THISDAY

UBA FAMILY AT WAR OVER SUPREME COURT JUDGMENT 41

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the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) shall be countenanc­ed by the commission.

Referring to judicial precedence, he said: “In Emeka v. Okadigbo, the court held that ‘a diligent reading of the above reveals that it is the NEC of the PDP that is responsibl­e for the conduct of the party’s National Assembly primaries. The Court of Appeal was correct.

“There can only be one valid primary and that is the primary conducted by the NEC. A primary conducted by the state chapter of the PDP is not a primary. It is an illegal contraptio­n that carries with it no rights. It is a complete nullity.

‘’The primaries conducted on January 8, 2011 was conducted by the NEC of the PDP, and it was the only authentic primaries conducted by the PDP to choose its candidate for the Anambra North senatorial seat. On the other hand, the purported primaries conducted on the 10th or 12th of January, 2011 were conducted by the state chapter of the PDP. It is null and void for the purpose of choosing the PDP’s candidate for the senatorial elections. It is clear that at no time were two parallel primaries conducted’”.

He also cited the case of Emenike v. PDP (2012) 12 NWLR (Part 1315) 556 at 594 Para H, where the Supreme Court in interpreti­ng a similar provision, “was emphatic that the PDP primaries conducted by the Abia State executive committee of PDP was illegal as it was not empowered to conduct primary election and that being the case, the respondent who emerged from the said primary was not properly elected.

Okafor said all the affected lawmakers were duly nominated by the national executive of the PDP for the 2015 general election and they contested the election and were duly returned as elected.

He added: “They were subsequent­ly issued with their respective certificat­es of return and have since been performing the duties for which they were elected by their respective constituen­ts before the election and during the nomination process, the national executive duly forwarded our clients’ names which the commission duly received.

“Thereafter owing to some shenanigan­s by some staff of the commission whom our clients believed were working for a selfstyled state executive committee which were determined against the serene and settled position of the law to sponsor candidates for the PDP, our clients’ names were relegated.

“This created a situation whereby the legal department of the commission commenced playing a “musical chair” with list of candidates of the PDP when they were fully aware that the only authority that is competent to forward names of candidates is the NEC by virtue of correspond­ence signed by its National Chairman and Secretary.

“It was therefore odd for the legal department of the commission to have ill advised the commission to purport to accept the list forwarded by a self-styled state executive, while disregardi­ng the list already domiciled with the commission and forwarded by the national executive of the party.

“By so doing, the commission purported to have acted pursuant to what was said to be an order of court made by the Federal High Court Abuja Division in FHC/ABJ/ CS/854/2014.”

However, he argued that a perusal of the order made in the said proceeding­s would not disclose any place where the Federal High Court ordered the commission to accept a list of candidates forwarded by a state chapter of the PDP.

He said: “That would have been a total impertinen­ce if not rascality as every High court is duty bound to obey the establishe­d principles of law as laid down by the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

“Thus, with or without an order of court, on no account would the legal department or any other authority advise the commission to accept a list forwarded by a self-styled state executive.

The affected lawmakers are Stella Oduah and Andy Uba in the Senate. Other are members of the House of Representa­tives comprisisn­g Lynda Chuba Ikpeazu, Anayo Nnebe, Tony Nwoye Okechukwu, Chris Azubogu, Chukwuka Onyema, Obinna Chidoka and Eucharia Azodo.

The lawyer said: “The Supreme Court did not order the withdrawal of the certificat­es of return issued by the commission to our clients. They did not hold that the faction of the PDP had the right to sponsor candidates for the PDP.”

He pointed out that the court did not equally authorise the commission to substitute the lawmakers with the individual­s whose names were on the list improperly allowed by INEC in obvious disregard of the series of judgments of the Supreme Court of Nigeria to the effect that it was only the NEC of the party that has the power to sponsor candidates.

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