President of the Senate, David Mark, has
promised that the Senate will revisit its decision to amend Section
29(4)(b) of the 1999 Constitution, which defines the full age of a woman
seeking to renounce her citizenship.
The Senate Committee on Constitution
Review led by Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, had
recommended that sub-section 4b be deleted because it was
“discriminatory.” It suggested that a woman of any age, once married,
was an adult.
Although Section 29 deals with the right
of citizens to renounce their citizenship and subsection 4 defines the
age at which a citizen could do so, a religious connotation brought in
by Senator Ahmed Yerima swayed Senators’ votes to retain the clause.
The Senate had initially voted to delete
it as recommended by the committee, but had to retake its voting
after Yerima and a few others protested.
While receiving a Non-Governmental
Organisation, Gender and Constitutional Reform Network, in the Senate on
Wednesday, Mark admitted that religious sentiment played a role in
the final outcome of the voting on the clause.
He however noted that the public
misunderstood the Senate in not recognising the fact that its members
had actually proposed to delete the sub-section, without any prompting
from the public.
Mark assured the visitors that the
Senate was prepared to revisit the clause, but pointed out that the
public needed to be better educated on the subject.
He said, “I want to appeal to all
Nigerians that now that we know that this is not receiving the
acceptance of majority of Nigerians and people are getting educated,
that there is no religious connotation, there is no reason why we cannot
revisit it. The important thing is that if we take a step, which is
wrong, we can retrace it.
“I think the problem is not whether we
can still revisit Section 29 (4b) or not, that is not the issue; it is
whether we can get the number of votes to be able to delete it. With
all due respect, the entire Senate is being castigated.
“There was and there is still a big
misunderstanding of what the Senate is trying to do. We are on the side
of the people. That was why we put it that we should delete it; that is
what the people want. We, in fact, were the first to take the step
in the direction of deleting it. It didn’t go through because of other
tangential issues that were brought to the floor of the Senate that are
totally inconsequential and unconnected.
“When we voted at first, we had 85
votes and we were 101 during plenary. Eighty five voted, and about
six abstained. There was hardly any dissenting voice. But once it got
mixed up with so many other issues, we couldn’t get the 85 anymore. But
I think the castigation outside is done out of misunderstanding by the
general public.
“But a religious connotation was brought
into it, it became a very sensitive issue. You must agree with me that
in this country, we try as much as possible not to bring in issues that
involve faith to this chamber.
“I think the bottom line is when people
get sufficiently educated, we can do a rethink and if the Senate agrees,
we can then go back and see whether we can get the required number
once more, because that is the solution.
Source: Punchng
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