agreement by all parties to wait for Mr Fagbemi, who had promised to appear in court before noon, the court eventually adjourned the matter when he did not show up.

A further hearing had been adjourned till October 23 for all applications, including one challenging the court’s jurisdiction, to be heard.

The NFIU had on May 6 issued ‘Guidelines to Reduce Vulnerabilities Created by Cash Withdrawals from Local Government Funds throughout Nigeria,’ which sought to stop governors from tampering with funds meant for local government areas forthwith.

Despite the stiff opposition by the governors, including several meetings with President Muhammadu Buhari, the guidelines took effect from June.

source: premiumtimesng