The Nigerian Senate has passed a bill that seeks to protect students, especially the females from all forms of sexual harassment on campus.
The bill was sponsored by the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege who represents Delta central senatorial district.
Titled, “a bill for an Act to prevent, prohibit and redress sexual harassment of students in Tertiary Educational Institutions,” Tuesday’s passage of the bill followed the consideration of the report of the Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters.
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President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, in his remarks, expressed optimism that the passage of the sexual harassment bill by the Senate will ensure the safety of students of tertiary institutions in the country.
He said, “This is a very important and landmark legislation that this Ninth Senate has passed. We have to protect our daughters from predators.”
“In the process we could see clearly that we wanted fair means of determining what offence somebody is accused of, so it is a balanced legislation.
“We want our tertiary institutions to be a very safe environment for everyone, and this is a legislation that will ensure that wish”, the Senate President added.
Earlier, Chairman of the Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele in his presentation said the piece of legislation “attracted unprecedented support from not only Distinguished Senators as demonstrated by the 106 Senators that Co-sponsored the bill but an overwhelming number of Nigerians who see the bill as a necessary legislative intervention that will bring sanity and good order to the educator-student relationship in our tertiary institutions.”
According to the lawmaker, “the bill is not targeted at a particular community – the educators and that it does not interfere with the autonomy of the universities – rather, it is intended to reposition and strengthen our tertiary educational institutions to maintain the core values of etiquette and excellence.”
He added that with the passage of the bill, the piece of legislation will bridge the huge gap and give legal backing to any internal rule by educational institutions to check the incidences of sexual harassment.
Senator Bamidele stated that contrary to ASUU’s claim that there are extant laws that can sufficiently address sexual harassment in tertiary institutions, the Committee found that there are no such laws.
“This legislation is meant to address incidence of sexual harassment in tertiary institutions only, as there are other laws that address sexual offences in respect of persons under the age of 18 years such as the Child Rights Act 2003”, the lawmaker stressed.
He added that, “by enacting this bill into law, the Nigerian Government would be fulfilling part of its obligations undertaken through the ratification of the United States Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, the Protocol to the African Charter on the Rights of Women in Africa, and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, amongst others.”
Lawmakers during the clause by clause consideration of the bill, however differed on the retention of clause seven in the bill.
The Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege who proposed an amendment to clause 7, argued that it was unnecessary for the prosecution to prove the intention of the accused person or the condition under which the act of sexual harassment was carried out.
According to him, the commission of sexual harassment was sufficient to try any educator accused of a sexual offence.