There
were indications last night that the Federal Government was serious about
enforcing the no-go area clauses contained in the report of the Presidential
Committee on National Conference, as many of the delegates began to arrive
Abuja, yesterday, for the confab inauguration today.
Vanguard
learnt from competent Presidency sources that the government was working hard
to ensure that the delegates did not discuss any issue that could lead to the
dismembering of Nigeria.
While
unfolding the details of the National Conference in Abuja, the Secretary to the
Government of the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, listed the
indivisibility and indissolubility of Nigeria as the areas that the delegates
were not expected to deliberate on.
Vanguard
learnt from authoritative sources that the government was bent on ensuring that
the delegates kept to the issues canvassed by majority of Nigerians when the
Femi Okurounmi-led Presidential Advisory Committee on National Dialogue went
round the country to collate their views on what should form the issues for
discussion at the conference.
It was
gathered that the Federal Government through the Conference Planning
Secretariat had also developed a set of rules and regulations to guide the
delegates’ deliberations and to ensure that they do not go outside their brief
during plenary.
One
source said that it was in recognition of the need to ensure that the delegates
conform to what Nigerians had already pinpointed as the main areas of interest,
that each delegate would be given a set of rules and regulations upon arrival
in Abuja.
“While
the government would not gag the delegates on what to discuss, it is also clear
that the government will not allow anything that could lead to the break-up of
Nigeria.
It is
important to say that the committee planning the conference had outlined the
major areas of interest to Nigerians based on the views expressed by them when
the committee went round the six geo-political zones of the country.
“There is
no doubt that the submission of the committee will help immensely in shaping the
agenda of the meeting even though the secretariat will not in any way try to
gag the delegates on what to say.
“It is
also pertinent to say that anyone who wants to deviate from the views of the
majority of Nigerians at the conference will have to test the superiority of
their argument by winning by at least 75 per cent votes,” the source explained.
Vanguard
also gathered that in a bid to ensure the success of the exercise, the
secretariat might adopt a modified version of the Votes and Proceedings of the
National Assembly for its work.
Although
the delegates were expected to arrive for accreditation today, Vanguard
observed that no fewer than 20 delegates had already been screened by hordes of
security agents manning the expansive compound of the National Judicial
Institute, NJI, the venue of the talks.
Each of
the screened delegates was issued with tags with machine-readable security
features and biometrics of the delegates.
Vanguard.
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