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APC vs PDP: Anxiety As Supreme Court rules On Zamfara Judgment Review Motion Friday

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APC vs PDP: Anxiety as Supreme Court rules on Zamfara judgment review motion Friday

The Supreme Court will on Friday rule on the motion by the All Progressives Congress (APC) seeking set aside the consequential order that made the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) beneficiary of all elective positions in the 2019 general election in Zamfara State.

Already, there is mounting tension among members and supporters of the two political parties who have arrived Abuja ahead of the ruling.

The Chief Justice of Nigeria be(CJN), Justice Ibrahim Muhammad who led a five-member panel of the court, had on March 17, announced that a date for the ruling will be communicated to parties.

This was shortly after lawyers representing parties in the matter adopted their brief of arguments.

A short message from the Director Information, Supreme Court, Dr Festus Akande, to journalists said the apex court will deliver its ruling in the appeal on Friday, March 27.

The apex court had declined two previous judgment set aside requests involving the PDP’s sacked Imo State Governor, Hon. Emeka Ihedioha, and APC’s governor-elect of Bayelsa State, Senator David Lyon.

While arguing the application for setting aside the consequential order that barred its clients from the 2019 general election, Chief Robert Clarke (SAN) informed the panel that the order was made out of jurisdiction.

Clarke disclosed that the APC which brought the application challenging the consequential order was not against the main judgment because the party did not conduct primary election for nomination of candidates for the 2019 general election.

The senior lawyer, who admitted bringing the application for the second time, insisted that what the Supreme Court ought to have done was to order for a fresh primary election for all elective positions in the state.

He informed the panel that the consequential order which made the PDP candidates for all elective offices winner was in bad taste and ought to be reversed.

Clarke further submitted that it was wrong of the apex court to have declared over 400,000 votes as wasted simply because APC at the time did not conduct primary election known to law because of its internal dispute.

He therefore urged the court to invoke its inherent jurisdiction to set aside the consequential order that brought PDP’s candidates to power in Zamfara State and instead should order APC to conduct a fresh primary election and to also order the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct new election into all elective offices in Zamfara State.

However Senator Kabiru Marafa, who is the first respondent in the matter, urged the apex court to dismiss the request of the APC for want of jurisdiction and merit.

Marafa through his lawyer, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), informed the panel that the APC’s application was caught by section 285 of the 1999 Constitution which prescribed 60 days for hearing and determination starting from the date the notice of appeal was filed.

Ozekhome argued that the apex court gave final judgment in the Zamfara governorship tussle over 10 months ago, adding that bringing such application for the second time is a gross abuse of the process of the apex court.

The senior lawyer urged the court to dismiss the application with huge punitive fine to keep the party away from further abuse of court process.

Ozekhome cited the decision of the court in the Bayelsa and Imo States governorship tussles, adding that the apex court had made it clear that its judgment on any issue is final for all times, ages and that no force on earth can change the decision except a law made to that effect.

The CJN, after taking submissions from the counsel, said ruling has been reserved to a date to be communicated to parties in the matter.

The Supreme Court had last year ordered that the candidates of parties that came second in the 2019 general election be inaugurated as winners following the nullification of the nominations of APC candidates on account of failure to conduct valid primary as required by law.

Source: Sun

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EFCC Withdraws Appeal against Temporary Order Stopping Arrest of Ex-Gov Bello

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The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has filed a notice of withdrawal to discontinue an appeal against an order of a Kogi High Court restraining it from arresting the immediate past governor of Kogi State, Yahaya Bello.

In the notice filed on April 22, the EFCC said the withdrawal is predicated on the fact that events have overtaken the appeal.

The commission also admits that the appeal was filed out of the time allowed by law.

“The appellant herein intends to and do hereby wholly withdraw her appeal against the respondent in the above-mentioned appeal,” the notice partly read.

“This notice of withdrawal is predicated on the fact that on the 17th of April 2024, the application filed by the appellant herein was overtaken by the decision of the same high court of Kogi State.

“The orders made ex parte by Jamil on the 9th of February 2024 in said suit which is the subject of this appeal, was made to last pending the hearing and determination of the originating motion on notice which was finally determined by Jamil on the 17th April 2024.

“Furthermore, the notice of appeal was filed out of time and we, therefore, pray that the appeal be struck out for being filed out of time and incompetent.”

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Yahaya Bello: Publish Code Of Conduct For Leaders, Lukman Tells APC

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A former National Vice Chairman, North-West of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Salihu Lukman, says the ruling party should publish its code of acceptable conduct for leaders and elected representatives of the party.

“None of the Second Republic parties will allow what is going on in the case of Yahaya Bello for instance,” Lukman said on Channels Television’s Politics Today programme on Wednesday.

“This is why I keep raising the point about the APC coming up with a kind of code of conduct for elected representatives and leaders of the party because leadership is about trust.”

Lukman, a former Director General of Progressives Governors Forum (PGF) of the ruling APC, also said the party has been reduced to an election platform that has produced some “disasters” as elected representatives because the party organs have failed to meet to discuss critical matters.

“The national caucus was meeting almost every week before the 2015 election,” he said lamenting that eight months into the administration of ex-Kano governor Abdullahi Ganduje as APC national chairman, the National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting of the APC has not taken place.

“Because we are faced with this reality, it presents an opportunity for the leaders of the party to really go back and renegotiate the party because when you have a political party that doesn’t meets, it’s as good as not having a party; we are reduced to another election platform. The danger is that even in managing an election platform, we have produced almost a disaster,” Lukman said.

Political Solution’ll End Ganduje’s Ordeal
He said the mismanagement of political relations has been the reason incumbent governors have been rubbishing their predecessors, despite the fact that they belong to the same political party at one point or the other.

Lukman said the corruption allegations facing Ganduje in Kano has political undertones, arguing that only a political solution would solve it. He said the troubles facing Ganduje in Kano has to do with his squabble with Rabiu Kwankwaso, another ex-governor and 2023 presidential candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP).

Lukman said the protracted conflict between Ganduje and Kwankwaso “was an avoidable crisis which emerged because the party didn’t handle it well” which made Kwankwaso dumped the ruling party.

“We must push Dr Abdullahi Ganduje to renegotiate relationships back in his state because it’s political. If you don’t approach it politically, you will never take it away. You can replace Dr Abdullahi Ganduje and if the capacity to get leaders to do the right thing in their base is not addressed, we will continue to get into this,” he said.

Ganduje and some of his family members are being probed by the state anti-graft agency under the control of Governor Abba Yusuf of the NNPP over corruption charges and the matter is in court. Some APC ward chieftains have suspended Ganduje but the matter has been roped in conflicting court judgements, with the APC disowning those chieftains and affirming the ex-Kano governor as the party’s national chairman.

Like Ganduje, who has a case to answer in court, Bello, also an APC chieftain, has a case before the court.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is prosecuting Bello, the immediate-past Governor of Kogi State on 19 counts bordering on alleged money laundering, breach of trust, and misappropriation of funds to the tune of N80.2 billion.

EFCC chief Ola Olukoyede, who vowed to prosecute Bello or resign, alleged that the embattled ex-governor withdrew $720,000 from the state’s accounts to pay his child’s school fees in advance just before he left office on January 27, 2024.

The anti-graft commission has since declared Bello wanted after his successor, Governor Usman Ododo allegedly whisked him away on April 17, 2024, preventing EFCC operatives to arrest him (Bello) when they laid siege to his Abuja residence.

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Breaking: Another Commissioner Tenders Resignation From Fubara’s Cabinet

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Hours after the resignation of Rivers State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Zacchaeus Adangor, another commissioner in the oil-rich South-South state, Isaac Kamalu, has exited the cabinet of Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

Like Adangor, Kamalu, in a letter to the Secretary to the Rivers State Government, Tammy Danagogo, on Wednesday, rejected his redeployment from the Finance Ministry to the Ministry of Employment Generation and Economic Empowerment.

Kamalu cited absence of peace in Rivers State despite the peace pact by President Bola Tinubu last December. He said it was impossible for him to give his best in an atmosphere of rancour.

The governor had on Tuesday implemented a minor cabinet reshuffle in the state and moved Adangor to the Ministry of Special Duties (Governor’s Office) while Kamalu was moved to the Ministry of Employment Generation and Economic Empowerment.


The Rivers State Government did not provide a reason for their redeployment.

Both commissioners, who are loyalists of ex-governor Nyesom Wike, had previously resigned from their positions last December in the heat of the political crisis in the state and the rift between Fubara and his predecessor who is now the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). However, they were reinstated as part of the peace agreement initiated by the President Bola Tinubu.

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