News

Rivers Assembly passes Dehumanizing and Harmful Practices Abolition Amendment Bill into law

The Rivers State House of Assembly has passed into law the Rivers State Dehumanizing and Harmful Practices Abolition Amendment Bill of 2019.

The law is to repeal the principal law known as the Rivers State Dehumanizing and Harmful Practices Abolition Law No.2 of 2003.

Sponsor of the bill and lawmaker representing Emohua Constituency, Sam Ogeh proposed stiffer penalties for those still engaged in traditional dehumanizing harmful practices against persons especially in rural areas of the state.

He said defaulters should be made to face a two-year jail term or an option of five hundred thousand Naira fine to serve as a deterrent.

Leader  of the house, Martin Amaewhule argued in support of the bill, saying payment of ten thousand Naira paltry sum as fine by defaulters as contained in the principal law was not sufficient to discourage those engaged in the act.

At the end of the debate on the bill at plenary and at committee of the whole, speaker of the house, Ikuinyi Owaji Ibani conducted a vote which went in favour of its passage.

Related posts

Court remands 18-year-old girl, others for cultism

Court upholds El-Rufai’s election

The Port Harcourt Spectator

Certificate saga: Adeosun, NYSC dragged to court

Leave a Comment