Recall that President
Muhammadu Buhari had in May this year conferred a posthumous award on Alhaji
MKO Abiola, the acclaimed winner of June 12, 1993 presidential election upon
which the new Democracy Day is being proposed from the known May 29. Members were
naturally divided on a plea to pass the bill for second reading. Titled “A Bill
for an Act to amend the Public Holidays Act, Cap. P40 Laws of the Federation of
Nigeria, 2004 to bring the Act in tandem with the current realities and
exigencies of the modern times and to declare June 12 as Democracy Day in
Nigeria and for Related Matters (HBs.918 and 1529)”.
Those who spoke against
the Bill questioned the rational behind the proposal and the Presidential
pronouncement, saying it had political connotations. They queried the
significance of the day, asking if the hand over ceremony constitutionally done
on May 29 of every four years would be shifted. Recognizing however that June
12 election was adjudged free and fair, the lawmakers asked if the government of
President Buhari has bothered to give democracy a leeway to thrive in various
elections he had so far conducted since he came on board.
They posited that
Buhari who himself truncated democratic practice in 1983 by ousting the
government of Shehu Shagari has without repentance, continued to muzzle
democratic ethos and norms.
Similarly, those who spoke in favor of the bill
said that the annulment of an election termed the fairest can only be redone by
pronouncing the day the real democracy day, applauding President Buhari for
that singular recognition. When subjected to voice vote, the chambers roared
with a thunderous “nay”, clearly out-voicing those that chorused “yea”. And
then came an eerie silence with all attention shifting to Dogara to know what
his hitting of the gavel would mean.
Apparently, applying tact and finesse, the
Speaker echoed “the ayes have it.” He was later to justify the ruling on the
plank of national unity and cohesion having earlier before putting the question
appealed to the members to consider the mood of the country. “I ruled in the
favor of national unity and cohesion”, he said.
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