The House of Representatives on Thursday passed the bill seeking the establishment of the South East Development Commission.
Fifty-three years after the Nigerian civil war, the bill was passed after third reading.
The House unanimously adopted the recommendations of the bill during the Committee of the Whole chaired by the Deputy Speaker, Hon. Benjamin Okezie Kalu.
Standing in Kalu’s name as the lead sponsor and indeed, all the lawmakers from the Southeast region, the explanatory memorandum of the bill explained that the Commission would be charged with the responsibility to receive and manage funds from allocation of the Federation Account for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of roads, houses and other infrastructural damages suffered by the region as a result of the effect of the civil war.
When established, the Commission will equally address the ecological challenges and any other related environmental or developmental issues in the Southeast States which include Abia, Imo, Enugu, Anambra and Ebonyi.
Incidentally, the passage of the bill is coming at a time when members of the National Assembly from the region led by the deputy speaker are championing a new initiative known as the Peace in South East Project, seeking non-kinetic approach to resolving the socio-economic and sociological challenges and also enhance the infrastructural development of the area.
The Third Reading of the bill means that it will now be taken to the Senate for concurrence before it will be transmitted to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his assent to make it a law.
The House also passed through third reading a bill seeking to repeal the Weights and Measures Act, 2004 to establish the Nigerian Weights and Measures Regulatory Agency, for the development and enforcement of varying scopes of legal metrology standards for the promotion of fair trade, protection of public health, safety and the environment.
The House also decided the Committee of the Whole while considering the report on the bill.