8th NASS, the best in legislative history of Nigeria; Passed greatest number of pro-masses bills – Ozekhome

Constitutional lawyer and human rights activists, Chief Mike Ozekhome, has hailed the outgoing 8th National Assembly as the best in legislative history of Nigeria, noting that the 8th NASS passed the greatest number of pro-masses bills in the nation’s history.

Chief Ozekhone SAN made the submission in a statement he signed on Thursday, June 6, 2019, titled ‘My Humble Rating of The Outgoing 8TH National Assembly’

He said, “The 8th NASS has been the best so far in the legislative history of Nigeria, in terms of sheer productivity and daring insistence on being truly independent of an overbearing and rampaging Executive that did everything to annex it to its apron strings.

“Right from the emergency of its principal officers when it insisted it was its inalienable right to produce them in accordance with section 50 of the 1999 Constitution and outside the dictatorial, whimsical, capricious and arbitrary desire of any political party as if we were operating a parliamentary system of government.

“It has held sacrosanct, the hallowed doctrine of Separation of Powers, as ably propounded by great philosophers of yore and famously dilated upon in 1748 by the great French philosopher, Baron de Montesque.

“In the entire legislative history of Nigeria, the 8th NASS has Passed the greatest no of pro-masses motions, resolutions and bills (into Acts of parliament) than any Legislature before it.

“It has also incubated and thrown up the most daring, courageous and brave Legislators that spoke truth to power and authority, at the perilous risk to their lives, families and properties.

“Future NASS should and must take a cue from the 8th NASS, that it is an independent arm of government specifically created by section 4 of the 1999 Constitution, to make laws for the peace, order and good governance of Nigeria.

“Though expected to cooperate with the Executive, it must not do so at the expense of its own independence as an arm of government that participates in the inbuilt constitutional checks and balances.

“It is not a rubber stamp to executive desires and nuances.

“Any NASS worthy of its name as the present one, must rise up and use its oversight powers under sections 88 and 89 of the 1999 Constitution to check the excesses of the other Judicial and Executive arms of government, especially of the usually intolerant, overhearing, dictatorial, arm-twisting and imperious Executive arm that controls the coercive apparachick of state power and forces.

“A NASS must defend the Nigerian people at sll times because governments, like soldiers, come and go, while the barracks (the people, the real owners of power) remain.

“They constitute the dog that wags the tail (government).”

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