Ambode cautions National Assembly
against going ahead with the passage of the Stamp Duty Bill. The Lagos State Governor
says it is time to amend Section 214 (1) of the Constitution to allow states to
establish their own Police Service. He says the present structure of the
Nigerian constitution is why the federal government is failing Governor
Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State has said that the present structure of the
Nigerian constitution is why the federal government is failing in effectively
performing its duties.
Ambode made this known while
speaking at a joint working retreat of Senate and House Representatives
Committees on the Review of 1999 Constitution held in Lagos on Friday, July 14,
The Guardian reports. He said: “We believe that the principle of
appropriateness should guide the sharing of powers between the federal and
state governments.”
Ambode also cautioned the National
Assembly against going ahead with the passage of the Stamp Duty Bill, saying it
poses grave danger for Nigeria’s fiscal federalism.
According to him, the bill would
further cripple the internally generated revenue due to states in the
federation, at a time there are calls for downward review of the 52.62% federal
government of revenue in the Federation Account.
He said there are “imminent dangers
inherent in the proposed Stamp duties Bill which no doubt seeks to cripple the
internally generated revenue due to States in the federation in favour of a
Federal Government Agency- NIPOST.
The Bill is presently before the
National Assembly and it is a grave threat to the principles of fiscal
federalism and as representatives of the true beneficiaries of the Act as it
presently stands, there is need to put an urgent and immediate end to its
further coordination by the National Assembly which also has the noble
tradition that once a matter is before the Court, all activities on the matter
would be suspended.”
Speaking further, Governor Ambode
said it was time for Section 214 (1) of the Constitution to be amended to allow
states to establish their own Police Service, as the current arrangement was
unhelpful to truly protect the citizens.
He said over the years, the federal
government had been unable to provide resources necessary to pay, equip and
train policemen to the level required by the challenges they face, adding that
the situation whereby only about 300,000 policemen are policing more than 140
million which is a ratio of 1 to 467, confirmed the fact that the country was
grossly under-policed.
He said the situation had negatively
affected states like Lagos with huge population saying despite the massive
financial support to security agencies by most states including Lagos, such was
still inadequate mainly, because state governments have no influence over the
number of men recruited for or deployed to their domains.
NAIJ.com had earlier reported that
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo finally confirmed that the federal government is
working to allow state police across Nigeria after years of rejecting.
Osinbajo in Abuja on Tuesday, July
4, said the aim of the community policing is to sanitize the remote part of the
country.
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