Kogi gov seat: A-Court reserves judgment
(Nigeria) The Court of Appeal in Abuja on Tuesday reserved judgment in the appeals challenging the election of Yahaya Bello of the All Progressives Congress, APC, as governor of Kogi State.
Rep. James Faleke of the (APC) and former governor Idris
Wada of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, had appealed the judgment of the
Governorship Election Petition Tribunal.
The tribunal had upheld the election of Bello as duly
elected governor of the state.
Justice Jumai Sankey led other four Justices to reserve the
judgment after counsel to parties adopted their written addresses.
``The judgment in these appeals will be delivered on a date
to be communicated to parties in the matter," she held.
Earlier, Chief Akin Olujimi, SAN, counsel to Faleke, urged
the court to invalidate the decision of the tribunal, adding that the governor
was not properly nominated by their political party.
He submitted that Bello did not undergo all the
electioneering processes as required by law before he emerged as his party's
candidate in a re-run election.
Olujimi also urged the court to allow the appeal and declare
his client as the proper person for the governorship seat.
However, Mr Ahmed Raji, SAN, counsel to INEC, asked the
court to uphold Bello's election.
Raji said that the governor’s name was submitted to his
client by his party as a replacement to late Abubakar Audu.
Audu, the estwhile flagbearer of the party in the election,
passed on during the election.
Also, Mr Joseph Daudu, SAN, counsel to Bello insisted that
the issue of nomination of candidates for election was the sole responsibility
of a political party.
Daudu told the court that Bello, having been nominated by
the APC in compliance with the existing law and authority of the party remained
the candidate of his party in the election.
He urged the court to dismiss all the appeals against his
client and uphold the decision of the tribunal which had earlier held that
Bello was properly nominated.
The tribunal had, in a judgment delivered on June 6,
dismissed Falake and Wada's petitions challenging Bello’s election as governor
the state.
The three-member panel, headed by Justice Halima Mohammed,
held in a unanimous judgment that Faleke could not be declared governor as he
was never the substantive candidate in the 2015 governorship election.
Mohammad held that the APC was right to have nominated Bello
to replace late Audu as its candidate in the December 5, 2015 supplementary
election.
She declared that Faleke had no locus-standi to have filed
the petition in the first place.
On Wada’s petition,she held that he also lacked the locus
standi to institute the action, adding that he had no right to challenge how
Bello emerged.
Comments
Post a Comment