Tag: atiku

  • Atiku, Obi risk losing at Supreme Court, says Clarke

    Atiku, Obi risk losing at Supreme Court, says Clarke

    The Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) has dismissed the cases of the petitioners against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the All Progressives Congress (APC). But, the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, and his Labour Party (LP) counterpart, Peter Obi, have vowed to challenge the verdict at the Supreme Court. In his interview with Channels Television, monitored by Assistant Editor EMMANUEL BADEJO, Chief Robert Clarke (SAN) advises the petitioners to jettison the idea of appealing the judgment.

    What’s your view of the trial court of the PEPC in the last judgment favoring the incumbent president?

    My personal view and I believe that this view has been enriched with my experience in the dispensation of justice at the bar.  I have every belief and I seriously believe that the unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal is unassailable.  It is as fixed as you can fix anything and I can assure you that, if there is an appeal, I doubt if there is anything that can come out of the appeal.

    This assertion is too categorical and too preemptive of the Supreme Court.  Why did you say so?

    Well, let us be clear to ourselves.  All the matters based on law that were brought before the tribunal had already been adjured by the apex court in this country.  Therefore, if I were to say my personal reasons for my earlier statement, there was no need for the tribunal to have gone through all of that. 

    Take for instance, in Atiku’s case, no real point of law was canvassed, but points of facts.  And in tribunal matters, when you bother with a point of fact, the law says you must provide the particular facts upon which you want the court to judge the case.  As the tribunal rightly said, Atiku’s counsel for one reason or the other never presented any fact before the court that could make the court look into those facts and be able to say categorically one way or the other whether there merits in those facts or not. Therefore, any reasonable lawyer, apologies for my word, would not have taken the matter considering the available facts before it and asked the tribunal to adjudge on the matter.

    Secondly, the Labour Party was pressing their case on what the law says and it does not say. At least, all the materials the Labour Party presented before the tribunal were decisions that had been held and upheld at the apex court.  So, what are you asking the tribunal to do? Do you want the judges to sit on an appeal against the judgment of the Supreme Court.? Whether Abuja can be granted a special status against the judgment of the Supreme Court, this matter had already been decided. Now, asking the tribunal to create a special status where you must make 25 percent or else you die if you don’t win an election?

    Natural justice, morality, and indeed whatever area you want to turn the statement into, you will find that where morality and natural justice meet, we lawyers will say that we must stand on the position of the law.  The law is very clear on this.  Abuja, even though it is not a state, the Supreme Court says we will concede to you that you are a state for all that purpose.  Nevertheless, we do not advise you to take advantage of the fact since we have said you are like a state, you will now be granted special priviledge.  That is not the intention of the Supreme Court.  Therefore, if the law says, to be the president of Nigeria, you must have 25 percent in two-third of the states in Nigeria, then, Abuja can be treated as a state.  But to say that since the word, and had been used, though the English Language can be used in many ways. Then, you can say even if a man has won the 36 states and had 25 per cent but he does not have 25 percent in Abuja, then, he’s not deemed to have won. The reasoning of that nature needs to be reconsidered.  We lawyers used to say in my time that this is the harvest period for lawyers.  They believed that if politicians have illegally made their money, apologies for my words, that it is their turn to make money, too. So, lawyers, without considering their status at the bar, without considering that they are senior members at the bar will just take any brief without thinking about the state of the law of the brief they are taking. This is a debate for another date.  I will not want to castigate any lawyer. I will not want to impugn on the integrity of any lawyer.  If Robert Clarke and if I were briefed to take the brief of one of the appellants, I will refuse it.  I will make them know that in this area of law, Tinubu has been found not guilty of having been convicted; Tinubu has not been found guilty of having no certificates to contest; this Abuja matter had been decided in three or four other cases.

    In view of several decided cases and the position of Section 299 of the Constitution, I know that the petitioners may not be satisfied with the PEPC’s position. How do you think we can then resolve something that has become like a ‘mischievous reasoning’ into the position of the constitution?

    It will not be a mischievous reasoning.  I don’t think any court will say that. How can you say that a man who has the majority votes, a man who won the 36 states, cannot be pronounced president because he did not win one state?  It means you are giving that state a special privilege in the constitution.  And the Supreme Court has consistently said that, Abuja, you are not a state.  But we will concede to you that you are a state, where we feel you should be regarded as a state.  One of the circumstances is this one. If you want to produce 25 percent, then it should not mean that by that priviledge, you supersede all other states. It is more than absurd.  I believe no reasoning tribunal will hold that line of position.

    How do you think going forward, our laws can resolve this so that there won’t be any kind of lacuna as far as FCT is concerned?

    Look, the problem in Nigeria should not be left at the hands of the court.  If we continue the way we are going and we fail to look at our statutes in respect of election, we will continue to be rushing to court and we will continue to be opening our courts to all the biases in this country. Let me be honest to you.  The law that created the electoral act has not been very nice to Nigerians. Number one, how can you say that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which is considered as the electoral umpire, is right in whatever it does in the course of conducting an election because of the Evidence Act? The Act says any action showing that any act been done by a government agency or by government will be presumed to be correct.  We call that the presumption of correctness attached to any document by INEC.  So, if INCEC comes to court and says I conducted this election, these are the papers I used, and they are correct.  There is a presumption immediately that the court will hold that it is correct.  Now, the whole burden of proof shifts to all those who are challenging the documents to show evidence.  And that was what the court was saying. The tribunal said, look, you know the law, being lawyers of many years standing, so, you know that when you come before the court and after your pleadings have been taken, you must go by your pleadings.  If you fail to show evidence, which the law says you must show to topple what INEC says, then why do you have to come to court? Why not go and look for the evidence? One of the problems we have in this country is INEC.  It has to be debarred from that toga of correctness attached in the conduct of the election.

    The constitution has empowered INEC in the manner it has to conduct elections in compliance with the Electoral Act. INEC has said it will transmit election results but that didn’t happen in some cases. And the court has made its position known on that. How do you place that?

    You see, INEC has been enjoined by statutes to ensure that in the conduct of elections, it follows, not only the statute, to be able to follow any other rules it brings out.  But, we should be able to follow what constitutes law and constitutes discretion. That aspect of the law you referenced only granted INEC discretion in conducting an election.  That is the discretionary aspect of INEC.  Now, INEC is telling us that yes, I wanted to do it that way, but since it is my discretion, I discovered I had a hitch and I could not because of that hitch stop all other jobs that the Act has asked me to do.  No.  By virtue of the doctrine of correctness, if you feel INEC is telling lies or INEC is hiding certain facts, you as the lawyer should now bring those facts to the tribunal to say we don’t believe INEC’s claim of any hitch and our reasons for not believing are this, this and this with their particulars. It is those particulars that constitute what we, lawyers call, pleadings. And cases are won and lost on the pleadings before the court. INEC says ok, I was given discretion to conduct an election.  But, unfortunately, I couldn’t do it that way because I had a hitch on my machines.  

    Is that kind of excuse tenable?

    It is. That is the law. If it is a mandatory position, if it is part of the law that you must transmit in a particular manner and you didn’t do it that particular manner, you have to give reasons. That, however, is not the law. The Electoral Act does not say elections must be transmitted electronically. No. It gives INEC the discretion to transmit to whatever way and manner it deems fit.

    Chief, but INEC itself told Nigerians the manner in which it was going to conduct that election. Wasn’t that enough commitment from the electoral umpire to transmit the results through the IREV?

    The problem with us Nigerians is that we like to hide many things and allow our political inclinations to affect whatever we do. Look, the same INEC you people are claiming says to do this, or that, look at the results in the eastern part of Nigeria; look at the results from Delta State, who has challenged INEC there? In the Eastern region, INEC declared that Obi won almost 95 percent of the votes, has anybody challenged that?

    Sir, what do you make if the constitution has placed the INEC to do a certain duty and the commission has said it was going to do in a certain way, wasn’t a burden for INEC to deliver and if INEC does not deliver, can’t it be held responsible?

    To be honest, if I had been reached to take Peter Obi’s brief, I would have advised him that his grouse or issues raised are not in the law. What is in the law is a discretion to transit and if it does it one way or the other and could not do it as in this case, I would have told them to show me that they should show me where INEC says it had hitches. If they said they have evidence, then, I would have asked them to give me the particulars, then, I would have taken the brief and go and plead those facts to prove that INEC was lying when it said it had hitches.  I would have taken my forensic experts and made evidence to the effect that INEC was telling lies.  But, all these were not done. INEC said I could not do it because I had hitches and all the lawyers stopped there.  They did not take INEC on it. What type of hitches did you have?  They should zero in on this under cross examination. And INEC now explains the type of hitches it had, they would have gone to call their own witnesses and good lawyers to speak to that. If they had done that, the court would have been given the opportunity to listen to the two sides and look at the evidence.  Unfortunately, all these were not available.

    Politically speaking, where do we go from here?

    Let me tell you that where we are today in Nigeria is that we are moving backwards in our laws on elections and this is what we will always get when we hold elections except independent candidates should be allowed to contest elections in Nigeria. The problem with elections in Nigeria today comes from the party; the caucus of the party, they dictate to Nigeria whom to vote for.  And this is happening because the constitution does not allow independent candidates. Only political parties can sponsor candidates to elective positions.  Until the law is amended to allow independent candidates, we will continue to witness this.  Most of the problems in the country today are caused by the political parties.  They are holding Nigerians to ransom because whoever the party decides, will become the president.  You and I don’t have control over that. Let lawyers and a group of Nigerians who have the country at heart pursue this.  These politicians will not want to change the law.

    Where do you think we can go in healing the land?

    Number one, those who can help us to move forward are the same people who are benefiting from the quagmire we are in.  For instance, look at the local governments, they do not exist in a practical sense.  We know that the state governors control the local governments.  Their money goes to the state and the governors give them what they think they should give them.  In clear terms, we don’t have local governments. If only our politicians will allow the local governments to work, we will not move.  Imagine a man who is doing well in his locality and he wants to vie for councillorship, he cannot do that without joining a political party.  We have to first of all remove that from our constitution. Once we remove that, there will be progressive.  But, I fear that nobody will do it because those that should champion that cause are the same people benefitting from the system. My prayer is that we should jettison the whole idea of the 1999 constitution and allow the citizens to get their own constitution.

  • Atiku, Obi: why we are challenging tribunal verdict

    Atiku, Obi: why we are challenging tribunal verdict

    • Don’t go to S’Court, Bello, Wike, Bruce urge PDP, LP candidates
    • APC: judgment reinforces democracy, judiciary’s vibrancy

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar and his Labour Party (LP) counterpart, Peter Obi, yesterday explained why they rejected the judgment of the Presidential Election Petition Court, which upheld the victory of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Atiku described the judgment as bereft of justice.

    The former vice president also said the judgment failed to restore the confidence of Nigerians on free and fair elections.

    Obi said he rejected the tribunal’s decision because it was devoid of justice.

    However, the ruling party hailed the verdict, describing it as a victory for democracy.

     Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello urged the two opposition presidential candidates to accept their defeat, warning that their appeals will be an exercise in futility.

    A PDP chieftain, Senator Ben Murray-Bruce, advised Atiku to accept the judgment in “national interest”.

    Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Nyesom Wike said “there is no need for Atiku to appeal,” adding that it is counter-productive.

    The Court of Appeal justices, sitting at the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC), is the first stage of presidential election petition.

    An aggrieved petitioner has a right of appeal to the Supreme Court, which is the final arbiter.

    The appellant has 14 days to file his claims before the apex court, which has 60 days from the tribunal judgment to give its verdict.

    Atiku: I will fight on

    Atiku, who vowed to appeal the verdict, said his decision was anchored on his belief that the court is the sanctuary of justice.

    The presidential candidate, who spoke at a media briefing held at the PDP secretariat in Abuja, was accompanied by the National Chairman, Umar Damagum, and other party leaders.

    Atiku said: “The journey of my political career, as you know, holds so much to the courage and fearless decisions of our judiciary.

    “Indeed, I am no stranger to legal battles, and I can say that I have a fair idea of how the court system works. All through my career as a politician, I have been a fighter, and I must say that I have found the judiciary as a worthy pillar to rest on in the pursuit of justice.”

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    Atiku added: “Our gains in ensuring transparent elections through the deployment of technology was heavily compromised by INEC in the way it managed the last presidential election.

    “I am afraid that the judgment of the court, as rendered by the Presidential Election Petition Court yesterday (Wednesday), failed to restore confidence in our dreams of free and fair elections devoid of human manipulations.

    “Like I did say at the beginning of this legal battle when I instructed my lawyers to file my petition challenging the outcome of the presidential election, my ultimate goal in this pursuit is to ensure that democracy is further strengthened through the principles and processes of fair hearing.

    “I take great pains to tell you that the decision of the court of first instance on this matter utterly falls far short of that expectation. I am therefore, here to tell you that, though the judgment of the court yesterday is respected, it is a judgment that I refuse to accept.

    “I refuse to accept the judgment because I believe that it is bereft of substantial justice. However, the disappointment in the verdict of the court can never destroy my confidence in the judiciary.

    “Consequently, I have asked my lawyers to activate my constitutionally guaranteed rights of appeal to the higher court, which, in the instance, is the Supreme Court.

    “It is my conviction that the electoral process in Nigeria should be devoid of untidy manipulations and that the outcome of every election should be a perfect reflection of the wishes of the electorate.

    “I believe that such is the only way through which our democracy can have a manifest expression of its true meaning. Whether I prevail in this quest or not, the record of my effort in ensuring an order of credible elections in Nigeria shall remain for the future generations to evaluate.

    “On this note, I urge all my supporters to remain steadfast. I urge them to take solace in an immortal lesson I learned from my leader and mentor, the late Shehu Yar’Adua, that losing a battle is less important than losing the war.

    “We might have lost a battle yesterday, but the war is well ahead of us. And I believe that with our hopes in God, we shall win the war of restoring confidence in our electoral system”.

    Damagum said the verdict did not serve the interest of justice.

    He said: “From the faces of Nigerians in all nooks and crannies, you will see hopelessness and despair since the pronouncement of the judgment yesterday.

    “Lawyers, politicians and other relevant stakeholders from all walks of life were also more confused as law and facts were visibly thrown over board.

    “As a law-abiding political party, we received the judgment with shock along with other Nigerians and friends of Nigeria. What is at stake is beyond personal gains”.

    Why I reject verdict, by Obi

    Obi said: “This judgment was delivered within the statutory time frame under the extant statutes. We acknowledge the Court’s contributions to due process and the seeming attempt to strengthen our democracy.

    “As petitioners in this case, we respect the views and rulings of the Court, but we disagree with the Court’s reasoning and conclusions in the judgment it delivered. It is my intention as a presidential candidate and the intention of the Labour Party to challenge this judgment by way of appeal immediately, as allowed by the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “The PEPC has rendered its judgment, but that esteemed body is not the final arbiter. The responsibility now falls on the Supreme Court. I do know that judgment is not coterminous with justice. I implore Nigerians to remain focused, steadfast, and peaceful; abide by the rule of law, and understand that this matter has not reached its logical conclusion.

    “Our legal team has already received our firm instruction to file an appeal against the decision. I shall not relent in the quest for justice, not necessarily for myself but indeed for our teeming supporters all over the country whose mandate to us at the polls was regrettably truncated by INEC.”

    Judgment reinforces democracy, says APC

    The National Working Committee (NWC) of APC said the judgment has reinforced  democracy and underscored the vibrancy and independence of the judiciary.

    The National Secretary, Senator Ajibola Basiru,  who spoke on behalf of the NWC, hailed the judiciary for meticulously dealing with the petitions brought before it by aggrieved candidates and political parties.

    He said the judiciary has strengthened the country’s democratic process through the instrumentality of the law.

    Basiru, who addressed reporters in Abuja,  maintained that PEPC’s decision was a vindication and reaffirmation of the mandate given to President Tinubu by Nigerians during the poll.

    Acknowledging that the last election was keenly contested, he said “the outcome remains a wholesale endorsement of our party’s vision, values and commitment to rebuilding and repositioning our country for greatness.”

    Basiru stressed: “Our campaign, planked on the unity and prosperity of Nigeria and our message of ‘Renewed Hope’ resonated with Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora.”

    He applauded the diligence and professionalism of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), security agencies, local and foreign observers, and other stakeholders in ensuring a credible, free and fair election.

    He also commended party leaders, members, supporters and campaigners for their unwavering commitment and resilience throughout the electoral process.

    Basiru added: “As we soldier on  in the business of governance, the APC will stay focused and resolute in fostering unity and improving the quality of life of all Nigerians as enshrined in the eight-point agenda of this administration.

    “We enjoin all Nigerians, irrespective of ethnicity, religion or political leanings to join hands with us in this onerous but patriotic task of building a better, more prosperous nation

    Bruce to Atiku, Obi: don’t appeal

    Bruce advised Atiku and Obi to to accept the judgment, saying that national interest should override personal interest.

    In a post on his X page, Bruce said:”Once elections have been held and a winner is announced, we must follow the Jonathan doctrine and accept the people’s verdict in the interest of democracy and the nation.”

    He added: “Our elections don’t have to end in the courts. But now that we have found ourselves in this position, and the courts have spoken, let us put national interest above self-interest, accept the verdict, and move on so the nation can advance.

    “Bola Ahmed Tinubu is the duly elected and undisputed President of Nigeria, and this judgment should settle all questions and erase all doubts.

    “I commend the judges of the presidential election petition court for doing a challenging job exceptionally well. It was democracy that won.”

    Bruce advised supporters of all the political parties to be mindful of recent events on the continent and promote the peace of the country.

    Bello: no ground for appeal

    Governor Bello said Atiku and Obi should not appeal because there is no basis for their rejection of the judgment.

    He told State House Correspondents in Abuja after a meeting with Vice President Kashim Shettima,  that the PDP and LP candidates should  save their resources.

    In his view, the verdict is flawless.

    Bello said: “As far as I’m concerned, I dont think there is any ground for appeal. I will rather appeal to them that they should drop any appeal and save the resources, save the trouble, advise their supporters, admonish them that they should accept yesterday’s judgment. No flaw. I thank God for all that happened yesterday.”

    Reacting to the loss of two senatorial seats by the APC in Kogi State at the tribunal, Bello expressed optimism that the party will reclaim the seats through lawful means.

    Why Atiku should not appeal, by Wike

    Wike, who spoke on Channels Television ‘Politics Today’ yesterday evening said, PDP and the Labour Party do not have a case to pursue.

    He urged them to close ranks with the President to build the country.

    The minister said the judgment has confirmed the wishes of Nigerians, who freely and happily elected Tinubu.

    He hailed the judges for being detailed in their verdict, adding the judgment appeared to be the longest in the history of political cases in Nigeria.

    Wike said: “From what I saw yesterday, if my confidence in the judiciary was 50 percent, now it has gone up to 70 percent. I say a job well done and well researched.”

    He said he was happy with the verdict by the tribunal.

     ”I believe President Bola Ahmed Tinubu won the presidential election squarely and I expected the judgment of the tribunal the way it went.

    “I am very happy; it is a moment of joy. I congratulate Mr. President and his Vice, Kashim Shettima.

    “I commend the judiciary.  For the first time in my life, I have never seen what I saw yesterday.

    “The judgment was like opening the eyes of the public. It took the judges more than 10 hours to deliver that judgment.

    “The judges painstakingly took their time to address each issue raised. So, for me, it shows that our judiciary is improving.”

    Wike said it was surprising that his party had rejected the result and said it was going to appeal.

    “That my party has come out to reject the judgment is because abinitio, I did not support them.

    ‘I believe that their position was wrong. I believe in equity, fairness and justice.

    “I have always told people that election petition is not like any other case.  It is a special area.

    “It is not done by propaganda and it cannot be won on social media.  It is won based on the presentation of evidence and facts.

    “The judgment has opened the eyes of the PDP that there is no need to appeal.”

  • JUST IN: Atiku breaks silence after PEPC ruling

    JUST IN: Atiku breaks silence after PEPC ruling

    The candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the February 25, 2023 presidential election Atiku Abubakar has vowed to appeal the verdict of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) at the Supreme Court.

    The PEPC on Wednesday threw out the petition filed by Atiku and the PDP challenging the victory of President Bola Tinubu who contested the election on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    In his reaction to the verdict on Thursday, Atiku said his decision to appeal the verdict was anchored in his belief that the court is the sanctuary of justice. 

    According to him: ”I am therefore here to tell you that, though the judgment of the court yesterday is respected, it is a judgment that I refuse to accept. I refuse to accept the judgment because I believe that it is bereft of substantial justice. However, the disappointment in the verdict of the court can never destroy my confidence in the judiciary.

    Read Also: PEPC verdict: Save your resources, there’s no ground for appeal, Bello tells Atiku, Obi

    ”Consequently, I have asked my lawyers to activate my constitutionally guaranteed rights of appeal to the higher court, which, in this instance, is the Supreme Court. It is my conviction that the electoral process in Nigeria should be devoid of untidy manipulations and that the outcome of every election should be a perfect reflection of the wishes of the electorate. 

    ”I believe that such is the only way through which our democracy can have a manifest expression of its true meaning. Whether I prevail in this quest or not, the record of my effort in ensuring order of credible elections in Nigeria shall remain for future generations to evaluate.” 

    Details shortly…..

  • PEPC verdict: Drop agitations, join Tinubu to build better Nigeria, Bagudu tells Atiku, Obi

    PEPC verdict: Drop agitations, join Tinubu to build better Nigeria, Bagudu tells Atiku, Obi

    The minister of budget and national planning, Atiku Bagudu, has called on presidential candidates in the February 2023 presidential election, who had challenged President Tinubu’s victory at the tribunal, to join him in the process of building a stronger Nigeria.

    Bagudu, who made the call on Thursday in Delhi, India, in a chat with journalists, was reacting to Wednesday’s verdict of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC), which affirmed President Tinubu’s victory at the election and his eventual declaration by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as the winner of the poll.

    Opposition political parties; the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Atiku Abubakar, the Labour Party (LP) and its candidate, Peter Obi, as well as the Allied People’s Movement (APM), had petitioned the PEPC, challenging President Tinubu’s victory.   

    However, in his reaction, Bagudu said the PEPC’s verdict was just an affirmation that Nigerians were right in their choice of President Tinubu, adding that the call on the candidates to join the administration in refocusing the nation was just a reminder of their promise during campaigns to work towards building a stronger Nigeria.

    He said: “Mr President is somebody who has paid his dues in politics and equally supported by a vice president who, in addition to being governor, has been a senator of the Federal Republic and they complement each other and it is the manifesto they campaigned upon, the popularity of the APC was stronger than that of other parties.

    Read Also: Join Tinubu to develop Nigeria, groups tell Atiku, Obi

    “But ever since then, Mr President has focused on the job that he campaigned on a mandate, the Renewed Hope manifesto and ever since he was declared winner, even before he was sworn in, he’d devoted his energy to delivering on the promises that he made to Nigerians.

    “It is interesting that when the tribunal was reading the judgment yesterday, Mr. President is in India attending the G20, meeting with investors, because his focus is on the job. But we congratulate all Nigerians because it is all our achievements, our victory that we gave a mandate to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Vice President Kashim Shettima.

    “Yesterday, the tribunal told us that we were right, we were correct, all the allegations are unfounded. But more than that, in his characteristic magnanimity, Mr. President had always called upon the other presidential candidates to come and join him.

    “This is a democracy, let us build Nigeria, after all that was the promise of each presidential candidate. I’m very happy when, again yesterday, Mr. President restated that call.

    “So while congratulating all Nigerians and thanking the process, the Independent National Electoral Commission, the judiciary, but reechoing Mr President’s call for all those who contested against him to join him in building stronger Nigeria.”

    Meanwhile, the Bagudu has tipped Nigerians to expect more high-end investment flow into the country, saying President Tinubu’s ability to attract $14 billion-worth investments from India is consistent with his pattern of administration.

    Bagudu was reacting to the signing of some agreements and Memorandum of Understanding, as well as promises of investments by Indian investors on Wednesday.

    According to him, as Governor of Lagos state, President Tinubu laid the foundations for some of the economic developments bearing fruits for the state today, citing the Dangote Refinery, Dangote Fertilizer and the Eko Atlantic City as some of the ideas the President birthed for the state.

    The minister said: “Mr. President is very bold and courageous. He has the capacity, he has the wisdom, he has a contemporary knowledge of the world’s political economy and one of the selling skills he has is that he’s able to mobilize and convince international capital to come to Nigeria and rightly so because Nigeria has a strong absorptive capacity, meaning ability to absorb investment.

    “If somebody goes to Lekki Free Trade Zone, where, among others, Dangote Fertilizer, Dangote Refinery, you’re talking about investments in just one location, over $10 billion and these were as a result of the dream of our President, when he was a governor, to partner and give land several times bigger than Victoria Island, to private investors because he believes in Nigeria and he supported them.

    “Equally, the Bar Beach reclamation where what used to be a nightmare is now a thriving modern city. These are just two among the bold decisions that he’s taken. So at the national level, Mr. President believes right so, he wrote about it, he speaks about it, that Nigeria can and indeed will find hundreds of billions of dollars from the international and domestic investors so that we’ll build the economy.

    “So yesterday’s news story that the group of investors he met in India, consistent with his messaging, consistent with the clarity of his vision and belief in the agenda, have committed $14 billion. I think we will see much more.”

  • Atiku’s greed caused PDP’s defeat at PEPC – VON DG

    Atiku’s greed caused PDP’s defeat at PEPC – VON DG

    Mr Osita Okechukwu, the Director-General of the Voice of Nigeria (VON) says he fully understands the grief of the opposition parties over the judgement of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC).

    Okechukwu, also a foundation member of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) said this when he spoke with journalists in Abuja.

    He said that although the main opposition PDP had bright chances of bouncing back through the 2023 presidential election, the political greed of the party’s candidate, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, denied the party victory.

    Okechukwu said that Atiku’s failure to rise to the golden opportunity and play as a statesman by throwing support for his erstwhile running mate Peter Obi or any other Southern presidential candidate divided the opposition party.

    “Atiku dealt PDP a huge blow from which it might be difficult to recover.”

    He dismissed claims that the petitioners had maintained that President Bola Tinubu was not qualified to run and allegations of irregularities in the conduct of the election as well as the failure to electronically transmit results in real time were fatal to the respondents’ case.

    “Those intricate webs could have been resolved if Atiku had obeyed the zoning convention, supported Peter Obi or any other Southern presidential candidate it could been simply an all southern bout.

    “The Wike Masquerade couldn’t have emerged. That would have meant that the bulk of votes he garnered could have been credited to PDP.

    “Atiku divided PDP’s votes irreparably, all the votes Labour Party garnered were from the party’s stronghold, minus voted warehoused by the former Vice President who naively forgot that northern voters are one of the most sophisticated in the country, but believed that northern electorate would behave like children in a dormitory waiting for directives on how to vote,” he said.

    Okechukwu said that Tinubu deserved accolades for rescuing the zoning convention which guarantees equity, and natural justice between the north and south.

    “First and foremost, let me congratulate Tinubu, for rescuing the zoning convention, a ligament binding north and south from unprecedented assault.

    “To be honest, my take is that the opposition lost the election that day in 2022, when Atiku Abubakar trampled on the presidential zoning convention, which governed the 4th Republic Nigeria and was also embedded in his party’s Constitution.

    “Recall that Atiku earned accolades when he stormed out of PDP Convention in 2014 in protest that President Goodluck Jonathan was breaching the zoning convention. And, in 2018, Governor Nyesom Wike hosted PDP Convention in Port Harcourt and ensured that only northern presidential aspirants contested for the presidential ticket as a way of honouring the zoning convention.

    “So, it is obvious that when Atiku sacrificed statesmanship on the altar of narrow political ambition, one concluded that he had wittingly or unwittingly fatally wounded the fabric of PDP. And, going by the time worn cliché, a divided house cannot stand, Nigerians should recognise that Atiku by his greed denied PDP a possible victory.”

    On the way forward, the APC chieftain suggested the promulgation of a revised Electoral Act that will resolve all evident ambiguities, by enthroning mandatorily only electronic accreditation and transmission of results.

    “I subscribe to the idea that we should totally abolish manual collation of results and make electronic transmission of results mandatory. We also need to return to the popular Justice Uwais Handbook on Electoral Reform, which among other fine democratic tenets recommended how best to transparently recruit the INEC Chairman, Commissioners and sundry officials.

    “With these altercations, Election Petitions will definitely be concluded before swearing-in of winners. Let us not forget that our democracy has witnessed tremendous advancement and keep in mind the fact that democracy is not a revolution, but a work in progress,” Okechukwu said.

    (NAN)

  • JUST IN: PEPC strikes portion of Atiku/PDP’s petition querying Tinubu’s qualification

    JUST IN: PEPC strikes portion of Atiku/PDP’s petition querying Tinubu’s qualification

    The Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) has struck out some aspects of the petition by Atiku Abubakar and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) including that where they claimed President Bola Tinubu was qualified to contest the last presidential election.

    In a ruling, on some motion by the respondents, the court held that while the petituoners claimed that Tinubu did not meet constitutional threshold to have contested the election, they failed stated what the required qualification was.

    Read Also: LIVE UPDATES: Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC)

    The court also struck out some paragraphs where the petitioners accused Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State and one Friday Adejo (described as a Local Government Chairman in Kogi State), but failed to join them as parties to the petition.

    It equally struck out some other paragraphs where it found that the petitioners made vague allegations of irregularities and malpractices.

  • PROFILE: Meet the five judges who’ll decide Tinubu’s, Atiku’s, Obi’s fate at Tribunal

    PROFILE: Meet the five judges who’ll decide Tinubu’s, Atiku’s, Obi’s fate at Tribunal

    In May, the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal commenced its sitting with various justices presiding over the various petitions concerning the 2023 presidential election.

    Five political parties including the PDP, LP, Action Peoples Party (APP), Allied Peoples Movement (APM) and the Action Alliance (AA) had lodged separate petitions before the tribunal seeking to annul Tinubu’s victory.

    The sitting of the five-man panel of justices is headed by the presiding justice, Justice Haruna Tsammani.

    On the day of the final judgement, the five jurists will deliberate and possibly vote to take a final decision, in case there are disagreements on issues thrown up at trial.

    The decision is, however, not final, as a displeased party can still appeal to the Supreme Court.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Presidential Election dispute: Tinubu, Atiku, Obi know fate Wednesday

    However, many lawyers agree that the Court of Appeal’s decision sets the tone of the final decision of the Supreme Court, either in concurrence or disagreement.

    The judges presiding over the tribunal are:

    1. Justice Haruna Tsammani – Chief Registrar of the Court of Appeal

    2. Justice Stephen Adah – Court of Appeal (Asaba division)

    3. Justice Monsurat Bolaji-Yusuf – Court of Appeal (Asaba Division)

    4. Justice Moses Ugo – Kano division

    5. Justice Abba Mohammed – Ibadan Court of Appeal.

    In this report, The Nation chronicles the profile of five eminent jurists who will deliver the verdict:

    Justice Haruna Simon Tsammani

    Justice Haruna Tsammani was born on November 23, 1959. He hails from Tafawa Balewa LGA of Bauchi State.

    The judge obtained his LL.B degree from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 1982.

    He attended the Nigerian Law School, Lagos for his BL in 1983, and started as a High Court judge in Bauchi State on September 17, 1998.

    He was later elevated to the Court of Appeal on July 16, 2010.

    He is the longest-serving Justice of the Court of Appeal among the five members of the panel. Tsammani has spent half of his 24 years as a judge on the Court of Appeal bench which he was elevated to in July 2010.

    Tsammani delivered one of the judgements of the Court of Appeal in Abuja that affirmed the second term election of Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State.

    He also delivered the judgement of the Court of Appeal in Abuja that issued the order restraining the Rivers and Lagos state governments from taking action on their bids to collect Value Added Tax (VAT).

    Justice Stephen Adah

    Justice Stephen Adah who is the presiding Justice of the Asaba Division of the Court of Appeal, was born on June 13, 1957. He hails from Dekina Local Government Area of Kogi State.

    Adah obtained his LL.B degree from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, in 1981. He attended the Nigerian Law School, Lagos, for his BL in 1982.

    He was appointed a judge of the Federal High Court on November 12, 1998, and later elevated to the Court of Appeal on November 5, 2012. He served as a member of the three-man panel that granted Obi and Atiku’s motions to serve Tinubu their petitions by substituted means.

    Adah delivered the lead judgement of a three-member panel that affirmed the conviction of a former Plateau State governor, Joshua Dariye, on 16 November 2018. President Muhammadu Buhari would later grant a widely condemned pardon to Dariye alongside a former governor of Taraba, Jolly Nyame, after their conviction and jailing had been affirmed by the Supreme Court.

    Justice Mistura Bolaji-Yusuf

    Justice Misitura Bolaji-Yusuf is the only female member of the five-man panel of the court. She was born on August 7, 1959, and hails from Oyo West LGA of Oyo State.

    The judge obtained her LL.B degree from the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife in 1983. She attended the Nigerian Law School the following year for her BL certificate.

    She was appointed a Judge of the High Court of Oyo State on January 30, 1997, and later elevated to the Court of Appeal on March 24, 2014.

    Justice Boloukuoromo Ugo

    At 57, Justice Boloukuoromo Ugo is the youngest among the judges on the panel of the Presidential Election Petition Court. He hails from Kolokuma/Opokua Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    Justice Ugo obtained his LL.B degree from the University of Calabar in 1989, before proceeding to the Nigerian Law School in Lagos the following year, for his BL certificate. He was appointed a Judge of the High Court of Bayelsa State on March 21, 2006, and later elevated to the Court of Appeal on March 24, 201

    Justice Abba Mohammed

    Justice Abba Mohammed hails from Kano State. He was born on February 19, 1961.

    He obtained his LL.B degree from the Institute of Administration, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 1984, before proceeding to the Nigerian Law School in Lagos the following year, for his BL Certificate in 1985.

    Justice Mohammed was appointed a judge of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court in 2010.

    After serving for about 10 years, he was promoted to the Court of Appeal on June 28, 2021. He was the Chairman of the Nasarawa State Governorship Election Tribunal in 2019.

  • UPDATED: Presidential Election dispute: Tinubu, Atiku, Obi know fate Wednesday

    UPDATED: Presidential Election dispute: Tinubu, Atiku, Obi know fate Wednesday

    Barring any unforeseen circumstances, parties to the three pending petitions before the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) will know their fate on Wednesday, September 6.

    The PEPC, headed by Justice Haruna Tsammani, confirmed in a statement on Monday that it has scheduled judgment for Wednesday in the petitions by the Allied Peoples Movement (APM), Atiku Abubakar and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and that by Peter Obi and the Labour Party (LP).

    It also said the proceedings, planned to commence at 9 a.m., will be aired live on television.

    The statement, signed by the Chief Registrar of the Court of Appeal, Umar Bangari, reads: “The Court of Appeal wishes to inform the general public that judgment in the following petitions before the Presidential Election Petition Court will be delivered on Wednesday 6th  September 2023:

    *CA/PEPC/03/2023 between Mr Peter Gregory Obi and another vs. Independent National Electoral Commission and 3 others

    Read Also: Atiku, Obi lost cause

    *CA/PEPC/04/2023 between Allied Peoples Movement vs. Independent National Electoral Commission and 4 others.

    *CA/PEPC/05/2023 between Abubakar Atiku vs. Independent National Electoral Commission and 2 others.

    “In a bid to promote transparency and openness, these judgments will be televised live by interested Television Stations for the public to follow.

    “Access to the court premises will be strictly on accreditation. Only accredited individuals, including counsel and representatives of political parties, will be granted access into the courtroom.

    “Interested members of the public are advised to watch proceedings from their television sets.

    “We appeal for the maximum cooperation of the general public to ensure a hitch-free exercise, please.”

  • Presidential Election dispute: Tinubu, Atiku, Obi know fate Wednesday

    Presidential Election dispute: Tinubu, Atiku, Obi know fate Wednesday

    Barring any unforeseen circumstances, parties to the three pending petitions before the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) will know their fate on Wednesday, September 6.

    The Nation learnt that the PEPC, headed by Justice Haruna Tsammani had scheduled judgment for Wednesday in the petitions by the Allied Peoples Movement (APM), Atiku Abubakar and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and that by Peter Obi and the Labour Party (LP).

    Read Also: 100 days: ‘Tinubu/Shettima govt proven to be for all Nigerians’

    A senior official of the court, confided in The Nation that the proceedings, planned to commence at 9am, will  be aired live on television.

    Details Shortly…

  • Atiku, Obi lost cause

    Atiku, Obi lost cause

    Pity Atiku. The court afforded him time. But he chose to fight like a beast scratching the air. He pushed his lawyers, SANs all, out of the fray. It was a tag team match in the ring, featuring Atiku Abubakar and Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    But what an anti-climax. Rather than pounce like a Doberman, Atiku took the battle head-on with the stumbles of a charging ram. His grief was to look for what was not missing in a certificate. The Chicago State University had said President Bola Tinubu is a graduate. He wanted to look for other things.

    Credit him. He has good eyes for spellings, dates, signings and pictures. He noted that the school might have made mistakes. But his eyes lacked focus. But the issue was not whether he was a student. He did not address the fundamental matter. Did Tinubu attend CSU? If he spotted mistakes, who to blame? I think Atiku Abubakar should have sued CSU. It is they he has trouble with and not the fellow who went to school.

    And if he sues, he would be, not Tinubu’s foe, but advocate. He would save Tinubu the trouble of a court itinerary, of the discriminating itch of picking SANs or American lawyers, or expending dollars to restore the purity of his nomenclature and the sanctity of his paper certificate.

     He could not raise hairs over whether he was an honour student, attended classes or wrote exams. Without knowing it, Atiku has become a fighter for the Tinubu cause. He is a quintessence of the parable of the enemy being at peace with one.

    So, Atiku could become a certificate revolutionary. He could teach the university how not to make mistake with a certificate. Rather than being men who fought in election trenches, he and Tinubu could become pals who taught Americans how to write certificates. But it is nothing new in the Universities as a recent report says one out of 10 certificates show one form of error or another, including grades.

    Especially with a name like Tinubu and not Tom or Jerry. He could add another charge: Racism in spelling names or certificate racism. Has he heard how their broadcasters call African athletes in their country? Roll back tapes and hear how they pronounced Olajuwon, Okoye, Okafor or Adebayo, and he will have abundance of material for his bloodhound of SANs.

    In the case of Atiku versus Tinubu, the issue is not whether he was there or whether he graduated. If it was a clerical error, maybe Atiku should sue for clerical error. It is not Tinubu’s headache.

    Suing CSU is the only way he could have made something out of his adventure. For one, the case has closed in court and everyone is waiting for the verdict. He has no more prayers. If he goes to court, is he going to say the man did not go to the school? Or is he going to be the first person who had certificate errors?

    Read Also: Promote democratic ideals, IBB, Abdulsalami tell NIPSS SEC 43 participants

     What Atiku is doing is what American historians describe as the lost cause. It refers to the southern partisans of the American civil war, who would not accept that they lost the war. They keep hiding under the so-called folksy charm of the south. They romanticise black servitude and deny the tyranny of the slavery era. They propagate antebellum beauty and the superiority of their soldiers. They even say they did not fight the war to keep slaves. They merely wanted to assert a federalist principle. They twist it as state’s rights. They exploit such delusion to fight to upturn racial equality today. At a Mississippi rally, Ronald Reagan proclaimed, “I believe in state’s rights.” A code for white supremacy. The KKK and Donald Trump are a product of that depraved conscience.

    Not for them the modern credo of human equality. That It is not Atiku’s problem alone. He is often backed by the war cry of Obi’s supporters. They are twinedtwinned and twined in self-delusion. Atiku is a lone ranger vouchsafed to a populist rabble. Evidence is not material. They believe. It is faith without work, or faith without facts.

    While the rabble kept saying they won the election, they also called for the army. They parroted lies about Tinubu’s health, parodied to their own shame the fashion sense of then candidate Kashim Shettima until they exposed how old-fashioned they were. They latched on to certificate anxiety and drug apocrypha and called the university so many times that the school developed a standard response to their hysteria. They thought if they called many more times, someone would say he did not know the school.

    Atiku did not want to miss the train. He then issued a statement without evidence that President Tinubu was mounting pressure on the judges. Had he even taken time to examine whether his lawyers made enough case for his own victory? Maybe he did and discovered his SANs had a feeble offering at the Presidential Elections Petition Court (PEPC). Hence, he hollered at CSU for one last card.

    In the same breath, Obi’s men continue their melee. They were looking for blackmail. They threw ads saying ‘all eyes on the judiciary.’

    But they don’t want to win. They love a loser’s ecstasy. They love their misery as wannabe. It gives them vim and dynamism. It puffs their egos as phony intellectuals. They mistake rap for rhapsody. It is a masochist paradise. It is like pain without a pain killer. But pain is its own killer pill. In the paradise, they grieve, rant, squirm and rage. They illumine the darkness of their intents with deceptive glow, to skew narratives.

    It is the physiognomy of failure. It is not like Okonkwo or Oedipus, who saw death and craved it. Or the protagonist of Gabriel Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera, who spends his whole life waiting for the husband of his obsession to die. They, at least, have wish fulfilments. End gives apotheosis. It will embalm their heroes and sheroes. But Atiku and his Obidients crave an epic in search of great men and women, a tale without end.

     They want a Sisyphean bliss, and they will keep getting almost there. Just like profitless adventures of Willy Loman in playwright Arthur Miller’s Death of A Salesman.

    It is the way of lost causes. We are seeing it with Nnamdi Kanu and his followers. The agitation is the success. Some of our clerics need such euphoric intoxication. They keep preaching for followers to keep hoping. It is such attitude that inspired a distorted reading of the Bible, especially the Old Testament, in a new book, Why the Bible Began by Jacob L. Wright. He writes about how the Jews wove failure into nobility and justify salvation with defeats. Their misery, especially with the Babylonian captivity, they sang the Lord’s songs in a strange land. According to Wright, they poeticise bondage. Even after Christ, Christians see the crucified and suffering Jesus instead of the risen Lord. In the epic The Iliad, Homer’s account of the fall of the Trojans beats that of the Greek triumph. He paints fallen Hector’s exploits as though a hero. In the same way, Obi’s folks and Atiku have turned pity into piety, despair into desire, the prospect of salvation into a salvo and savoir faire. Two baseball clubs in the U.S., the Red Sox and Chicago Cubs, found love among themselves for a century until they won. Victory deprived them of a fine illusion. Frank Sinatra sang, “Here’s to the losers, bless “em all.” In Paradise Lost, John Milton pens Satan into greater grandeur than Christ.

    The Obidients and Atiku will continue to guard and cherish their sweet melancholy, and even if they see victory, they would pray it never comes. And it won’t. They are like the main character in one of America’s classics, Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence about the Gilded Age. The character spent all his life falling in love with his wife’s sister and another man’s wife. Decades later, when it is time to finally climb up the stairs to meet her, alone, he walks away.