Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State has demanded an urgent review
of the 1977 decree which changed the Lagos Stock Exchange to Nigerian
Stock Exchange, saying it “negates the global standards.”
The
governor made this known while speaking to journalists at the end of the
technical session of the 10th Lagos Executive/Legislative parley, where
he noted that across the world, stock exchanges are named after their
host cities.
The Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) suggested that
it is the time to take a second look at legislations that were passed
during the military era when there was no legislative arm of government
and the executive appropriated to itself the power to make laws for
Nigeria.
He explained that it was during the military era that
the Lagos Stock Exchange as it started out, became the Nigeria Stock
Exchange in a unification move, underscoring the need for the nation to
go back to what is best global practice.
The governor said, “I
think the time has come for us to begin to look at the legislation that
was passed during the military administration that is decrees and acts. I
think that was when the Lagos Stock Exchange became the Nigerian Stock
Exchange, in unification for the country.”
“Perhaps there is the
need for us to go back to what is best global practice because we have
the Johannesburg, Paris, New York and we don’t have the American Stock
Exchange or German Stock Exchange while there is a Frankfurt Stock
Exchange and so on.”
“There is nothing like the British Stock
Exchange, but the London Stock Exchange” he adds, noting that a similar
trend should be followed in Nigeria consistent with best global
practices.
“Those are issues that some of the legislators will
take on board to their various legislative bodies” he said for all the
legislators representing Lagos state at both state and national
assembly.
Faults bill on Nigeria International Financial Centre.
Mr.
Fashola also faulted a proposed bill at the National Assembly for the
creation of the Nigeria International Financial Centre, NIFC, arguing
that the lawmakers might be ‘over-legislating’ because the measure is
against the 1999 constitution.
The bill seeking the establishment
of the NIFC, which is expected to gulp N5.69 billion, according to the
financial compendium attached to the bill, scaled the second reading on
the floor of the Senate last May.
http://premiumtimesng.com/business/150212-fashola-wants-nigerian-stock-exchange-renamed-lagos.html
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