The quest for a solution to the
festering crisis besetting the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party came
under threat on Friday as an Abuja Federal High Court ordered the ruling party
to replace the embattled former National Secretary, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola,
with Prof. Wale Oladipo.
In a ruling on an application filed
by Ogun State PDP, the Justice Abdul Kafarati-led court ordered the Independent
National Electoral Commission and the PDP to replace the name of Oyinlola as
national secretary within three days.
Oyinlola, PDP and INEC were listed as
the defendants in the suit.
The order by the court followed a
January 11, 2013 judgment in which the Abuja FHC sacked Oyinlola as PDP
National Secretary.
Justice Kafarati had in the January
11, 2013 judgment, ordered INEC to rectify the records of the PDP by deleting
Oyinlola’s name as the party’s National Secretary and replace him with a
candidate nominated at a valid South-West zonal congress of the party.
The court ordered that the South-West
zonal congress must be conducted within 21 days from the January 11 judgment.
However, the South-West PDP failed to
meet the 21-day deadline when it conducted a zonal congress in Ibadan on July
13, 2013, where Oladipo emerged as Oyinlola’s replacement for the office of the
party’s National Secretary.
As a result of the development, the
Ogun State PDP, led by its Chairman, Chief Adebayo Dayo, and Secretary, Alhaji
Semiu Sodipo, approached the Abuja FHC with another application, asking the
court to extend the 21-day period stipulated in the January 11 judgment for
selection of Oyinlola’s replacement at a valid congress of the South-West zone.
The plaintiffs also asked the court
to make an order deeming Oladipo’s nomination by the extra-ordinary South-West
Zonal Congress on July 13, 2013 as proper and in due compliance with the
January 11 judgment.
In the same vein, they asked the
court to order the PDP and INEC to, within three days, reflect the replacement
of Oyinlola’s name with that of Oladipo as the party’s National Secretary.
Oyinlola had opposed the application,
arguing that the court should not reopen the matter – having earlier delivered
a judgment in the same matter.
Also, the embattled former Military
Administrator of Lagos State maintained that the court could no longer consider
the application because he had already filed an appeal against the January 11
judgment, which sacked him from office.
Oyinlola noted that the application
would affect the appeal.
But Justice Kafarati, in his ruling,
dismissed the objections raised by Oyinlola.
He held that, in granting the orders
sought by the plaintiffs, the court did not mean to effect changes in the
January 11 judgment, rather, he maintained that it was meant to regularise the
steps taken in compliance with the judgment.
The judge further held that the application
would have no effect on the judgment and the appeal filed by Oyinlola.
However, Justice Kafarati, in the
same vein, noted that there was no evidence before the court that Oyinlola’s
appeal had been transmitted to the Court of Appeal.
According to him, the mere filing of
a notice of appeal does not serve as a ground to stay proceedings.
He, therefore, granted the
application, and ordered PDP and INEC to reflect the replacement of Oyinlola’s
name with that of Oladipo as PDP National Secretary within three days.
After the court had delivered the
ruling, counsel to the plaintiffs, Babs Akinwunmi, attempted to move a motion
ex-parte, seeking leave for substituted service of court documents relating to
a pending contempt case on Oyinlola, the chairman of the New PDP, Abubakar
Baraje, and a chieftain of the party, Sam Jaja.
The plaintiffs, in the pending
contempt case, had asked the court to commit Oyinlola, Baraje and Jaja to
prison for one year for allegedly flouting the orders of the court as contained
in the January 11 judgment.
Akinwunmi had told the court that the
plaintiffs had made unsuccessful attempts to effect personal service of the
court processes on Oyinlola and the two others.
But Justice Kafarati refused to hear
the ex-parte motion, and instead, advised the plaintiffs to file an affidavit
indicating the failed attempts they had made to serve the defendants.
In a telephone interview,Oladipo gave
glory to God even as he thanked President Jonathan, Tukur and the party.
He said, “I thank the judiciary for
creating the environment for the party to choose. It’s now crystal clear that
internal democracy is well and alive within our party courtesy of President
Jonathan and the leadership of the PDP.”
A member of PDP Board of Trustees,
Chief Ebenezer Babatope, has said that his loyalty to President Goodluck
Jonathan, and PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, remained unshaken.
He said, “I have no comment. I am a
member of the Alhaji Tukur-led PDP. I don’t believe in any other mushroom
organisation.
But reacting to the court judgment,
Oyinlola said his lawyers would respond appropriately today [Saturday], adding
that he had earlier appealed the judgment on his suspension at the Court of
Appeal.
Tags
Politics
Tnk God
ReplyDeleteOyinlola abi wetin,troway put make I see road!
ReplyDelete