Politics

SEMA Bill Suffers Major Setback

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A bill for the establishment of Rivers State Emergency
Management Agency (SEMA), has suffered a major setback as it was rejected by
the lawmakers for inconsistencies

The draft law, sponsored by Hon. Andrew Anderson Miller,
representing Opobo/Nkoro Constituency in the Assembly, could not scale through
second reading at Monday’s plenary because of what lawmakers identified as
irreconcilable conflict with the federal law.

Opening debate on the bill, Hon. Michael Okey-Chinda lauded
the sponsor of the bill, noting that the intent was for the overall interest of
the state, but hinted that the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), law
provided that states should have Emergency Management Committees.

He argued that the State does not have powers to create another
agency in the likeness of NEMA, except to requests the State government to
reconstitute the Committee. He thus urged the House to jettison the bill.

Hon. Augustine Ngo, representing Abua/Odual advised the
House to take a deep breath on the bill, while the sponsor withdraws the
document for re-engineering and fine-tuning to enable the lawmakers deliberate
on it another time.

Hon. Chidi Lloyd representing Emohua commended the sponsor
of the private member bill for his initiative, but drew the attention of
members to the 1999 constitution as amended to avoid acting ultra vires and
allied himself to the position of earlier speakers.

Also speaking, Hon. Innocent Barikor, representing Gokhana,
opined that since a federal law is operational, the state should domesticate it
to suit the peculiar needs of the people of Rivers State rather than embark on
a new exercise that will be contradictory.

Sponsor of the bill, Hon. Miller had stressed the need for
the state to have an Emergency Agency that will attend to disaster cases like
those in some states of the federation, arguing that there was difference
between Agency and Committee, and appealed to the House to allow the bill move
to the next stage for fine-tuning.

The Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Otelemaba Amachree, ruled
that the bill be withdrawn and advised the sponsor to approach the legal
draftsmen of the Assembly to help repackage the bill before reintroduction to
remove encumberances.

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