Tag: decries

  • Agbakoba decries high cost of election petitions

    Ahead of the 2019 general elections, former Nigeria Bar As-sociation president Dr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) has expressed concern about the high cost of handling election petitions.

    Agbakoba stated this at the public presentation of a report titled: “Judicial Application of Election Petitions at the 2017 Anambra State Governorship Election Tribunal”.

    He was represented at the event by the Senior Legal/Programmes Officer of The Human Rights Law Service (HURILAWS).

    Agbakoba, who is the Senior Counsel, HURILAWS, decried the high cost of filing and procuring relevant documents at election petitions tribunals.

    He said: “Since 1999, HURILAWS has been involved in advocacy for reforms of the election conflict management process in Nigeria. HURILAWS has advocated a principled, effectively-managed, and disciplined election petition tribunal.

    “In furtherance of this, HURILAWS has developed the practice of observing proceedings at the election tribunals to identify problem patterns and issues with the court system and propose potential solutions as well as hold the justice system accountable.

    “HURILAWS believes that in addition to observing/monitoring the voting process attention must also be paid to the process of managing pre and post-election disputes because the tribunals/courts represent the confidence of the people not only in the electoral process but also in the rule of law and the non-existence or malfunctioning of the tribunals/courts will lead to the electorate and the political class settling political scores through unconventional means.”

    According to him, the process of dealing with complaints and resolving election disputes is critical to the survival of any democracy particularly a fragile one like Nigeria.

    He used the 2017 Anambra State Governorship Election Tribunal as a case study.

    Agbakoba said the cost of filing election petition at the Anambra Tribunal costs N400,000, lamenting that this high fee could discourage potential petitioners ahead of the 2019 polls.

    He disclosed that out of the 37 candidates that participated in the November 18, 2017 governorship elections, only three candidates filed petitions before the Election Tribunal adding that the candidates at the election, who came second and third were expected to have had some fighting chances at the Tribunal given the reasonable number of votes they garnered, but chose not to challenge the outcome of the election.

    He said the candidates who presented petitions were those that secured insignificant number of votes, and by virtue of that fact it was ab initio a herculean task for them to upset the presumption of regularity and substantial compliance.

    The report stated that it was cumbersome for the three petitioners who filed complaints to establish the corrupt practices they alleged as having marred the election because, “as candidates of less popular political parties, who were largely self-funding, they could not muster enough financial muscles to deploy the massive array of evidence and witnesses requisite to upturn the apple cart, as it were.”

    The report noted that the three petitions that were filed and complied with section 285 (5) of the Constitution which stipulates that an election petition must be brought within 21 days from the declaration of the election results.

    It however lamented the cost of filing of the petitions, noting: “Filing of election Petition at the Tribunal attracted filing fees as assessed by the Registrar and security for costs of N400,000.

    “This high cost of filing election Petition and prosecuting it might have discouraged some potential petitioners, given the large number of candidates (36) that stood for the 2017 governorship election in Anambra State.

    “Candidates, having expended so much during the election campaign were usually in very tight financial circumstances at the stage of election petition, so unless such candidates have huge financial muscles as an incumbent, they would really be discouraged from venturing into the capital intensive project of election Petition”.

    Although the Constitution stipulates that election petitions must be disposed of within 180 days of filing, the report observed that there were delays during the preliminary stages of the petition process in Anambra due to the inability of members of the Tribunal to all assemble.

    However, the Tribunal, though with the absence of its second member, was eventually able to conclude hearing and delivered judgments in respect of two out of the three petitions on June 5, 2018, one having been dismissed earlier for want of diligent prosecution by failure to file application for issuance of Pre-Hearing Forms.

    It noted: “Access to relevant election materials or documents by candidates in the election for purposes of election petition continued to be a challenge with the Independent National Electoral Commission levying very exorbitant fees for issuance of certified true copies of the election results and other election documents to candidates.

    “Petitioners at the Anambra State election Petition Tribunal had to pay application fees in the range of N1,000,000 to N1,500, 000 to access such documents. The huge financial cost attendant to procuring election materials and documents from INEC for purposes of Election Petition might have contributed in dissuading potential Petitioners from challenging the outcome of the November 18 , 2017 Anambra State governorship election.”

    Although the judgments of the Tribunal on the petitions exhibited high level of erudition, the report noted that they were “emasculated by the obvious lack of reasonable input by the two other members of the Tribunal. One member was absent throughout the hearing and determination of the petitions and the member present along with the Chairman was largely passive.”

    The report suggested investigating the source of funding of an election petition process by a respondent who is an incumbent and has access to state resources.

    “It puts the petitioner at a serious disadvantage where the respondent can draw from state resources to retain the best of legal minds or advocates to defend a petition while the petitioner with his or her very limited personal funds struggles to retain a relatively inexperienced lawyer to prosecute the petition with the humongous weight of burden or onus of proof the petitioner is expected to discharge.

    “This unfortunate disparity or imbalance of capacity played out very evidently in the just concluded Anambra state election petition process. The retinue of Senior Advocates of Nigeria unleashed on the tribunal by the governor, the principal  respondent in the three petitions, sufficiently overawed the tribunal, as it were, with their profound legal clout and sagacity, so much so that the petitions were virtually dead on arrival.”

    Aside suggestions for a reduction  in litigation costs for election petitions, HURILAWS also recommended the expansion of the rule on non-compliance, access to election material and the burden and standard of proof, among others.

    On the issue of access to and high cost of procuring relevant election documents needed for election petitions, the report counselled INEC to “immediately after announcing the result of an election, make available at no cost, certified copies of all relevant election documents to all the political parties to facilitate fair challenges against the election outcome. Alternatively, certified copies of such documents may be made available by INEC to the National Library, which will in turn issue at nominal cost recertified copies to any person who wishes to have them be it for election petition, research, or other personal or public purposes”.

    The report noted  that the main tenable ground against the election was the allegation of corrupt practices in the form of votes or ballot buying and that  ”the standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt where a petitioner is challenging an election on grounds of corrupt practices again proved to be a very cumbersome burden to place on a petitioner as manifested in the two petitions above decided on the merit’’.

    It recommended that it would be better to reduce the standard of proof where a petitioner is allegedly involved in corrupt practices against the conduct of an election to proof on a balance of probabilities.

    “In this case the onus can shift to the respondent where a petitioner has volunteered reasonable evidence that warrant rebuttal evidence by the respondent.

    “The cost of litigating or prosecuting an election petition is usually heinous, starting from the procurement of relevant election documents to use as documentary evidence to the hiring of competent legal representation. The petitioners herein obviously could not afford the cost of securing the CTC of the election documents to support their petitions,” it added.

  • Olawepo decries high cost of nomination fess

    Frontline Presidential Aspirant, Mr. Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim has decried the high cost of nomination fees being charged by both the All Progressive Party (APC), and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    Olawepo-Hashim who lately criticized the regrouping of some corrupt politicians ahead of taking over from the failing APC, said that the fees were outrageous in a nation where people are rated to live on less than a dollar a day.

    Reputed to be the favorite of the youths, the intelligentsias, and the business community, he argued that the high cost of nomination fees is unparalleled in the world.

    According to the business mogul, who is running on the platform of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), “claims that the monies were contributed by other interest groups for some aspirants are also bogus, because they are most likely from government coffers.

    “And for those hapless members without access to government coffers, it is regrettably that they are selling their assets to raise the funds, with the mindset that such will give them license to the public till when the time comes”

    To the eloquent politician, with a rich pro-democracy pedigree, the one legitimate way of raising funds for political parties the world over is through membership dues. “And it is the reason why the ANN is following this path, as a party of new ideas, and as a party that is ready to bring in a new beginning”

    He concluded: “In ANN, our nomination fees are modest, and the average aspirant is not likely to imagine that he has paid for a license to deep his or her hands in the public till at the end of the day. The earlier we get things right as we are doing in the ANN, the better for us, our nation, and the future generation”

  • Family decries trespass of land

    The Edunjobi-Ogundare family has said its right to its property on the Ocean View Estate, Ogombo, Lagos is being violated.

    Addressing reporters in Lagos, the family spokesperson Isiaka Ibrahim-Ogundare accused Col. Hameed Ali (retd) of ordering the demolition of the family house on the two plots of land.

    He added that the matter was before High Court No 44 Lands Division, Epe, which order parties in the dispute to maintain status quo, but Ali fenced the family out of the property.

    He said: “On March 27, 2018 after we left the police station, the lawyer who wrote a letter to us to vacate the land, came with along with solders to our house and instructed us to vacate the land.

    “We told them we cant. On the same day, some unknown person started fencing our property round with the aid of heavily armed soldiers.

    “We got an order of injunction against Hameed Ali and other unknown person on April 11, 2018, but police officers from SARS as well as offers from Zone two have been threatening us.”

    The solicitor to the Edunjobi-Ogundare family, Tope Fadahunsi Michell Solicitors said his client right to his legitimate property was violated.

    “This matter is before a competent court that says parties involved should maintain status quo ante, but the army General has refused, going ahead to fence the place. My client is now facing unmitigated suffering.

    Responding to the allegation, the lawyer to Ali, Abulrahman Adegoke said the matter was in court and would not comment on it.

    He said: “The land latter you are talking about is in court and I will not say anything beyond that. And if they want me to react, they know my office and can come there.”

  • AGF decries increase in detainees without trial

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami (SAN) has expressed concerns that awaiting trial inmates constitute 70 per cent of the nation’s prison population.

    Malami said the development was a violation of the rights of inmates, which must be reversed through deliberate efforts of the state to decongest the prisons.

    Deputy Director (Information) in the Federal Minister of Justice, Ogundoro Modupe, quoted the AGF as speaking when he led the Federal Government Stakeholders Committee on Prison Decongestion to Rivers and Imo states on February 5 and 6.

    Malami decried the unchecked violation of fundamental rights of prison inmates across the country, explaining that the purpose of the visit was to oversee the implementation of the Federal Executive Council’s directive in fast-tracking the decongestion of prisons.

    He added that the Committee would also review cases of inmates who have been convicted of minor offences with option of fines and are unable to pay.

    According to Malami, “The committee wishes to secure the release of as many of such inmates as possible through the payment of their fines.

    “I am therefore pleased to announce that the committee will, in addition to ensuring the payment of fines, also conduct a review of cases of inmates awaiting trial for more than five years, in the select priority prisons.

    “These able bodied men represent our potential workforce, they represent tomorrow’s fathers to raise the next generations of Nigerians.

    “We must, therefore, begin to find improved ways of addressing the issue of crime and the treatment of minor offenders in our criminal justice system.”

    The committee’s Chairman and Chief Judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Justice Ishaq Bello, during the tour of prisons in Imo State, facilitated the release of 13 inmates, whose fines were settled by the Governor Rochas Okorocha.

    In Rivers, the committee released 26 inmates, among who governor, Nyesom Wike assisted in paying their fines

    Justice Bello also released those whose offences were minor but were either remanded for years without trial or sentenced beyond  the provisions of the law.

    He stated that the problem with  the prisons is not only about the crowded space inmates were subjected to, but also the attendant psychological and emotional impacts.

    Wike flayed the police for delay in charging arrested persons to court, alleging that the this was partly responsible for the swelling figure of inmates.

    Speaking during the meeting with the Committee in Owerri, Okorocha admitted that prison atmosphere in Nigeria cannot guarantee transformation of inmates upon their release.

    He also identified the country’s justice system as part of the factors responsible for prison congestion.

    Okorcha suggested prison concession or a private, public partnership, which he said, would enable the private sector participate in the construction of prisons and the welfare of inmates.

    Among those freed was a young woman, Joy Goodluck, an indigene of Imo State, sentenced to three years jail term in Port Harcourt prison for stealing a half bag of cassava.

    The lady, who was a month pregnant at the time of the offence, was set free with her baby after she narrated the circumstance that took her to the prison.

  • Niger Delta group decries probe of kinsmen

    A group, Niger Delta Youth Consultative Forum (NDYCF) has described the probe of former Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe, as a witch-hunt.

    The president of the group, Ebi-Akpo Debabode, said: “We don’t have any problem with Buhari as the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. In fact, the NDYCF supports his administration and its anti-corruption crusade. But we frown at a situation where only Ijaw people who served under Jonathan’s administration are being alleged to have stolen money. That Jonathan lost election does not mean that those who worked with him must be conquered and decimated.

    “We will not accept a situation where Niger Deltans and those who are believed to be Jonathan’s tribesmen are persecuted unnecessarily. The likes of the former Petroleum Minister, Mrs Diesiani Allison Madueke; former Director-General of Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA); former Presidential Adviser on Amnesty, Hon Kingsley Kuku; IBTC Board Chairman, Peter Otedo; former second-in-command to the immediate Customs boss, John Atte and now, Elder Orubebe are all Ijaws who are being persecuted by this administration.

    He alleged that Orubebe is being probed for allegedly stealing N70m because of his role at the 2015 presidential election collation centre. “I can assure you that Orubebe will not get justice, but judgment. In the same manner, Mrs Madueke would not have got justice in Nigeria. However, we are sure that she will get justice and fair hearing in the United Kingdom,” he said.ºª

    Debabode also condemned what he described as a subtle plan to take over Rivers and Akwa-Ibom states through election petition tribunal, saying, “We are aware that under-aged children voted in Kano and everybody saw it. There was no protest about that. But here we are and they want to take away powers from Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa-Ibom. We are watching. If they are probing our brothers and sister for allegedly stealing oil money, we are going to probe the pipe lines in the Niger Delta and we can assure them that we are capable of doing so. If they are looking for N70m from Orubebe, we have the capacity to probe the oil pipe lines and get N700m.”

  • LSTTA decries lack of sponsorship

    LSTTA decries lack of sponsorship

    The Lagos State Table Tennis Association (LSTTA) on Friday observed that the dearth of sponsors stalled the association’s programmes.

    Femi Sokoya, the chairman, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Indoor Sports Hall of the Teslim Balogun Stadium, the venue of the Chairman Cup, sponsored by NNPC/NAPIMS.

    He said the board members had been working round the clock to secure corporate bodies to partner with the association.

    “We are doing our best and we will not relent in the effort. We have met people, written to several others too on sponsorship.

    “We are fighting a battle here which is to raise the tempo of the sport in the country. Lagos is the base of table tennis and it won’t change,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that the NNPC-sponsored annual Chairman’s Cup championships, served off on Thursday in Lagos with 72 players – 48 men and 24 women taking part. The top prize winner received N100, 000, the second, N75, 000 and third, N50, 000 each in men and women singles.

    Sokoya, however, urged persons and corporate organisations to `embrace associations with open hands when approached for sponsorships’.

    He said that the association did not have the means to execute all its programmes. “I want them to know it’s for the future of our young players, I am talking generally now and not just on table tennis.

    “’It’s from grassroots programmes that players will be discovered and arrangements made for grooming them to be notable players in the sport,’’ he said.

  • NUP decries non-payment of April pension

    The Nigeria Union of Pensioners (NUP) has decried the non-payment of April pension by the Federal Government to its members across the country.

    It said this had brought hardship to the pensioners, many of whom are old and are dependent on the monthly stipends for survival.

    In a statement signed, its National President, Dr. A. O. Afolayan and General Secretary, Elder Actor Zal in Abuja, appealed to the  outgoing Minister of Finance and the Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, to release funds for the payment of the pension delay, the government grows.

  • #BBOG decries ‘military attack’

    #BBOG decries ‘military attack’

    The #BringBackOurGirls (#BBOG) advocacy has condemned the alleged attack by security agents on an Internally- Displaced People’s (IDP’s) camp in Durumi, Abuja.

    The incident was reported by the BBC Hausa Service. It was alleged that military officers attacked the camp about 1am on Saturday and shot into the air.

    The report alleged that three people were killed, while others escaped with bullet wounds.

    The leader of the #BBOG group, Oby Ezekwesili,  decried the attack.

  • Community decries ‘marginalisation’

    The people of Ohodo community in Enugu State have urged Governor Sullivan Chime to intervene in what they called “deliberate political marginalisation” of the community by some elements in Igbo Etiti Local Government Area.

    A statement yesterday by the Chairman of the Lagos branch of Ohodo Welfare Association, Mr. Matthew Ezeaku, alleged that some people planned to perpetually subjugate Ohodo to political extinction.

    The statement reads: “Ohodo community is the third largest community in Igbo Etiti Local Government, in population and voting strength. Yet, it is being sidelined in political appointments and elective positions.

    “Since the inception of the local government, none of our sons or daughters has had a shot at the local government as the chairman, or vice chairman or even secretary to the local government…”

  • Group decries blackmail over new cement standard

    The Coalition Against Building Collapse (CABCO) has condemned what it calls increasing blackmail in the opposition to the new cement standard, which aims at minimizing the incidence of building collapse and moving the cement industry forward in line with global trends.

    In a statement issued after their meeting in Lagos to discuss the ongoing cement controversy, the group’s secretary-general Clement Orimade expressed shock that instead of complying with the new guidelines that will save lives and property, some stakeholders have resorted to blackmailing the House of Representatives and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), thereby deceiving the larger Nigerian public.

    “We have noted with dismay a well-orchestrated campaign of blackmail, misinformation and threat being visited on SON with the aim of forcing a policy reversal that will prolong Nigeria’s losses to building collapse. When they get tired of blackmailing SON, they turn to the

    House of Representatives which have voted in favour of enforcement of the new cement standard.

    The coalition maintained its earlier stand that cement contributes to building collapse, a position which the chairman of Ashaka Cement Plc aligned with in his interview with The Sunday Punch of August 3, 2014.

    The group further stated that the cement labeling and traceability requirements which are part  of the new cement standard are long overdue, adding that cement manufacturers have cheated consumers for too long through non-disclosure of important facts  of their products.

    “Manufacturers who are kicking against the inclusion of cement grade, batch number and expiry date on the labeling want to perpetuate the cheating into a new era where the versatile 42.5 has become the mandatory all-purpose cement grade in Nigeria. They should count themselves lucky that consumers haven’t sued them for failing to give full disclosure of the facts of the cement they sell”.

    The Coalition also dismissed the claim that it will take manufacturers of 32.5 two years to change their production line to 42.5, calling it another falsehood being spread in a callous effort to keep Nigerians buying the lower grade and suffering the consequences rather than going for a more reliable grade cement .

    “The technical experts in our Coalition have investigated the issue and found that, contrary to what opponents of the new cement standard are saying, conversion of a 32.5 production line to a 42.5 production line requires neither new buildings nor new manufacturing equipment but adjustment of the combination and preparation of ingredients”,  the statement continued.