CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS IN
NIGERIA
Kalu Ezera, in his
seminal work, Constitutional Development in Nigeria gave us Morel’s
unauthorized scheme for Amalgamation: To Morel, the objects of amalgamation
would be four in number, namely:
·
Financial
management directed not only to meeting present needs but to making provision
for the future.
·
The
right sort of man to fill the important and onerous post of Gov-General
·
The
division of the country into provinces corresponding as far as possible with
natural geographical boundaries and existing
political conditions ; involving as few changes as possible and
·
A
comprehensive system of public works.
With the
amalgamation of the territories hitherto referred to as Southern and Northern
Protectorates of Nigeria by Lord Lugard, began the constitutional development
in Nigeria .
Nigerian Council
of 1914
The amalgamation
of Nigerian Protectorates was done through three constitutional instruments
namely;
·
The
(Nigerian Council) Order in Council
(1912)
·
The
Letters Patent (1913)
·
The
Nigerian Protectorate Order –in- Council(1913)
On becoming
governor of the amalgamated Nigeria
in 1914, Lord Lugard established the Nigerian Council. It has been noted that
the establishment of this council marked a watershed in the history of
constitutional development in Nigeria .
REASONS FOR
CREATING THE NIGERIAN COUNCIL
·
It was
necessitated by the fact that the existing legislative council of Lagos was too small to
legislate for the newly created united Nigeria .
·
Lugard
believed that a council with a larger number of representatives would enable
the governor to get the feelings and opinions of every component unit that made
up the country.
·
It
must be noted that the council was merely a deliberative body without executive
or legislative powers.
THE COMPOSITION
OF THE NIGERIAN COUNCIL
· The Council consisted of 16 members out of which 3 were official
members,
· 7 were unofficial Europeans
· 6 were unofficial Nigerians nominated by
the governor himself.
· The 6 Nigerians were made up of 2 Emirs
from the North, The Alafin of Oyo from Yoruba land, one member from Lagos , Calabar and Benin area.
The Composition
of the Legislative Council of Nigeria
· There were 26 officials- 23 government officials and three
nominated.
· There were 4 elected members- 3 from Lagos and 1 from Calabar.
· Nominated unofficial members varied in
number from 13 to 17 out of which 6 were Europeans nominated by commercial
Interests.
· The nominated Nigerians came mainly from
the colony, Ondo, Oyo, River District, Igbo ethnic group, Egba land, Warri and Benin
THE CLIFFORD
CONSTITUTION OF 1922
· This constitution adopted in 1922 derived
its name from the then governor of Nigeria , Sir Hugh Clifford who took
over from Lord Lugard.
· The constitution introduced new legislative
and executive councils.
· Northern Nigeria was not represented in the
new Legislative council as it comprised members from the south alone
· The governor retained the power to
legislate for Northern Nigeria
· There were 26 officials in the Legislative
Council
· Four
elected members and 15 nominated members.
· It was called the Legislative Council of
Nigeria.
· This Legislative Council was in existence
for 44 years.
· The elective principle was introduced under
this constitution. This thus galvanized the formation of political parties and
political activities.
· A single executive council for Nigeria was
first created under this constitution. It was composed of 12 members, all of
whom were Europeans.
DEMERITS OF THE
CLIFFORD’S CONSTITUTION.
· It isolated the North from the other part of Nigeria . In
other words, it failed to bring together in one legislative house, even after
the amalgamation. This situation lasted for twenty-four years.
· A large percentage of Nigerians were disenfranchised by the
limitation of franchise to Lagos
and Calabar.
· The council met
very infrequently for about 8 days on the average, every year.
· The Governor
acted like a school headmaster during the proceedings of the legislative
council.
· There were many
more officials and nominated members than elected members in the legislative
council.
RICHARD’S
CONSTITUTION OF 1946
Sir Arthur Richard
was next as the governor; he effected the new constitution which later bore his
name.
OBJECTIVES OF
THE CONSTITUTION
· A legislative council which would legislate
for the whole of Nigeria as a single United Country.
· Regional councils for the Northern, Western
and Eastern Provinces comprising Houses of Assembly with the addition that in
the Northern Province(to be constituted a Region) there would be a House of
Chiefs;
· The introduction of diverse representation
of the people through the Native Authorities and the Houses of Assembly of the
Regions in the Legislative Council; and
· African majority both in the Houses of
Assembly in the Regions and in the Legislative Council.
PROVISIONS OF
THE CONSTITUTION
·
The
Constitution came in to operation on 1 January 1947 .
·
Laws
for the whole of Nigeria
became the responsibility of the Governor, with the advice and consent of the
Legislative Council.
·
Apart
from the Governor, there were forty-four members. The 28 unofficial members
formed the majority in the Legislative Council.
·
Only
four of the unofficial members were directly elected, three from Lagos and one from
Calabar.
·
The
Northern Region had a House of Chiefs, the Eastern Region and the Western
Region each had a House of Assembly only.
·
In
each House of Assembly, the unofficial members were in the majority. In the
Northern House of Chiefs, there were only twelve second class chiefs, while the
rest of members were first class chiefs.
·
The
Chief Commissioner was the President of the House of Chiefs, while the Senior
Resident was the President of the House of Assembly in the Northern Region. In
the Eastern and Western Regions, the Chief Commissioner was the President of
the House of Assembly.
·
The
regional houses had no independent legislative power. A law concerning a
particular region was sent to the legislature of that region from the
Legislative Council in Lagos, for consideration and advice. The
Governor could reject the advice of the regional legislature.
·
The
Governor had reserved powers to act if the Legislative Council refused what he
proposed to do. The Secretary of State for the Colonies must however, approves
such proposals of the Governor.
·
One
other Nigerian was added in 1949 to the only one appointed in 1943 as member of
the Executive Council.
MERITS OF THE 1946
CONSTITUTION
· Greater
consideration was given to Nigerian opinion in the making of laws than under
the 1922 Constitution.
· The Northern and
Southern leaders were brought together in one legislative house for the first
time since the amalgamation of 1914.
· It gave the
division of the country into East, North and West the force of Law.
· The Federal idea
was the most popular feature.
DEMERITS OF THE
1946 CONSTITUTION
· The constitution was promulgated with the
least possible consultation with the Nigerian people.
·
The
constitution failed by not giving Nigerians responsibility in the actual
administration of their country
·
The
governor still retained his veto powers thereby making a mockery of the
legislative council.
·
The
elective principle was still as restrictive as under the 1922 constitution.
·
There
was widespread dissatisfaction with the constitution which led to its collapse
in 1949.
·
The
right to vote was limited to people with high income or property.
·
European
interests were still represented in the Legislative Council.
MACPHERSON’S
CONSITUTION OF 1951
Sir John
Macpherson as the governor of Nigeria
was reported to have had consultations with the different strata of the
Nigerian society. The people from the village, district, provincial, and
regional levels had discussions on what later became the 1951 constitution.
MAJOR
PROVISIONS OF THIS CONSTITUION
·
Creation
of a House of Representatives which comprised the governor, 136 members elected
from the regional assemblies and 6 special members appointed by the governor.
·
The
responsibility of House is to legislate for the whole country and its laws
could override any regional legislation.
·
The
establishment of a central executive council known as the Council of Ministers-
its membership included the governor as president, 6 official members and 12
Nigerian ministers; 4 from each of the regions.
·
The
ministers were without portfolios and were appointed by the governor on the
recommendations of the 3 regional assemblies
·
Each
of the regions was to establish an executive council consisting of Lt-Governor
as president, 5official members and 9 ministers each.
·
Election
was both by direct and indirect methods.
·
Only
male tax payers votes in the North, whereas both males and females voted in the
East and West.
DEMERITS OF THE
1951 CONSTITUTION
·
Three
constitutional crises of 1953 led to the collapse of the 1951 constitution.
·
The
first Crisis in the Eastern Region which arose as a result of the failure of
the party to elect their Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe into the House of Representatives in
Lagos and as a
result of the expulsion of some party’s ministers because of the party’s
unwillingness to continue to support the constitution.
·
The
second Crisis was due to the motion moved by Chief Anthony Enahoro in 1953 at
the House of Representatives for self government. The North opposed the motion
on the grounds that Nigeria
was not ripe enough and the date 1956 should be changed to “as soon as
possible”.
·
The
third was a riot in Kano
in 1953 which was precipitated by second crisis the northerners’ attempt to
revenge the disgrace meted out to Sardauna of Sokoto when motion was by
southern delegates in House.
·
These
three crises exposed the defects of the Macpherson constitution and led to its
collapse.
CONSTITUTIONAL CONFERENCES OF 1953/4
The collapse of
1951 Constitution brought in its wake a realization that the constitutional
development of the country has to be hastened.
Accordingly, Mr
Oliver Lyttleton, in his capacity as the Secretary of State for the Colonies
invited Nigerian Political Leaders to London
in August 1953. The London Conference arrived at some landmark resolutions on
the way forward.
1953 London Conference
Resolutions:
·
That a
Federal System of government be established.
·
That
Legislative powers be shared between the Federal and the regions,
·
That
the regional heads be called governors while the head at the centre be called
governor-general,
·
That Lagos should be separated
from Western region and made a federal territory,
·
That
self-government would be granted to those regions that desired it,
·
That a
Conference be held in Lagos
in 1954 to ratify a separate regional administration for the Cameroons
if the people of the territory expressed their desire through a referendum.
1954 Lagos Constitutional
Conference Resolutions:
·
That
the Public Service and Judiciary be recognized,
·
That
the autonomy be granted to Southern Cameroon ,
·
That
the principle of 1953 fiscal Commission on revenue allocation be implemented.
LYTTLETON CONSTITUTION OF 1954
Major Provisions
of the Constitution:
·
A
Federal Legislature consisting of 184 members, which were elected directly and
independently of regional assemblies.
·
A
Council of Ministers with the governor-general as the President, with three
official members, three ministers from each region and one minister from Southern Cameroon .
·
It
retained the bi-cameral Legislature for both North and West, and uni-cameral
for the East.
·
The
leader of the majority party in the regional assembly was expected to be
appointed the regional premier.
MERITS OF THE 1954
CONSTITUTION
·
It
provided a Federal System of government in Nigeria
·
Ministers
were given portfolios,
·
The
posts of permanent secretaries and the parliamentary secretaries were created.
·
It
granted real law making powers to the regional legislatures.
·
It
recognised the need for gradual integration of the various groups in Nigeria by
passing power to the regions. Regional governments were given greater responsibility.
·
It
rescued the Nigerian
State from gradual
collapse by rejecting the customs union proposed by the North.
·
It
paved way for regional self government.
·
Separate
elections were allowed into the regional and central legislative houses, unlike
before which one was an electoral college of the other.
·
Ministers
were given greater responsibility.
·
It
recognised the need to appoint Premiers in the regions.
·
It
properly decided not to recognise the right of a region to secede as requested
by the Action Group.
DEMERITS OF
1954 LYTTLETON
CONSTITUTION
·
It
made no provision for a second chamber at the centre,
·
The
post of Prime Minister was not provided for,
·
It did
not provide for a unified electoral system throughout the country
·
The
governor-general still retained his veto powers.
·
It
introduced a revenue allocation formula which over emphasized derivation as
against need and national interest.
Indeed, other
constitutional conferences to take Nigeria to her independence took
place between 1957 and 1958. There were resolutions from these conferences.
These resolutions which included the following were later included into the
1960 independent constitution:
·
A
house of Chiefs for the East,
·
A
Bicameral legislature at the Centre
comprising of the Senate and the House of Representatives,
·
The
creation of the office of Prime Minister,
·
A list
of Fundamental Human Rights.
PROVISIONS OF
1960 CONSTITUTION
· The governor-general, an agent of the
British government, became the Head of State while the Prime Minister, who will
be elected, became head of government.
· A national Bicameral Parliament consisting
of the Senate with 44 nominated members and the House of Representatives with
305 elected members,
· The Powers of government were to be shared
between the regional and federal governments.
· Provision was made for judges of Supreme
Court whose decisions were subject to confirmation by the judicial committee of
the Privy Council in Britain
· Procedures for amending the constitution
were laid down,
· Provisions for the Fundamental Human Rights
were entrenched in the Constitution.
MERITS OF THE 1960
INDEPENDENCE CONSTITUTION.
· The most
important clauses of the Constitution, dealt with issues of :
-Fundamental Human Rights,
-The office of the Prime
Minister,
-The Council of Ministers,
-The Supreme Court,
-Revenue Allocation
The above clauses could not be altered unless the Bill in question was
passed by a two thirds majority in both Houses of the Federal Legislature and
by both Houses in at least two of the three Regions of the Federation.
· The Basic federal
framework could thus not to be altered at will.
· Existing regions
and their boundaries were safeguarded, thereby preventing such issues from
disturbing the needed stability of a newly independent country.
DEMERITS OF THE
1960 INDEPENDENCE
CONSTITUTION
· The legislative
powers of the independent State of Nigeria were defined in an Act of the
British parliament rather than an Act of the Nigerian parliament. It was not
until three years later, under the Republican Constitution, that this imperial
basis of Nigeria ’s
Constitution was removed.
· It carried over
many of the unresolved national issues, such as revenue allocation criteria,
which emphasised the national rather than regional interest.
1963 REPUBLICAN
CONSTITUTION
Major
Provisions
·
The
Queen ceased to be the head of State.
·
The
abolition of the Judicial Service Commission and the empowerment of the
President to appoint judges of the Supreme Court on the advice of the Prime
Minister and,
·
The
Supreme Court and not the Privy Council became the final court of appeal in Nigeria and has
the power of judicial review.
·
The
emergency power is conferred on the federal government.
·
The
constitution laid down the process for the creation of new regions and revenue
allocation formula.
MERITS OF THE REPUBLICAN CONSTITUTION
· It removed the imperial basis of the
Nigerian Constitution.
· The Nigerian Federal Parliament enacted the
Constitution of the Federal Act, 1963 which repealed the Nigerian Independence
Act of 1960.
· It made the Supreme Court the Highest court
for all cases in Nigeria .
DEMERITS OF THE
REPUBLICAN CONSTITUTION
· The constitution made it more difficult to
create new states, thereby making one of the regions larger than the three
others put together.
· It failed to remove Nigeria totally
from the strong influence of Britain
by allowing Nigeria ’s
continued membership of the British Commonwealth .
THE 1979
PRESIDENTIAL CONSTITUTION
MAJOR PROVISIONS
·
Federal
Legislature now referred to as the National Assembly comprising the Senate with
5 members each from the 19 States, and the House of Representatives with 450
members.
·
The
life of each legislature was fixed for four years.
·
The
establishment of the Federal executive council with the President, Vice-
President and Ministers appointed by the President as members.
·
The
term of the President is 4 years and can be re-elected for another term in
office.
·
A
State Legislature was created for each State known as the House of Assembly.
·
State
executive councils were created consisting of the governor, deputy governor and
commissioners appointed by the governor.
·
The
Chief Judge of the Federation was appointed by the President with the approval
of the Senate, all other Justices of the Supreme Court, the President and
Judges of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Chief Judge and other Judges of the
Federal High Court were appointed on the advice of the Federal Judicial Service
Commission and presented to the Senate for approval.
THE 1999
CONSTITUTION
This constitution
was almost a replica of the 1979 Constitution but with minor modifications such
as
·
The
House of Representatives was now composed of 365 members instead of 453 members
·
More functional
roles were given to Local Government Councils by the provision of Section 7.
·
Separation
of real from formal authority, as under the independence and republican
constitutions was eliminated. Both authorities now rested in one person, the
President at the Federal level, and the Governor at the State level.
DEMERITS OF
1979 AND 1999 CONSTITUTIONS
·
They
were imposed by the departing military governments.
·
Process
of Constitutional making was flawed on the following basis:
1.
Inclusively-
all voices and opinions including those of minority groups were not heard.
2.
Diversity-
in terms of ethnic identity, language,
religion, and gender
3.
Participation-
involvement of people at all levels who are debating the content of the
constitution freely.
4.
Transparency
and Openness- there must never be “no-go” areas or hidden agenda.
5.
Autonomy-
the body charged with leading the review process was neither autonomous nor
independent from government control.
6.
Accountability:
the body charged with the responsibility of reviewing the constitution was not
accountable to the parliament and the people.
7.
Legitimacy:
No national referendum was ever conducted to test the popularity of any of the
drafts of the constitutions.
CONTENTIOUS ISSUES IN THE 1999 CONSTITUTION
·
Federalism-
It is agreed that there is over concentration of powers at the federal level.
·
Affirmative
Action: Concerning granting of positions to women.
·
Political
Parties/ State INEC
·
Fiscal
Federalism/Resource Control
·
Religion
·
State
Police
·
Sovereign
National Conference.
IMPEACHMENT THREATS AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIA
The concept of Impeachment
·
The
concept of impeachment is a derivative of the Latin word impedicare which
implies “to entangle”.
·
It is
a quasi-judicial concept.
·
It is
also political and constitutional concept.
·
It is
political because its application and interpretation depend largely on the
whims and caprices of the Legislature;
·
It is
constitutional because it is entrenched in the constitutions of most countries.
·
At one
level, impeachment connotes a formal accusation of wrong doing.
·
In a
broader sense, it encompasses the whole network of complexities involved in the
process by which erring public officers are removed from office.
·
Prof
Seymour M. Lipset defines impeachment as the method by which government
officials may be removed from office when they have been formally accused of
crimes or misconduct….it is usually initiated by the lower house of a
legislature and is followed by trial and sometimes conviction by the upper
house.
GROUNDS FOR IMPEACHMENT
·
Under
normal circumstances, the grounds for impeachment would be predicated on
reasons such as crimes against the State, mostly manifested by a violation of
the constitution of the country.
·
There
is no definite definition of what constitutes impeachable offence. The
definition of such offences varies from one country to another.
·
In Nigeria , this
would include “gross misconduct” defined as “a grave violation or breach of the
provisions of the constitution or a misconduct of such nature as amount in the
opinion of the National Assembly as gross misconduct”
·
The
impeachment procedure is however complex and cumbersome.
THE BASIC GOAL OF IMPEACHMENT
·
The
basic goal of impeachment is to ensure a system of governmental accountability
and control.
·
As
Prof. Adeoye Akinsanya puts it, “perhaps the most effect weapon that can be
used by the legislative branch to exercise control over public officers and
ensure public accountability…is the power to remove public officers from office”.
·
In
reality, the Nigerian experience under this Republic depicts a situation
whereby the legislature would appear to have perceived the impeachment
machinery as one tool for political vexation.
IMPEACHMENT- NIGERIAN CASE STUDY
·
The
first case of impeachment was initiated on May 13, 1981 with presentation of
the notice of allegations to Governor Balarabe Musa of Kaduna State under the
Second Republic.
·
There
were 10 articles of impeachment.
·
Investigation
into the allegations began on March
21, 1981 with the setting up of the Impeachment Panel in line with
the provisions of section 170(3) of the 1979 Constitution.
·
The
impeachment proceeding, which began on June 10, 1981 witnessed a high turnover
of litigation, affidavits and counter affidavits. These notwithstanding, the
committee forged ahead and ended its proceedings on June 18, 1981with the
eventual impeachment of Alhaji Balarabe Musa as the Governor of Kaduna State.
·
Since May 29, 1999 , following
another fresh democratic beginning in Nigeria , the spate of impeachment
as well as its threats seemed unabated.
·
The
impeachments and its threats were carried out at both legislative and executive
arms. Many Speakers and principal officers of most of the State Houses of
Assembly and the National Assembly lost their seats to this phenomenon.
·
Salisu
Buhari as the Speaker of House of Representatives lost his seat in 1999. Evans
Enwerem as Senate President lost his seat in November 1999.Chuba Okadigbo the
successor to Enwerem also lost his seat due to impeachment on 8th August 2000. He
claimed to have survived seven impeachment attempts.
·
In Abia State ,
the Speaker of the State House of Assembly has been changed twice due to
impeachment. The first elected Speakers of Enugu and Edo Houses were impeached
on the charges of inefficiency, acts of impropriety and high handedness in the
running of the State Houses of Assembly respectively.
·
Delta
and Akwa Ibom Houses were not spared. Ekiti and Oyo Houses were visited by the phenomenon.
The first Ekiti State Speaker spent only 37days in office.The Deputy Governor
of Osun State Iyiola Omisore was impeached in December 2002.
·
In Kano , both the Speaker
and his Deputy were impeached. The Deputy Speaker was impeached in Sokoto State .
Benue State with the only Female Speaker, had
her impeached in August 2000 for alleged inefficiency.
· The first threat of impeachment against
Nigerian President Obasanjo was made in May 2000.
· The
1999 Nigerian Constitutional provisions for impeachment of the President and
the Vice President can be found in Sections 143(1-11).
· The corresponding provisions for the State
Governors and their Deputies are found in Sections 188(1-11).
· The main provision is Section 143(2b) for
the President and his Vice, while Section 188(2b) stands for the Governor and
his Deputy.
· Section 143(2b) states that if “the holder
of the office of President or Vice President is guilty of gross misconduct in
performance of the functions of his office, detailed particulars of which shall
be specified”.
· Section 188(2b) has the same provision for
Governor and his Deputy.
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