With the coronavirus pandemic keeping nations on their toes, governments are seeking ways to control spread.
Section 15 states in part, “The Minister (of Health) may, for the purpose of preventing the spread or possible outbreak of an infectious disease, by notification in the Gazette declare any premises to be an isolation area.
HumAngle recalls that as at April 15, when Nigeria had recorded 407 cases and 12 deaths from the novel coronavirus, security officers had killed 18 people as they enforced the lockdown by President Muhammadu Buhari.
According to Section 24 of the bill,
Section 71 reads: “No liability shall lie personally against the Director-General, any Health Officer, any Port Health Officer, any police
The human rights outcry
Reacting to the bill, Abdul Aminu Mahmud, a lawyer and human rights activist,
Mahmud said it was not wise to hasten the enactment of a law in the middle of a crisis and the bill did not
He also said the bill conflicted with the fundamental human rights provisions in the country’s constitution, adding that the National Assembly erred by bypassing the public hearing component of legislative processes, which is “central to law-making,
“The House is accountable to the public, so for a bill to pass the test of scrutiny, the bill must be subjected to a public hearing,” he explained.
Chidi Odinkalu, a professor of law and author, said that the bill appeared to be a “cut and paste”
“Whoever drafted this #InfectiousDiseaseBill# passed posthaste by the House of Representatives must be very lazy.
“It’s not just about the plagiarism from Singapore. If the person had
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