South-East to Get Additional State as Etiti Bill Passes First Reading

By Our Reporter

bill to alter the 1999 Constitution as amended to create an additional state in the South-east geopolitical zone called Etiti has passed through its first reading in the House of Representatives.

Amobi Ogah (LP-Abia) and four others sponsored the bill, which was read by the clerk of the House of Representatives, Yahaya Dan’Zaria, during plenary in Abuja on Tuesday.

The co-sponsors of the bill included Miriam Onuoha (APC-Imo), Kama Nkemkama, Chinwe Nnabuife, and Anayo Onwuegbu.

The proposed state will include communities in the existing five states of Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, and Imo.

When created, the new state will have 11 local government areas, drawn from the five states, with headquarters at Lokpanta.

The bill seeks to alter three sections of the 1999 Constitution to delete the word 36 and replace it with the word 37.

This is to accommodate the new state and to insert the word Etiti immediately after Enugu in the list of states contained in the constitution.

The bill also sought to alter the listing of local governments according to states and transfer the 11 local government areas from their current states to the new state.

The local governments to be affected are Isuikwuato and Umu-Nneochi (Abia), Orumba North, and Orumba South (Anambra).

Others are Ivo and Ohaozara (Ebonyi), Aninri, Agwu, and Oji River (Enugu), as well as Okigwe and Onuimo (Imo)

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