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1999 Constitution is the product of a hurried national compromise to ensure that the military returned to the barracks – Gbajabiamila

Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila has described the 1999 constitution as a product of a hurried national compromise to ensure that the military returned to the barracks. 

The Speaker said this on Tuesday June 1, during the zonal public hearing on the review of the 1999 constitution in Lagos.

Gbajabiamila stated that there is need for a near-perfect constitution in Nigeria to correct the abnormalities witnessed in the country. 

He said; 

“A nation’s constitution is the foundation of its existence. It is supposed to set the terms of our nationhood and define who we are in a manner that reflects both our common truths and highest aspirations. 

“Our constitution falls short of this standard because the 1999 Constitution is the product of a hurried national compromise that we entered into two decades ago in other to ensure that the military returned to the barracks and that we returned to democratic government.

“It was always the intention that we will one day as one people and one nation, return to amend this document so that it gives voice to the yearnings of the Nigerian people and sets out in clear details how we intend to achieve the shared ambitions of our nationhood. Providence has cast upon the 9th National Assembly the responsibility to write such a constitution for the Nigerian people.

“No nation in the world has a perfect constitution, but we need a near-perfect constitution in Nigeria and we can achieve that through substantive amendments that significantly alter the character of our nation,” he said.

“Therefore, the task before us now is to use this process of review and amendment to devise for ourselves a constitution that resolves the issues of identity and political structure, of human rights and the administration of government, resource control, national security and so much else, that have fractured our nation and hindered our progress and prosperity.

“Our job is to produce a constitution that turns the page on our past, yet heeds its many painful lessons. It is not an easy task, but it is a necessary and urgent one.”

Expressing hope of getting a constitution that will “put an end to the debilitating conflicts that even now continue to tear our nation apart”, Gbajabiamila added that it will also help to “restructure our government to make it more effective”.

He said; 

“We will do what is necessary to achieve these outcomes because all of us in the House of Representatives recognise that this moment in our history is fraught with promise and peril, and the future of our country lies in our hands.”

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