Categories: Headlines

There Is No Grazing-Route Law In Nigeria, Says Senate Spokesperson, Ajibola Bashiru

Senate Spokesperson, Ajibola Basiru has that there is no grazing route law in Nigeria, he stated this following the statement of the president on the farmer-herder crisis.

The president while fielding questions in an interview with Arise Television on Thursday, said: “What I did was ask him (AGF) to go and dig the gazette of the first republic when people were obeying laws.

“There were cattle routes and grazing areas. Cattle routes were for when they (herders) are moving up country, north to south or east to west, they had to go through there.”

But speaking with The PUNCH, Basiru said the gazette that Buhari was referring to was a product of a decree promulgated in northern Nigeria in the 1960s, adding that the Land Use Act recognised by the constitution has rendered it ineffective.

“Nigerians should be concerned over whether the Nigerian president is actually getting the correct legal advice from his attorney-general and the legal team,” the senator said.

“As far as I am concerned, as a legal practitioner, there is nothing like grazing routes or grazing reserve law, in the laws of the federation of Nigeria. There is nothing like that.

“There is no federal legislation that the president can implement over such matter. The executive powers of the president merely rely on the powers of the national assembly to make laws, when you look at Section 5 of the constitution.

“Any area where the national assembly cannot make laws, and there is no express grants of powers to the president under the constitution, a purported exercise of power by the president in that regard, will be null and void because it is inconsistent with the constitution by section 1(3) of the 1999 constitution.

“I am aware that there is a northern Nigerian law on reserve and grazing routes which was promulgated by a 1964 decree by the premier of the defunct northern Nigeria region.”

The legislator said there is no how a decree for northern Nigeria will be implemented as a federal law.

“It is not a federal law unless the legal adviser to Mr President is equating a northern Nigeria law, which is not applicable in the west, mid-west, and eastern region or in anywhere in the southern part of Nigeria, to be a federal or a Nigerian law,” he said.

“The president does not have the power to implement that law because it is not a federal law. He can only implement federal legislation made by the national assembly or deemed to have been made by the national assembly.

“The grazing routes law is not a national assembly law, so there is nothing for the president to implement. It is regrettable that the president has not been properly advised by his attorney-general and the legal team.”

admin

Recent Posts

NBA Election: Only Female Candidate, Badejo-Okusanya, Extends Lead As Turnout Surpasses 21,000

Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mrs. Oyinkansola Badejo-Okusanya, has extended her lead in the ongoing Nigerian…

8 hours ago

Suspected Armed Herdsmen Kidnap Three Siblings Conveying Their Mother’s Corpse Home In Benue

Three siblings travelling from Abuja to Benue State with the remains of their late mother…

8 hours ago

SSA To Gov Mutfwang On Igbo Community Affairs, Chief Felix, Brings Igbo Community, Plateau Govt Together

Yakubu Busari Plateau State New Government House  , Rayfield on Friday  went agog  as the…

9 hours ago

Three Chinese Nationals, Others Arrested Over Illegal Mining In Nasarawa

The Nasarawa State Government has arrested three Chinese nationals and several Nigerian artisanal miners for…

9 hours ago

NAICOM Petitions IGP Over Fake Niger Insurance Management

The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) has petitioned the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) over what it…

9 hours ago

Atiku Demands NASS’ Probe Of 2026 Budget Over N210b Duplicate Allocations

Presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress ADC, Atiku Abubakar, has demanded that the National…

9 hours ago

This website uses cookies.