ECOWAS Ministers Endorse Supplementary Act to Enhance Powers of Parliament

Wed, Dec 7, 2016
By publisher
3 MIN READ

Africa

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THE ministers of Justice of the ECOWAS have examined and endorsed the draft Supplementary Act on the Enhancement of Powers of the ECOWAS Community Parliament.

The endorsement came during a two-day meeting which ended on December 7, at the ECOWAS Commission in Abuja as the ministers appraised the work of the technical and legal experts who had diligently reviewed the texts of the draft of the supplementary report earlier. The experts included officials with sound institutional management expertise.

The Enhancement of Powers Act is meant among others, to permit the ECOWAS Parliament to be involved in the process of budget as well as the oversight of activities of the ECOWAS institutions.

Delegates at the meeting considered the legal, political and financial implications of the proposals in the draft, pursuant to coming up with realistic and pragmatic recommendations that would ultimately re-position the ECOWAS Parliament in the traditionally accepted form.

After the election of bureau and adoption of agenda and work plan, there were presentation of reports of the technical committee on legal and judicial affairs, a consideration and adoption of the report of the technical committee on legal and judicial affairs, among others.

Speaking during the meeting on behalf of the president of the ECOWAS Commission, Edward Singhateh, vice president of the ECOWAS Commission, disclosed that the aim ECOWAS envisaged in all its enabling rules is to progressively enhance the powers of the institution and ‘let it evolve from its role of consultative body into that of a co-decision organ and ultimately assume a legislative status within the community.”

Singhateh also voiced the need to “join hands and work assiduously to empower the Community Parliament and enable it take its rightful place in the ECOWAS family of decision-making Institutions.”

Affirming that the entire community remains committed to achieving the objective of strengthening the regional Parliament, Singhateh thanked Mustapha Cisse Lo, speaker of the ECOWAS Parliament, for his ‘unequivocal commitment’ towards attaining the goals of regional integration in West Africa.

On his part, Lo emphasised the importance of the meeting which appraises the document that will affect the lives of the citizens of the region. Maintaining that Parliament is a legislative body that oversights the work of the other arms of ECOWAS, he noted that the work on hand was to ‘enable the evolution of co-legislature while keeping the Heads of State and Government updated on progress’

In order to review and refine the draft Supplementary Act, an inter–institutional Committee was established comprising of representatives of the ECOWAS Commission, Parliament and Court of Justice.

At the conclusion of their work, the committee agreed to adopt a gradual approach on enhancing the powers of the parliament from advisory to co- decision and subsequently legislative capacity in fulfilment of the provisions of Article 4.2 of the supplementary Act A/SP.1/06/06.

The ECOWAS Parliament was set up as an assembly of representatives of the citizens of the region and became operational with the inauguration of the first legislature in 2001.

Among the senior officials on hand at the meeting were Harriette Badio, chair of session and the deputy minister of Justice (economic affairs) of Liberia, Nelson Magbagbeola, secretary-general of the ECOWAS Parliament as well as Daniel Bodo Lago, director, ECOWAS Legal Affairs.

Following the endorsement by the ministers, the Draft will be brought forward to the ECOWAS Council of ministers for recommendation and subsequently to the authority of heads of state and government for final adoption.

—  Dec 7, 2016 @ 18:32 GMT

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