LIST OF 31 NEW STATES PROPOSED BY NIGERIAN SENATE

Senate Nigeria 2 2

LIST OF 31 NEW STATES PROPOSED BY NIGERIAN SENATE

The Nigerian Senate is reviewing proposals for the creation of 31 additional states across the country as part of the ongoing amendment of the 1999 Constitution, in what could become the most significant restructuring of Nigeria’s federal system since independence.

Led by Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, the Senate Committee on Constitution Review announced plans to hold zonal public hearings on July 4 and 5 in Lagos, Enugu, Ikot Ekpene, Jos, Maiduguri, and Kano.

The hearings will gather citizen’s input on the sweeping reforms.

According to the committee, state creation proposals have emerged from all six geopolitical zones, with the North-East leading with seven requests, followed by the North-West (six), and five each from the South-West, South-South, and North-Central.

The South-East is requesting three to five new states.

FULL LIST OF PROPOSED STATES
North-Central:
Benue Ala (from Benue)

Okun, Okura, Confluence (from Kogi)

Apa-Agba, Apa (from Benue)

Federal Capital Territory (to be a standalone 37th state)
North-East:
Amana (from Adamawa)

Katagum (from Bauchi)

Savannah (from Borno)

Muri (from Taraba)

North-West:
New Kaduna, Gurara (from Kaduna)

Tiga, Ghari (from Kano)

Kainji (from Kebbi)

South-East:
Etiti (proposed 6th SE state)

Adada (from Enugu)

Urashi, Orlu, Aba (from South-East region)

South-South:
Ogoja (from Cross River)

Warri (from Delta)

Bori (from Rivers)

Obolo (from Rivers/Akwa Ibom)

South-West:
Toru-Ebe (from Delta, Edo, Ondo)

Ibadan (from Oyo)

Lagoon (from Lagos)

Ijebu, Oke-Ogun (from Ogun)

Ife-Ijesha (from Oyo and Osun)

Other proposals under consideration include:

ANIM State (from Anambra and Imo)
Abak State (from Akwa Ibom)
Some of these bills have already passed second reading in the National Assembly.

Beyond state creation, the committee is considering several landmark reforms:
Full autonomy for local governments, including independent election bodies
20 bills on judicial reform, including setting judgment timelines and expanding tribunal powers

Creation of state police forces and security councils

Fiscal reforms to enforce budget timelines and improve revenue sharing
Gender inclusion, with reserved legislative seats for women
Diaspora voting rights and legal recognition of independent candidates

Expanded roles for traditional rulers through National and State Councils

Decentralisation of powers, including moving items like labour and shipping to the Concurrent List

The Senate Committee urged all Nigerians to participate in the hearings, emphasizing that public input is vital to producing a constitution that reflects the country’s present-day realities and aspirations.

About Dons Eze

DONS EZE, PhD, Political Philosopher and Journalist of over four decades standing, worked in several newspaper houses across the country, and rose to the positions of Editor and General Manager. A UNESCO Fellow in Journalism, Dr. Dons Eze, a prolific writer and author of many books, attended several courses on Journalism and Communication in both Nigeria and overseas, including a Postgraduate Course on Journalism at Warsaw, Poland; Strategic Communication and Practical Communication Approach at RIPA International, London, the United Kingdom, among others.

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