Constitution Amendment: Deputy Speaker Urges Support for Reserved Seats Bill

As the constitution review process gains momentum, the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Benjamin Kalu, on Friday, urged Nigerians to rally behind the Reserved Seats Bill, calling on his colleagues to vote in favour of its passage.

Hon. Kalu made the call in Abuja while delivering his remarks at the Australian High Commission Reception and Film Event to celebrate the National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC) 2025.

He stated that the bill would help increase Nigeria’s low percentage of female representation in government, currently standing at less than 4%, to at least 10%.

The Reserved Seats Bill, sponsored by the Deputy Speaker, seeks to enhance female representation in the Senate, House of Representatives, and Houses of Assembly by reserving one seat for a woman in each state.

Hon. Kalu emphasised that the bill is not intended to threaten the positions of male legislators, but rather to provide opportunities for women to contribute meaningfully to governance.

He said: “We have the Reserved Seats Bill in our nation at the moment. That bill is for the government to have more inclusiveness, so that we can celebrate the power of women—beyond sports, beyond family management, but in the governance space. If we believe and trust women to do what they do, we can also trust women to handle affairs of governance in our country beyond what it is at the moment.

“So, I urge you to urge your friends, the development partners, all non-governmental organisations to throw in more support in the advocacy of what is before us now as a parliament. We are soon going to be voting about how to include more women through these reserved seats.

“And to break it down, that bill says, let’s have one seat reserved for a woman in each state. It’s not too much, but it will help us shore up our percentage from what it is now, which is less than 4%, to at least 10%. It won’t stop us as Nigerians. So, we need you as our allies, friends, the Honourable Members who are in this room. It is not a threat to us.

“The details of that bill state that they are not coming to contest with the men to reduce their positions. We are saying, let there be a separate seat for women in the Senate, House of Representatives, and the Houses of Assembly, and together we begin to show that women are there to add value, not to threaten our position. We can do it. We can give women a chance.”

Hon. Kalu also called for unity among Nigerians, irrespective of tribe and religion.

He encouraged the people to take a cue from Australians who have embraced unity in diversity.

“That is one of the things and lessons we will take—the ability to accommodate one another, to believe that though we are different, we are the same. That in our diversity lies our beauty. It’s not a disadvantage. It’s a strength, because everyone has something to bring to the table.

“In Australia, all religions are tolerated, all languages are tolerated, all cultures are tolerated. It’s a lesson we must take back to our places, to our different states, to our various religions, to our various cultures. Let us begin to accommodate one another more than we are doing at the moment, knowing truly that the beauty of our nation is in our diversity,” Hon. Kalu said. Tribune

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