Monday, 15 July 2019

"My appeal against the dissolution of OSIEC was no politically motivated"- OYHA Honorable Asimiyu Alarape representing Atiba State Constituency

NEWS:

 Oyo State House of Assembly Member Honourable Asimiyu Alarape and also the minority leader representing Atiba State Constituency has made his intention known with his appeal against the dissolution of OSIEC as in the spirit of a true indigene of the Oyo State and also as an honourable that had served earlier in the Oyo State Honourable House of Assembly before, who saw to the creation of the LCDA and by the virtue of this he believes in the continuation of any good idea  set by any government since governance is continuum.
 He emphatically argued that since law is super-most in all ramification , the legality of the creation of the additional developmental areas called LCDA through the Oyo State House of Assembly was justifiably done , despite the fact that there was a court case on how to spell out the actual redefinition of the power to the creation of local government, which is still at the ambit of the State Assembly to do, before the notification of the National Assembly, citing a court case of 2002 comprising three adhoc committees from the Oyo State House of Assembly and that of the Federal House of Representative and Senate, but was abandoned because of the inconsistency of the government in power then.
 However, he justified his position on the motion as being good and correct , serving his role as a minority leader in the house , who is a representative and indigene of the Oyo State that has had the privilege to be in the Oyo State House of Assembly before, seeing the creation of LCDA hence would not pray to see what was built to his witness lawfully be destroyed, while he commended the fact that the area of the election for the LCDA could be controversially challenging,
yet appreciated the fact that the deliberation in the honourable house among the honourable members to the dissolution of the OSIEC in conducting election for the LCDA as being democratic, where the majority have had their way and the minority have had their say.

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