Hope For Nigerian Youth As Peace Corps Bill Passes Second Reading In Senate

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National Assembly Complex

By Millicent Umoru-O

December 15, 2020

Hope For Nigerian Youth As Peace Corps Bill passes second reading in Senate

The Nigerian Senate, on Tuesday, 15th December, 2020 again passed the Bill for an Act to establish the Nigerian Peace Corps.

Recall that the Bill was read the first time in the 9th Senate on Tuesday, 17th December, 2019 and is being sponsored by former Senate Leader and Chairman, Senate Committee on Army, Senator Ali Ndume.

Leading the debate on Tuesday, Senator Ndume reminded the President of the Senate, Dr. Ahmed Lawan how the Bill was introduced and passed in the 8th Senate when he (Lawan) was the Senate leader.

“The Bill went through all legislative processes, including Public Hearing and was overwhelmingly passed. The Bill also passed through all the same necessary legislative crucibles in the House of Representatives and eventually passed”, Ndume explained.

He stated that the core mandate of the Bill is “to develop, empower, and provide gainful employment for the youth to facilitate peace, volunteerism, community services, neighbourhood watch, nation-building and for other related matters”.

Ndume stressed that, the Bill would “give statutory backing to the existing Peace Corps of Nigeria, which currently has over 187,000 members, comprising of both regular staff and volunteers with well-structured network of branches in the 36 states of the federation, including the Federal Capital Territory”.

He stressed that, the Peace Corps of Nigeria, which came into existence in 1998, is an incorporated body by the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC).

“Based on its laudable achievements over the years, the Peace Corps was accorded Federal Government recognition, through the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development. On the international scene, the Corps was equally granted a Special Consultative Status by the African Union (AU) and the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)”, Ndume added.

He urged his colleagues to support the Bill, saying, “the Nigerian Peace Corps, when established, beside engaging millions of our unemployed youths on permanent basis, has the capacity of complementing the functions of conventional security agencies in the areas of developing its members as supporting agents of social order by providing a second-line of public safety”.

Senator Ndume explained that the issues raised by President Muhammad Buhari as reason for withholding assent to the Bill in the 8th Senate had already been addressed in the new Bill.

The Senate leader, Senator Abdullahi Yahaya, while seconding the Bill, urged his colleagues to give accelerated passage to the Bill, since it had already gone through the rudiments of lawmaking at both chambers in the 8th National Assembly.

The Bill had no objections.

President of the Senate, Lawan, who presided over Tuesday’s plenary, therefore, referred the Bill to the Senate Committee on Interior, for further legislative actions.

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