The leadership of the ‘New Peoples
Democratic Party’ suffered a major setback on Friday as an Abuja Federal High
Court restrained them from parading as the national executive committee of the
party.
The New PDP was equally restrained
from operating parallel national, state, local government area and ward offices
of the party.
The Independent National Electoral
Commission was also ordered to refrain from recognising, dealing and relating
with the New PDP.
The court, presided by Justice Elvis
Chukwu, made the order while delivering judgment in a suit in which the Alhaji
Bamanga Tukur-led faction of the party asked it to stop the Alhaji Abubakar
Baraje-led group from further parading themselves as the party’s elected
executive officers.
The defendants in the suit – Baraje,
Dr. Sam Jaja, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola and former Vice President Alhaji Atiku
Abubakar – were backed by seven state governors, including Sule Lamido
(Jigawa), Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano), Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Babangida Aliyu
(Niger), Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), Abdulfatah Ahmed (Kwara) and Rotimi Amaechi
(Rivers).
They had announced their emergence at
a press conference at the Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja, shortly after walking away
from the PDP special convention which was taking place on the same day at the
Eagle Square.
But the Tukur group, which included
all the officials elected at the August 31 special national convention at the
Eagle Square, insisted that they were the authentic national executive
committee of the PDP.
In the suit filed by their lawyer,
Tochukwu Onwugbufor, SAN, they also maintained that the only valid convention
of the party was the one held at the Eagle Square, which was endorsed by the
Independent National Electoral Commission.
As a result, they also asked the
court to restrain INEC from recognising, dealing and relating with the
Baraje-led faction as the national officers of the party.
The New PDP had, through their
counsel, Ahmed Raji, SAN, and Robert Clarke, SAN, asked the court to decline
jurisdiction in the matter, arguing that the dispute was an internal affair of
a political party, and as a result, not justicable.
They also argued that the suit should
have been filed before a state or Federal Capital Territory High Court, rather
than the FHC.
Meanwhile
the splinter PDP has reiterated that “it will see this issue to a logical
conclusion, including going to the Supreme Court, if necessary, to ensure that
a non-member of our party does not continue to lord it over us as our National
Chairman. Alhaji Bamanga Tukur and his loyalists should, therefore, not celebrate
yet as any such celebration would be short-lived as we are more than ever
determined to show him the way out of the exalted position he is illegally
occupying”.
The
nPDP insisted that they have every right to continue using the PDP flag, symbol
and colours, as they are bonafide members of the party and thus entitled to use
them
Tags
Politics
Do we truly haf judicial system not corrupted or influence by d executive in dis country?
ReplyDeleteU no longer have judicial system ? How funny selfish people reason or u would have appricated the judiciary if what happened ? Chuuuuuuuuuuuu .
ReplyDeleteFoolish rapheal
ReplyDelete