Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has revealed the reason behind the delay in the signing of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill.
According to him, āThe bill itself has been the subject of robust engagement between the government and civil society. While some have expressed reservations about the time it is taking to enact the new law, we should remember that a truly inclusive democratic, deliberative process often takes time.
Osinbajo stated this on Tuesday at the 53rd Conference of the National Association of Law Teachers, held at Bayero University, Kano (BUK), with the theme; āLaw, Democracy and the Electoral Process” noting that the delay was to ensure an improvement in Nigeriaās electoral system.
āI am confident that the legislation that emerges will be one that reflects a broad consensus between all the stakeholders,ā he said.
Osinbajo added that āwhile INEC continues to improve its capacity to conduct credible elections, particularly through the deployment of technology; we recognize that democracy is about much more than voting. It is also about constitutionalism, rule of law and respect for civil liberties. We must diligently work to uphold these principles.
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āOur progress as a democracy must therefore also be prosecuted; in terms of the struggle to reduce the basic problems of ill-health, malnutrition, illiteracy, and famine which afflict our people. Where social and economic rights are unsecured, people are unable to fully maximize their civil and political rights.ā
While declaring the conference opened earlier, Osinbajo noted that democracy and social justice are closely linked, adding that the cornerstone of democracy is the insistence that; āour society must be governed by the rule of law and not the whim of man.ā
āAs law teachers and legal practitioners, we are custodians of this truth. However, democracy cannot endure without social justice,ā he said, noting that; āthe pursuit of justice lies at the heart of the quest for the good of society.ā
Osinbajo continued, āThis makes the legal profession one of the cardinal vocations upon which civilization rests. Indeed, law is an instrument of pacific social engineering, the end of which is justice. When it is rooted in this postulate, it follows that the law and therefore democracy, are meant to serve beneficial social ends.ā
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