Court strikes out eligibility suit against Obanikoro
(Nigeria) A Lagos State High Court sitting in Ikeja, has struck out a suit seeking to stop Sen.
Musiliu Obanikoro, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs II, from contesting
for any electoral office in Nigeria.
Trial judge, Justice Kazeem Alogba struck out the suit by three members of the Peoples Democratic
Party, PDP, in a ruling delivered on Thursday.
He held that the originating summons was incurably defective
and lacking in merit.
The PDP members; Babatunde Ogun, Suleiman Saheed and Wasiu
Adeniyi Odusan, had filed the suit on November 17, 2014.
Defendants were the Independent National Electoral
Commission, INEC and the PDP.
The court had earlier dismissed their ex parte motion
seeking to restrain Obanikoro from participating in the PDP Lagos governorship
primaries which was eventually won by Mr Jimi Agbaje.
However, moving the substantive application, the plaintiffs'
counsel, Mr Wahab Shittu, had argued that Obanikoro was not eligible to contest
for any political position in Nigeria.
He said this was
based on the provision of Paragraph 4 (a) of Part iv of the Electoral
Guidelines for Primary Elections, 2014 of the INEC.
Shittu had exhibited several documents including an
application form bearing Onikoro Musiliu Babatunde in support of the motion.
He had alleged that the former Minister of State for Defence
had dual citizenship and also presented a forged birth certificate to the INEC
in December 2006.
Shittu said whatever judgment arrived at by the court would
become an important reference point on the nation's political landscape.
Responding,
Obanikoro's counsel, Mr Gbenga Ojo, had urged the court to dismiss the suit for
being an abuse of court processes as it did not disclose a reasonable cause of
action.
Ojo said the case against the first respondent (Obanikoro)
was premised on forgery and dual citizenship and there was no evidence of his
trial or conviction for the alleged offences.
According to him, all the documents relied upon by the
applicants in the suit were either uncertified public documents or documents
printed from internet without authentication of the source or certification.
Ojo further argued that the suit was a mere academic
exercise since Obanikoro failed to clinch the PDP's gubernatorial ticket for
the state.
In his ruling, the judge held that the originating summons
lacked admissible evidence because all the documents tendered by the applicants
were not certified true copies.
According to him, some of the documents exhibited were
gotten from the internet or mere photocopies which violate the provisions of
Sections 105 and 106 of the Evidence Act 2011.
Alogba said that legally admissible evidence to substantiate
the very serious allegations of forgery and perjury against Obanikoro had not
been produced by the applicants.
He noted that the
onus rested on the applicants to prove their case against Obanikoro which they
had failed to do in the originating summons.
The judge said:"The applicants did not comply with the
provisions of the Electoral Act thus making the originating summons incurably
defective.
"From the above
reasons, it is my view that the originating summons is incompetent, lacks merit
and is likely to be struck out. It robs the court of jurisdiction to adjudicate
on the merit of other issues raised as it has become only academic. This application
is hereby struck out."
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