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Sexual Harassment Bill: Omo-Agege Speaks On Why Bill Was Passed Into Law
Senate’s Deputy President, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, has elaborated on the rationale behind the passage of Sexual Harassment Bill into law, saying the increase in recent times of this dehumanizing act is quite alarming.
The Senate is hitting on this bill in pursuit of its legislative agenda, hence the need to approve of the Sexual Harassment Bill, which aims at the protection of women’s rights, he said
Senator Omo-Agege gave this statement on Monday in Abuja when he played host to the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Senator Pauline Tallen.
When this Bill is in full force, it would not only send a strong signal to the perpetrators of the act who may want to abuse women but also ensure that students are not at the mercy of ‘sexual predators’.
The Bill to Prevent, Prohibit and Redress Sexual Harassment of Students in Tertiary Educational Institutions, 2020, which was passed by the Senate at its sitting on July 7, 2020, prohibits sexual harassment of students in tertiary institutions and prescribes jail term ranging from two to fourteen years for various degrees of offences.
Having the backing of the Deputy President of the Senate and co-sponsored by 106 lawmakers, the proposed legislation also prescribes N5 million fine for offenders.
Read also: Rape Bill: ASUU Condemns Bill, Says It Is Targeted At Male Lecturers
The offenders, when the bill is up and running will be liable to two years imprisonment or a fine of N1million when found guilty. Hence any educator who made any sexually-related advances to any student verbally or otherwise is treading on dangerous grounds.
Omo-Agege commended his colleagues for looking beyond cultural, ethnic and religious differences to approve the bill.
He also called on the Minister and her entourage to equally reach out to the House of Representatives to immediately concur to the bill.
He said: “This bill was conceived in the Eighth Senate. The reason we did it then is not any different from the reason we pushed it again in this Ninth Senate. But let me just say that we received the overwhelming support of our colleagues who concluded that it was right that we did something about this because this is not an epidemic but a pandemic.
“For most of us who went through higher institutions, we know what happened. It is just that some would rather see it as business as usual. But having convinced my colleagues that this shouldn’t be business as usual and we needed to arrest the situation, we had to rise above our cultural, ethnic and religious differences to be able to make the case that an attack of this nature on our daughters, sisters, wives in Warri is not any different from an attack in Sokoto, Maiduguri or anywhere. And we needed to move past that culture of lecturers who see our young women as prerequisites of their offices. And we thought we should put a stop to that.
“The bill is one of the few bills that was sponsored almost by all the senators in the Ninth Senate. This is not necessarily an Omo-Agege bill but a bill of the Ninth Senate. We took this decision in furtherance of our Legislative Agenda which includes amongst others the protection of women’s rights.
“We are also in support of strengthening our anti-rape laws both under the Criminal Code and Penal Code. We will also make it in such a way that there will be a better appetite for enforcement of the laws, once we create the enabling environment that encourages the prosecutors to prosecute it, the better for us”.
On Affirmative Action, he said the Senate would examine what obtains in other jurisdictions and make informed decisions.
Female parliamentarians who joined Senator Omo-Agege at the meeting include the Chairperson, Senate Committee on Women Affairs, Senator Betty Apiafi; Senator Stella Oduah, and Senator Akon Eyakenyi.
Earlier, The minister, Pauline Tallen commended Senator Omo-Agege for sponsoring the all-important bill.
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