The decision of the Senate yesterday directing the Federal
Government of Nigeria to take steps to immediately to initiate the process to
file an application at the International Court of
Justice for a review of its judgment delivered on the 10/10/2002 concerning
the Land and Maritime Boundary Between Cameroon and Nigeria (Equatorial Guinea
Intervening) is indeed a very good development. Recall that the House of
Representatives passed a similar resolution directing the Federal Government of
Nigeria to apply for a review of the obnoxious judgment of the International
Court of Nigeria delivered on the 10th October 2002 concerning the sovereignty
of the Bakassi peninsula. However the Federal Government through the Minister
of Information, Labaran Maku dismissed the resolution of the House of
Representatives as non binding.
This stance of the Minister of Information, Honourable Maku drew
the ire of the Senate which invited the Minister to the floor of the Senate to
warn him on his predilection to making reckless utterances on matters of
national importance. It appears that Honourable Maku ate his words after the
rebuking by the President of the Senate, David Mark as he apologised profusely.
However it seems the executive branch of the Federal Government under President
Jonathan is not really keen in complying with the resolutions of the House of
Representatives and Senate respectively. Just two days ago while addressing the
General Assembly of the Heads of States and Governments of the United Nations
categorically declared that the Federal Government of Nigeria shall continue to
obey the Judgment of the International Court of Justice concerning Bakassi
Peninsula.
It is pertinent that both the House of Representatives and the
Senate respectively constitute the National Assembly by virtue of Section 47 of
the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended &
altered). The National Assembly is
constitutionally empowered by Section 4
(2) of the Constitution to make laws for the peace, order and good government
of the Federation or any part thereof with respect to any matter included in
the Exclusive Legislative List set out in Part I of the Second Schedule to this
Constitution.
The declaration of President Jonathan at such an August Assembly
like the General Assembly of the United Nations is particularly worrisome in
view of the fact that it is the executive branch of the Federal Government that
is constitutionally empowered to take decision whether or not the country
should apply for a review of the judgment of the International Court of
Justice. Meanwhile we have just about 14 days or so to the expiry of the ten
years deadline which a State Party has to apply for a review of the Judgment of
the International Court of Justice by virtue of Article 61 of the States of the
International Court of Justice.
The pertinent question is: Are the resolutions of both Houses of
the National Assembly binding on the Federal Government of Nigeria? Are the
resolutions of both Houses of the National Assembly binding on the Federal
Government of Nigeria? The answer is in the negative. Resolutions of the
National Assembly are not binding on the Federal Government or the executive
branch of government. They do not have the force of law. There are merely
declarations of intent or moral suasions.
These resolutions do not have the force of law. The Federal
Government may take advantage of this to ignore the resolutions of the National
Assembly on review of the judgment concerning the Bakassi Peninsula. It is
certain that the non-compliance with the resolutions of the National Assembly
on challenge of the judgment of the International Court of Justice may likely
cause a row between the National Assembly and the executive branch of the
Federal Government.
We may need to explain what a “Resolution” is all about. A resolution is a written motion adopted
by a deliberative body. The substance of the resolution can be anything that
can normally be proposed as a motion. For long or important motions, though, it
is often better to have them written out so that discussion is easier or so
that it can be distributed outside of the body after its adoption. Resolutions
are commonly used in company meetings and houses of legislature. Under the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 resolutions of the
National Assembly are recognized or contemplated as one of the instruments
through which the National Assembly can exercise its powers of law making. In company law, a written resolution is
especially useful in the case of the board of directors when there is the need
to give its consent to a transaction entered into by a company. When such a
resolution is certified by the company secretary it gives assurance to the
other side that such a transaction in question is authorized by the Board of
Directors. The Board of Directors of a company is undoubtedly the decision
making body in such a company. Other examples include resolutions approving the
opening of bank accounts or authorizing the issuance of shares in the company.
In a house of a legislature (such as the House of Representatives and Senate),
the term non binding resolution refers to measures that do not become laws. The
resolutions of both the House of Representatives and the Senate respectively
can be classified as Non-binding resolutions. This is used to differentiate
those measures from a bill, which is also a resolution in the technical sense.
A
bill is the major mode of exercising of Federal Legislative powers vested on
the National Assembly by virtue of Section 58 (1) of the Constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria (supra).
The
resolution is often used to express the body's approval or disapproval of
something which they cannot otherwise vote on, due to the matter being handled
by another jurisdiction or being protected by a constitution. An example would
be a resolution directing the executive to apply for a review of the judgment
of the International Court of Justice, which decidedly carries no weight, but
is adopted for moral support.
The work of National Assembly is
initiated by the introduction of a proposal in one of four forms: the bill, the
joint resolution, the concurrent resolution, and the simple resolution. Upon
adoption, simple resolutions are attested to by the Clerk of the House of
Representatives or the Clerk of the Senate and are published in the Hansard or
Gazette of both Houses.
However if the executive branch of government under the leadership
of President Jonathan fails to comply with the resolutions of the National
Assembly directing it to apply for a review of the judgment of the
International Court of Justice on the ground that the resolutions lack the
force of law; the National Assembly may likely take advantage of the non
compliance with Section 12 (1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria,1999 by the Federal Government before the signing of the Green Tree
Agreement between Nigeria and Cameroon that led to the handover of the Bakassi
peninsula to Cameroon in August 2006 and initiate impeachment proceedings
against President Jonathan for violating the Constitution.
However it is instructive that the Green Tree Agreement was signed
by the predecessor of President Jonathan, Olusegun Obasanjo. Be that as it may,
President Jonathan has a constitutional duty to ensure that the Green Tree
Agreement is invalidated if it fails to comply with the provisions of Section
12 (1) of the Constitution which explicitly provides thus:
“No treaty between the
Federation and any other country shall have the force of law except to the
extent to which any such treaty has been enacted into law by the National
Assembly”.
President Jonathan has a constitutional duty to ensure that no
portion or part of the territory constituting the Federal Republic of Nigeria
is given away to another country under the guise of pandering to the whims and
caprices of the international community to the detriment of Nigeria National
Interest. President Jonathan has fundamental duty of ensuring the Constitution
is preserved, obeyed and respected by all institutions and persons or group of
persons including the executive branch of government under his leadership. But
what stops the National Assembly passing a Law invalidating the Green Tree
Agreement and compelling the President to set a motion in machinery to apply
for a review of the Judgment of the International Court of Justice in order to
tie the hands of the President?
Okoi Obono-Obla
·
Obono-Obla is Barrister and a Civil Society Activist. He lives in
Abuja, Nigeria.
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