The plenary session of the on-going National Conference
in Abuja drew to a temporary close on Thursday as delegates get set to
move into committee sessions when they return from the Easter break.
The
list of 20 Standing Committees and their chairmen, co-chairmen and
deputy chairmen was announced on Wednesdayand made available to all the
delegates.
It
is expected that on their return from the Easter Holidays starting on
Friday and ending on Monday next week, delegates will move straight into
committee sessions to deliberate on crucial issues aimed at redressing
certain imbalances in the Nigerian polity.
Chairman
of the Conference and retired Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Idris
Legbo Kutigi, informed the delegates that two venues, the National
Judicial Institute and 10 meeting rooms at Sheraton Hotels and Towers will be used as meeting venues by the committees.
Of
the 20 Standing Committees approved by the Conference to discuss
various issues, five are headed by two co-chairmen while the remaining
fifteen are headed by a chairman each and a deputy chairman.
To
add a bite to this decision, the Work Plan, which is a document stating
the activities of the Conference and the time-frame attached to such
activities, was finally adopted for implementation pending any
alteration based on necessity.
The
Work Plan indicates that Committee work would begin on Tuesday April 22
after the Easter break and would end on Wednesday April 30.
Based
on protest by some delegates that the time allocated to committee work
was too short in view of the exhaustive and thorough job expected to be
done, Justice Kutigi appealed to delegates to get down to work first and
if the need for extension arises in the process, the necessary
representation will be made to the appropriate quarters.
He said the Work Plan was drawn based the time allotted to the Conference by the Federal Government; and that any attempt at arbitrary adjustment could be misunderstood even by the general public who may misconstrue the motive.
The
chairman however assured that everything would be done to ensure that
lack of time does not hinder the justification of the Conference but
urged delegates to properly articulate their points at the committee
level and be opened to suggestions from others.
The
Work Plan also indicates that Conference would receive reports from
committees and commence deliberations onMay 5 and May 6 before breaking
the plenary again for participation in the World Economic Forum which will hold in Abuja.
Deliberation
on the various committee reports will resume on May 12 and will last
till May 15 when deliberations would be completed.
Between May
19 to 29, the Conference Secretariat, working with the Report Drafting
Committee, will put the report together and present such to the
Conference in plenary.
Consideration
and adoption of the draft reports by the Conference in plenary will
start on June 2 and will end on June 12 after which the final report
would be produced and signed between June 16 and 19.
When
the plenary resumed on Thursday, most of the discussions centred on the
security situation in the country following the bombing in the Federal
Capital Territory on Monday and the abduction of 100 school girls in
Borno State on Tuesday.
Femi Falana, SAN, in an applauded Point of Order, said that since security agencies,
on the directive of President Goodluck Jonathan, have secured the
release of most of the abducted girls, the Conference should commend
their efforts and urge them to do more.
Mrs.
Josephine Anenih who seconded the motion said the directive by the
President, the cooperation of the local chiefs and hunters in the area
with the security operatives, should also be commended. He pointed out
that the development underscored the need for local communities to be
involved in the policing of their environment. She had made that pointon
Tuesday when the issue of the abduction of the girls was discussed be
delegates.
Also
tabled for discussion was the issue of media castigation of Conference
decisions by delegates who do not agree with such decisions instead of
bringing up the matter on the floor as demanded by the Rules of
Procedure. It was observed that some delegates were in the habit of
taking matters to the Press once decisions are not in their favour, even
if such matters were adopted by the majority.
Justice
Kutigi said it was wrong and against the Rules of Procedure for anybody
to show disrespect to decisions taken at the Conference through
upbraiding of other delegates using the media instead of raising such
issues on the floor for clarification.
RE- ANOTHER DELEGATE DIES AT THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Our
attention has been drawn to a misleading headline in the Osun Defender
posted online on April 17, 2014, as Breaking News, to the effect that
“Another delegate dies at the National Conference.”
Although
the body of the story is a fair representation of the incident that
happened on the evening of Tuesday, April 15, 2014; the headline is
completely misleading and does not even reflect the body of the story as
published by Osun Defender.
The
delegate in question slumped on his way out of the Conference
Secretariat after the day’s plenary and was immediately rushed to the
hospital where he was immediately attended to and subsequently put on
bed rest. His condition has since stabilised.
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