Tag: Falana

  • Malami, Falana to judge: shun threats

    Legal fireworks will begin on Monday in the suit challenging the legitimacy of the National Assembly’s decision to amend the Electoral Act.

    In contention, particularly, is the reordering of the 2019 general elections sequence as announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja set the date yesterday during the resumed hearing of the suit filed by Accord Party.

    He directed parties in the suit – the National Assembly, the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) – to within 48 hours respond to the plaintiff’s adress. He gave the plaintiff till Friday to file further replies to the defendants should there be the need.

    During the hearing, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami and Mr Femi Falana (SAN) frowned at the attempt by the Senate to undermine the Judiciary following last Wednesday’s order by Justice Mohammed restraining the Legislature from acting on the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, 2018.

    The Senate last week took exception to Justice Mohammed’s injunction, saying his action was an obstruction to its constitutional assignment.

    It resolved to report Justice Mohammed to Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnogen through an official correspondence.

    Malami amd Falana described the development as “sad” and urged Justice Mohammed to ignore whatever threat anyone might have made.

    Malami said: “I must say that the resort to intimidation and threat by one arm of government to the other, particularly the Senate, with regards to the powers of your lordship to discharge your duty, is indeed a sad development.

    “This is so, most especially, when parties have submitted to the jurisdiction of this court. We have a collective duty and responsibility in the circumstance, to support the entrenchment of the principle of separation of powers and to further say that we are in support of the Judiciary as far as this matter is concerned.

    “The independence of the judiciary is constitutionally-guaranteed and we must work to see to it that that independence is sustained.”

    Falana said: “We concur as far as the urgency and significance of this case is concerned.

    “With respect to observations of the AGF regarding threats or comments made outside the precincts of this court, I will humbly urge your lordship to ignore such developments so as to avoid being drawn into unnecessary controversies.”

    Malami was in court to represent himself. He is  the 2nd defendant. Falana is the INEC (3rd defendant) counsel. Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) represented the plaintiff. Mr. Joseph Daudu (SAN) represented the first defendant (National Assembly).

    Malami said his presence in court underscored the importance of the case and the need for its prompt determination.

    Justice Mohamed took arguments from parties on a joinder application filed by the Action Peoples Party (APP), which argued that it was a necessary party to the case.

    The judge dismissed the application on the grounds that APP was not a necessary party.

    The judge said: “The first defendant (National Assembly), in my view, is competent to defend the suit without any political party being made a party.”

    Justice Mohammed refused the applicant’s argument that all registered political parties were entitled to be joined as parties to the suit since the subject matter bordered on the 2019 general elections.

    He noted that APP’s defence in the case would not be different from that of the National Assembly, by whose defence the case could be “completely” determined.

    The judge added that APP’s desire to be made a party in the suit “does not qualify it to be joined as a party”.

    The Senate and the House of Representatives passed an amendment to the Electoral Act which reordered the sequence of elections against the plan announced by INEC.

    But President Muhammadu Buhari vetoed the Bill, a decision which the lawmakers said they would resist by overriding the presidential veto.

    Yesterday, the court made no reference to the injunction restraining the lawmakers from overriding the presidential veto.

     

     

  • Falana to Buhari, sack those responsible for Dapchi girls

    •vows to sue for criminal negligence over girls

    An activist and Lagos based lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) has demanded that President Muhammadu Buhari sack all those responsible for the abduction of the Dapchi school girls.

    Falana said that people responsible for the withdrawal of troops on ground and to whom security was handed over to should be sanctioned.

    Speaking yesterday in Abuja during members of the #BringBackOurGirls march to the Presidential villa to demand for the release of the Dapchi and Chibok school girls.

    He added that they will be going to court to demand for the search of both girls and demand that sanctions to be meted for the act of criminal negligence.

    His words, “Section 14 (2) of the constitution provides that the security and welfare of every citizen of Nigeria shall be the primary purpose of government. Secondly, Section 35 of the constitution guarantees the right to personal liberty. In other wors, no citizen of Nigeria can be abducted or detained illegally without a reaction from the government. So, that duty has been breached in the case of Chibok and Dapchi girls and why it is worse in this case is that having regard to the facts and circumstances of the developments in that part of the country, it is intolerable and unacceptable that the same manner of abduction took place. Are we being told that there was no security for those schools in the North-East region? And just like what happened in 2014, and if you recall I was appointed as part of a committee and I had to make it clear to the Jonathan government that I would not be part of the joke of setting up a panel after girls have been abducted. But why it is worse is that once you don’t punish impunity, you are going to have criminality repeated all over the place. Now we are being told that a committee has been set up by the same people to do what? It can only be to cover up.

    “So, if you want to challenge what has been done, we expect the government to have fired those who were responsible. Who withdrew the forces on the ground and to whom was security handed over to? An if nobody can provide answers, people have to be sanctioned. In other climes, these guys would have been put on trial. So, we are not just going to court to demand the search for the girls but to ask for sanction to be meted out for the act of criminal negligence .

    “The government has not given itself any benefit of doubt in the way it has gone about this matter. If you have a state governor who will not visit the scene of criminality as in this instance, what benefit of doubt are you talking about? I am sure you are aware that for the first time since 1960, Nigerians an foreigners who came here to ask for asylum were abducted and thrown out. We are saying the security and quality of life of Nigerians means nothing to our government. The President said in Benue yesterday to our utter chagrin that he did not know that his order on security was disobeyed by the IGP. And that may be the end of the matter. So, what benefit of doubt can we be talking about? So, our duty as citizens and as far as this movement is concerned is that we are going to court.”

    Members of the #BringBackOurGirls advocasy in a statement read out to Journalists at the Villa gate and signed by leaders of the group, Former Minister of Education Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, Aisha Yesufu and Florence Ozor.

    The group stated that it is utterly shocked and disappointed that yet another terrorist abduction of schoolgirls is being alleged by the Federal government.

    They stated, “The #BringBackOurGirls movement is utterly shocked and disappointed that yet another terrorist abduction of schoolgirls is being alleged by the Federal Government to have taken place under its watch. How is that even possible? How terribly embarrassing it is that within four years since the abduction of 276 ChibokGirls in April 2014 our country is again in the news for tragic reasons. The abduction of 110 Secondary school girls of Government Girls Science and Technical Secondary School, Dapchi in Yobe State on February 19, 2018 is the worst form of a deja vu that our movement could have ever imagined at this time in our nearly four-year-old advocacy.

    “We have closely followed all publicly available events and statements since the attack of the school and the alleged capture of 110 students of GGSTSS by people that the Federal Government allege to be terrorists. We are devastated that another set of parents and our citizens more broadly are indeed factually reliving the tragedy of abduction of our #ChibokGirls four years ago.

    “We are infuriated at the exactness of the blunders that led to this latest abduction of 110 school girls in another state of the country with what happened when ChibokGirls were abducted in 2014. The magnitude of incompetence and carelessness of our Government enabled the repeat of the worst abduction tragedy. This is more so because in only a few days, it would be four years since the remaining 112 #ChibokGirls in captivity have been with their abductors. If the Federal Government of Nigeria is to be believed, 110 Dapchi School Girls have now joined our Chibok Girls in terrorist captivity.

    “Our movement is numbed by the rudest and unexpected shock that instead of the return of our remaining 112 ChibokGirls ahead of the possibly painful 4th anniversary of their abduction; we are now faced with the calamity of additional loss. This monumental scale of repeat tragedy of the abduction of 110 #DapchiGirls in circumstances entirely similar to that of our #ChibokGirls has compelled a period of deep contemplation by our movement. We have taken time to reflect on and identify the key factors that permit repeat patterns of non-consequential failure by various administrations in Nigeria to show care for the safety and security of our children and citizens more broadly.

    “While undergoing our period of reflection, our movement has generated a ratchet of disturbing questions for the Federal and Yobe State governments. Our questions are premised on the troubling sparseness of information so far provided on the #DapchiGirls tragedy by the Federal Government. We, #BringBackOurGirls movement, therefore advise the Federal and Yobe State Governments to be swift in responding to our following questions:

    “How was a terrorist group that the Federal Government has, over the last one year, and in fact only last week, informed the Nigerian Public “it has ‘completely defeated”; still able to successfully launch an attack and abduct 110 schoolgirls in their school without any counteraction by the Nigeria military? How? How? What happened to Early Warning Signal System as part of security architecture for areas like Dapchi in the theatre of war? We ask for #TheTruthAndNothingButTheTruth.

    “How could a school in northeast Nigeria – located in one of the three most terrorism-affected states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa – be so negligently abandoned without any form of security and surveillance and left vulnerable to the attack of February 19, 2018? What happened to the Safe School Initiative that was signed on by the Federal Government in 2014 and to which it committed $10million alongside other donations by the several donors, including the international community?

    “Why was there at first a denial of the abduction of our DapchiGirls by Officials of Government? Where and how did the falsehood that no abduction took place at the time of the attack originate thereby leaving enough time for the abductors to succeed in disappearing with 110 school girls? Why did this deliberate attempt at a cover up of a humongous tragedy happen at all?

    “Following on 3 above, what was the basis and source of the false information to parents and the public that about half of our 110 #DapchiGirls had been rescued and in military custody when the government knew it to be lie?

    “Damaturu, the Yobe State capital, is only 110km from Dapchi; so we wonder why the Governor, Ibrahim Geidam, failed to immediately travel to Dapchi for accurate information on the tragedy that occurred at the school? What prevented the Federal Government military and security teams within Dapchi area from acting swiftly?

    “On what basis, and at whose instruction, was the Military withdrawn from Dapchi, and to whom did they hand over? Where is the evidence of a handover and to which equivalent force was the responsibility given?

    “How was it that the terrorists carried out their activity for hours unchallenged by forces of the Federal Government? Can we not assume a connivance between the abductors and all those in the military and security command with responsibilities for the Dapchi, Yobe State area?

    “How was it that 110 children were transported in a convoy of vehicles for more than twenty four hours over distance of hundreds of kilometers without their abductors encountering any Nigerian Military or Police security roadblocks?

    “Why was there no air surveillance by the Nigeria Air Force which is still at the battle front? If any, how did the Nigerian Air Force fail to track the movement of the terrorists motorcade as they made away with our schoolgirls? What happened to the recently commissioned Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) said to have been procured for such tracking purpose? What happened to our Intelligence assets – satellite links and military aircrafts – that were procured to prevent and abort such scale of elaborate attack by terrorists?

    “Does the Federal Government fail to see how underwhelming its recent announcement of a committee to interrogate the Dapchi abduction is so much so that it only elicited tired yawns among members of the Nigerian public? What is the worth of a Committee of members of security establishments that failed to prevent the operation that led to the abduction of our DapchiGirls? Why is another committee necessary when the Federal Government has blatantly refused to publish or act on the reports of previous committees like the June 2014 General M. Sabo Presidential Committee on Abduction of ChibokGirls?  What happened to the committee announced on 14 January 2016 by President Muhammadu Buhari to again look into the abduction of our #ChibokGirls? Has that Committee ever met? What were its findings?

    “Where is evidence of what constitutes a result-focused and sustained search and rescue operation by the Federal Government? Did the Federal Government not learn at all from the failures of its response to ChibokGirls abduction? Is there currently a multinational sustained search and rescue operation launched for our DapchiGirls by the Federal Government or will that wait until after the anodyne Committee it set up submits a report of its findings?

    “Have the Federal Government constituted a crack team to find and bring back our 112 ChibokGirls and their 110 DapchiGirls peers? Has the Federal Government sought the support of countries with superior intelligence and rescue assets? Again we ask, what should any reasonable person expect from the painfully familiar bureaucratic committee of the Federal Government of Nigeria that appears to be the only tangible measure the government has so far taken concerning DapchiGirls?

    “How does President Muhammadu Buhari justify the fact that only a few days after the abduction of 110 Dapchi school girls as a result of the gross negligence of his government, he was busy publicly politicking with his allies, seemingly giving priority to his re-election bid while 110 parents were wailing for their children? Was it that the President had not been informed of the tragedy at that time, or that there was hardly any concern for the fate of the abducted school girls as has been the case in all other tragedies that have happened under his watch?

    “When shall President Muhammadu Buhari address the parents of DapChiGirls and the Nigerian Public on the plans of his Federal Government to immediately bring back the missing school girls? When shall the President provide progress report on the plans of his government to bring back our remaining 112 ChibokGirls before April 14, 2014 which is the 4th anniversary of their abduction?

    “Finally, we suspect that there is a deliberate high level attempt to cover up the actions and inactions that led to the abduction of our 110 #DapchiGirls on the 19th February, 2018. We have seen the canvass and trail of contradictory statements and media spinning. So we ask the Federal Government why all these lies? Why is there so much falsehood around this tragedy? Why the cover up?

    “While we wait for the Federal Government’s response to our fourteen questions, our movement – #BringBackOurGirls – hereby issues a 7-day (one-week) notice to the Federal Government to without further delay BRING BACK  our 112 #ChibokGirls and 110 #DapchiGirls. Failure by the Federal Government to act immediately shall necessitate our legal actions for its criminal negligence that led to the recent abduction of our 110 DapchiGirls.

    “We have, in addition to this statement, written to the Federal and Yobe State governments demanding for answers to all our fourteen questions.

    “Our commitment to never stop demanding for the rescue of our girls and all other abducted citizens of Nigeria remains unwavering. We made a vow to stand for justice and of rescue of OUR girls, and we have stayed faithful to it for 1406 days today. We shall continue to do so until our girls all return to continue with their education. We shall never stop fighting for their cause, and that of other abductees. We urge all Nigerians to join our movement to #StandForDapchiGirls and to continue to demand that the Federal Government must #BringBackOurGirls until they, and our 112 ChibokGirls, are rescued.

    “When any Nigerian is endangered, we are all endangered. Yesterday’s survivors have proven to be today’s victims. We therefore count on the support of the Nigerian public to join our activities as they heighten over the coming days.”

     

     

  • Falana to Buhari: Sack those responsible for Dapchi girls’ abduction

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), on Tuesday asked President Muhammadu Buhari sack all those responsible for the abduction of students of Government Girls Science and Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State.

    The rights activist said people responsible for the withdrawal of troops on ground should be sanctioned.

    Falana stated these during the #BringBackOurGirls Group’s rally at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He said: “Section 14 (2) of the Constitution provides that the security and welfare of every citizen of Nigeria shall be the primary purpose of government. Secondly, Section 35 of the Constitution guarantees the right to personal liberty. In other words, no citizen of Nigeria can be abducted or detained illegally without a reaction from the government. So, that duty has been breached in the case of Chibok and Dapchi girls and why it is worse in this case is that having regard to the facts and circumstances of the developments in that part of the country, it is intolerable and unacceptable that the same manner of abduction took place.

    “Are we being told that there was no security for those schools in the North East region? And just like what happened in 2014, and if you recall I was appointed as part of a committee and I had to make it clear to the Jonathan government that I would not be part of the joke of setting up a panel after girls have been abducted. But why it is worse is that once you don’t punish impunity, you are going to have criminality repeated all over the place. Now we are being told that a committee has been set up by the same people to do what? It can only be to cover up.

    “So, if you want to challenge what has been done, we expect the government to have fired those who were responsible. Who withdrew the forces on the ground and to whom was security handed over to?

    “And if nobody can provide answers, people have to be sanctioned. In other climes, these guys would have been put on trial. So, we are not just going to court to demand the search for the girls but to ask for sanction to be meted out for the act of criminal negligence.”

     

  • Falana seeks stoppage of jumbo salaries for legislators

    Lagos lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to stop  the jumbo salaries and allowances  of federal legislators.

    Falana, in a statement yesterday, said:  “According to the  Senator (Shehu Sani), the running cost of each Senator is  N13.1 million in addition to a consoldated salary of N750,000 per month. Apart from the monthly package of N13.8 million, each Senator is given the opportunity to execute  constituency projects to the tune of N200 million per annum. However, the disclosure made by Senator Sani does not cover the allowances for cars, housing, wardrobe, furniture etc running to several millions of Naira approved for each Senator”.

    He went on: “The revelations  by Senator Sani should therefore provide an opportunity for the Nigerian people to review the entire costs of governance under the rickety democratic dispensation.

    “The Buhari administration owes the nation a duty to ensure that no political officer is paid salaries and allowances that have not  been approved by the Revenue Mobilization. Allocation Fiscal Commission.

    “The members of the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission empowered by section section 70 of the Constitution to approve the salaries and allowances of the legislators have always washed off  their hands like Pontius Pilate while the Budget Office has never questioned the payment of unauthorised salaries and allowances to federal legislators”, Falana stated.

    The activist lawyer recalled that last year, the legislators also illegally purchased exotic cars of N4.7 billion for themselves at a time when  workers were owed arrears of salaries and the masses  were groaning under a recession caused by the profligacy and mismanagement of the national economy by the ruling class.

    “While we commend Senator Shehu Sani for exposing the secrecy which had enveloped the salaries and allowances of  federal legislators in Nigeria before now,  it is crystal clear that the statement credited to Professor Itse Sagay, the chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council not too long ago to the effect that Nigerian legislators are the highest paid in the world cannot be faulted.

    However, the federal legislators cannot be blamed alone for paying themselves skyrocketing salaries and allowances outside the ambit of the wages approved for all political office holders in the country,” he noted.

     

     

     

     

  • DSS lacks power to ask Independent journalist to reveal source, says Falana

    DSS lacks power to ask Independent journalist to reveal source, says Falana

    THE Department of State Services (DSS) lacks the power to force the Abuja Bureau Chief of The Independent, Mr. Tony Ezimakor, to disclose the source of his information, activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has said.

    Ezimakor was released from detention last night.

    Falana,  in a statement issued in Lagos yesterday titled, “Tony Ezimakor cannot be forced to disclose his source of information”, advised the DSS to release him unconditionally as he has not committed any offence known to law.

    The senior lawyer, who said Ezimakor’s detention was illegal and unconstitutional, drew the attention of the DSS to Section 35(2) of the Constitution, which provides that “any person who is arrested or detained shall have the right to remain silent or avoid answering any question until after consultation with a legal practitioner or any other person of his own choice”.

    “Since Mr. Ezimakor is constitutionally entitled to “remain silent”, the Department of State Services lacks the power to subject him to disclose the source of his information.

    “Therefore, by arresting and detaining Mr. Ezimakor for the purpose of compelling him to disclose the source of a story written by him and published by The Independent newspaper, the DSS has acted malafide, illegally and unconstitutionally.

    “As Mr. Ezimakor has not committed any offence known to law, the DSS should release him unconditionally and publicly apologise to him in line with the requirement of Section 35(6) of the 1999 Constitution of Nigerian as amended.”

    He noted that the Abuja Bureau Chief of The Independent was arrested last week by the DSS  for publishing a story on the alleged payment of $2 million to the Boko Haram terrorists for the release of some of the abducted Chibok girls.

    He noted that the DSS, which felt embarrassed by the publication, held Ezimakor till last night. He was asked to disclose his source of information as a condition for his release.

    “The harassment of Mr Ezimakor is a sad reminder of the case of Messrs Tunde Thompson and Nduka Irabor, who were tried, convicted and jailed by the Buhari/Idiagbon junta in 1984 over their refusal to disclose their source of information pertaining to a story published in The Guardian.

    “Regrettably, the DSS  is yet to appreciate that a journalist cannot be forced to disclose his source of information under the current democratic dispensation,” Falana stated.

  • NNPC declines Falana’s request for information on ‘proposed’ petrol price

    NNPC declines Falana’s request for information on ‘proposed’ petrol price

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has refused to give information on alleged proposed review of the pump price of petrol.

    The corporation was responding to a letter by the law firm of Falana and Falana, which requested for information on the alleged planned hike in the pump price of petrol under the Freedom for Information Act (FOIA).

    In its response the law firm’s latter of March 1 and signed by its General Manager for Litigation, Arbitration and Property Law Department, Mrs Sarah Ndukwu, NNPC said the request was outside the scope of FOIA.

    It said: “We regret to inform you that NNPC is not in a position to provide you with any information or document as your request is incongruous with, unsupported by and or outside the scope and purview of the Freedom for Information Act (FOIA). Be informed that the FOIA is not applicable to NNPC because it is not a public institution within the meaning of Section 31 of FOIA.”

    Although the letter described NNPC as a law-abiding corporate citizen which complies with extant laws, it averred that the request by the law firm would not serve any useful interest to public health, public safety or the protection of the environment as to bring it within the items exempted for disclosure under Section 15(4) of the Act.

    In its letter, dated January 8, the law firm requested NNPC for information on “the revenue realised from the sale of the daily allocation of 445,000 barrels of crude oil to the corporation – from June 1, 2015 to December 2017; the amount realised as subsidy and the amount remitted to the Federation Account from the revenue realised from the sale of the daily allocation of 445,000 barrels of crude oil to the corporation – from June 1, 2015 to December 2017; the quantity of crude oil refined locally – from June 1, 2015 to December 2017; the amount spent on turnaround maintenance of local refineries, with vouchers and the quantity of crude oil refined daily in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, by the corporation within same period – June 1, 2015 to December 2017″.

    But the corporation, while declining the request, said it is neither a legislative, executive, judicial, administrative nor advisory body of the government, as listed under Section 31 of FOIA.

  • Falana: workers must demand how govt spends recovered loot

    Falana: workers must demand how govt spends recovered loot

    •Govt ‘not fighting real corruption’

    Human right lawyer and activist Femi Falana (SAN) said yesterday that workers represented by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) must demand from the Federal Government detail account of how the money recovered so far by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) will be spent.

    Speaking on the final day of the 40th anniversary celebration of the NLC, Falana accused the Buhari government of not fighting what he described as “the real corruption”, saying what was being done was scratching the issue on the surface.

    He described the third force being canvassed by former President Olusegun Obasanjo as the real party for the working class, saying the congress must take steps to rebrand and revive the Labour Party (LP) and make sure it does not become a dumping ground for disgruntled elements of the ruling party.

    He said the workers must rise up in defence of the country by demanding accountability and judicious use of the recovered looted funds as many citizens are dying from starvation.

    Falana added that Nigerians could not be complaining of being broke, considering the huge public resources in private hands.

    “NLC has a role to play to protect the interest of the Nigerian people. That is why whenever there is a problem in the country, people will be asking: where is NLC? If you say you are fighting corruption, we have nothing to lose but to join them to expose themselves.

    “The EFCC in the last two and half years recovered N750 billion. NLC must find out what they will do with the money. I told government publicly that what they are doing by saying they are fighting corruption is a tip of the iceberg. The real corruption is not been fought.

    “I wrote a letter to the Minister of Finance and itemised how this country can recover about 200 billion dollars. Therefore, they don’t need to go anywhere to borrow money.  But what the minister did was to write me back to acknowledge the receipt of the letter and that it is receiving attention. And up till now, that letter is receiving attention.

    “In 2006, the then CBN Governor, Prof. Chukwuma Charles Soludo, gave $7 billion to 14 banks and those banks have not paid back the money. Also in 2008, the then CBN Governor, Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, gave six banks N600 banks and up till now, the money has not been returned. You cannot say we are broke, pay back this money.

    “You also remember the N100 million that was released for the revive of textile industry. But these textile companies are still moribund. Also in the last 10 years, over N400 billion was released for agriculture, but yet we are hungry.”

    Falana said the organised Labour must put in place mechanism to revive the Labour Party to bring succour to the Nigerian people.

    Lead speaker and a universityd, Prof. Omotoye Olorode, said the labour movement had not forged any serious labour-based party since the 1950s and the 1960s, adding that effort to form a Labour Party in 1989 was squandered by some of the trade unionists when they ended up in bourgeois political parties.

  • Workers must demand how FG will spend recovered funds – Falana

    Workers must demand how FG will spend recovered funds – Falana

    Human right activist, Femi Falana (SAN), said on Wednesday that Nigerian workers must demand from the government how the money recovered by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) would be spent.

    Speaking on the final day of the 40th anniversary celebration of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Falana accused the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration of not fighting “the real corruption,” saying the government was scratching the issue on the surface.

    He described the third force being canvassed by former President Olusegun Obasanjo as the real party for the working class, saying the NLC must take steps to rebrand and revive the Labour Party and make sure it does not become a dumping ground for disgruntled elements of the ruling party.

    He said Nigerian workers must rise in defence of the country by demanding accountability and judicious use of the recovered looted funds as many citizens are dying of starvation.

    He added that Nigeria cannot be complaining of being broke considering the huge public resources in private hands.

    He said: “NLC has a role to play to protect the interest of the Nigerian people. That is why whenever there is a problem in the country, people will be asking where is NLC. If you say you are fighting corruption, we have nothing to lose but to join them to expose themselves.

    “The EFCC in the last two and half years recovered N750 billion. NLC must find out what will they do with the money. I told government publicly that what they are doing by saying they are fighting corruption is a tip of the iceberg. The real corruption is not been fought.

    “I wrote a letter to the Minister of Finance and itemised how this country can recover about $200 billion. Therefore, they don’t need to go anywhere to borrow money.  But what the minister did was to write me back to acknowledge the receipt of the letter and that it is receiving attention. And up till now that letter is receiving attention.

    “In 2006, the then CBN governor, Prof. Chukwuma Charles Soludo, gave $7 billion to 14 banks and those banks have not paid back the money. Also in 2008, the former CBN governor, Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, gave six banks N600 billion and up till now, the money has not been returned. You cannot say we are broke, pay back this money.”

     

  • Why National Assembly can’t fix election dates, by Falana

    Why National Assembly can’t fix election dates, by Falana

    Activist-lawyer Femi Falana insists the National Assembly erred by reordering the dates for the general elections scheduled for next year by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) says the National Assembly lacks the power to fix election dates

    Since the return to democratic rule in 1999, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has conducted the general elections on a two-tier or three-tier basis.

    Even though the National Assembly had attempted in the past to use the Electoral Act to alter the sequence of elections fixed by the INEC it did not succeed. In spite of the ongoing controversy surrounding the sequence of elections, our recent experience as a nation has shown that there is nothing sacrosanct about it.

    In 1999 and 2007, the presidential election came up last while it came up first in 2015.  In influencing the order of elections in 2015, the ruling party had thought that holding the presidential election first would have bandwagon effect on the outcome of the other elections. But the result was a disaster for the ruling party.

    It has equally been confirmed that when elections into the legislative houses were held before other elections in the past, majority of sitting legislators lost their seats.  So, there is no indication that President Muhammadu Buhari stands to benefit electorally from the decision of the INEC to retain the 2015 sequence of elections.

    But notwithstanding the reactions of the presidency and the National Assembly to the sequence of elections announced by the INEC, it is pertinent to review the relevant provisions of the Constitution, the Electoral Act and judicial authorities on the vexed issue.

    In preparations for the 2019 general elections the INEC recently released a timetable for party primaries and the elections into the various offices in exercise of its powers under Sections 76, 116, 132 and 178 as well as paragraph 15 of Part 1 of the Third Schedule made pursuant to section 153 (1) of the Constitution.

    Under the arrangement, the presidential and National Assembly elections will be held on February 16, 2019, while the governorship and Houses of Assembly elections will take place on March 2, 2019.  But in the Electoral Bill 2018 recently passed by the National Assembly, the sequence of the general elections has been altered. The sequence as proposed by the new amendment is (A): National Assembly election; (B): Governorship and State Assembly elections and (C): Presidential election.

    No doubt, the matter has generated a needless controversy to the extent that little or no attention is paid to the other provisions of the Electoral Bill which have the capacity to promote internal democracy and enhance the credibility of the electoral process.

    Perhaps not aware of the state of the law, the INEC has announced its intention to approach the Supreme Court to test the constitutional validity of the Electoral Bill 2018 if it is eventually signed into law by the President. Since there are indications that the President may withhold his assent in the circumstance, the National Assembly has threatened to override his veto.

    Having watched the trend of the debate, it is regrettable to note that the parties involved in the dispute have not studied the decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of National Assembly v. President (2003) 9 NWLR (PT 824) 104 at 143-144. In that case, former President Olusegun Obasanjo had refused to assent to the Electoral Bill 2002 which had been passed by both Chambers of the National Assembly and transmitted to him on June 24, 2002.

    Subsequently, by a motion of veto-override, the National Assembly passed the bill into law. In an originating summons filed at the Federal High Court, the INEC challenged the validity of the passage of the Bill into law and the constitutionality of Section 15 of the Act which had provided that general elections shall be held in one day.

    The trial court held that the Bill was properly passed into law but that Section 15 thereof was inconsistent with Sections 76, 116, 132 and 178 of the Constitution. Dissatisfied with the annulment of Section 15 of the Electoral Act, the National Assembly filed an appeal at the Court of Appeal. On his own part, the Attorney-General of the Federation filed a cross-appeal to challenge the passage of the Bill into law. In its judgment, the Court of Appeal held that the manner of passing the bill into was unconstitutional but declined to set it aside on ground of public policy as the 2003 general elections were being conducted under the law. However, the Court of Appeal affirmed the decision of the Federal High Court on the illegality of Section 15 of the Electoral Act.

    In his contribution to the judgment of the Court, Oduyemi J.C.A (as he then was) stated that “in so far as Section 15 of the Electoral Act, 2002 seeks to fetter that discretion and limit the third defendant to only one day in the year for all elections to the offices concerned, that provision of the Act is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution above referred to, and it is to that extent a nullity. Section 1(3) of the Constitution… All in all, I agree with the reasoning in the judgment of the lower court and with the conclusion in the judgment that Section 15 of the Electoral Act, 2002 is inconsistent with the specific provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 in Section 132(1), 76(1), 178(1), 116(1), 78, 118 and Item 15(a) of the 3rd Schedule: that it infringes upon the absolute discretion vested by the Constitution on the third respondent with regard to the fixing of dates for election into the various offices concerned.”

    However, the National Assembly took advantage of the 2010 Alteration of the Constitution to attempt to overrule the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the case of the National Assembly v. the President (supra). Thus, in the first alteration made to the Constitution, the National Assembly amended sections 132(1), 76(1), 178(1), 116(1), 118 and 178 of the Constitution by adding the phrase “in accordance with the Electoral Act”. Although the power of the INEC to “organise, undertake and supervise” the general elections conferred on it by paragraph 15 of Part 1 of the third schedule made pursuant to Section 153 of the Constitution was left intact, the National Assembly members erroneously believed that they had conferred on themselves the power to fix the dates for general elections in Nigeria. Hence, in the 2018 Electoral Bill, the National Assembly is alleged to have tampered with the discretion of the INEC to fix the dates for the 2019 general elections.

    Apart from the illegality of subjecting the provisions of the Constitution to the Electoral Act, the Alteration of the Constitution did not confer on the National Assembly the power of fix dates for holding the general election in Nigeria. To that extent, the National Assembly cannot use the Electoral Act to usurp the powers exclusively conferred on the INEC to appoint dates for holding the general elections in the country.

    Indeed, the Supreme Court has had cause, after the first 2010 Alteration of the Constitution, to confirm the discretionary power of the INEC to fix the dates for holding the general elections.

    In PDP V. SYLVA (2012) 13 NWLR (PT 1316) 85 the respondent challenged the decision of the INEC to cancel and reschedule the 2012 governorship election in Bayelsa State. In dismissing the contention the Supreme Court (per Rhodes Vivour JSC) held that ‘’INEC has the sole responsibility to fix dates for election and to my mind if INEC fixes a date for elections and for whatever reason, be it logistic, I do not think anyone has a cause of action against INEC for canceling an election (not held) and rescheduling elections for another day’’.

    Similarly, in NDP V INEC (2013) 20 WRN 1 at 45 the Supreme Court (per Ariwoola J.S.C.) held that “it is not in doubt that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that is, the respondent has the sole responsibility to decide when elections are to hold. See Peoples Democratic Party v Timipre Sylva & Ors (2012) 13 NWLR (Pt 1316) 85 at 122.

    The respondent also reserves the prerogative to decide what Timetable to of Activities to publish for a General Election.”

    Furthermore, in Hon. James Abiodun Faleke v INEC (2016) 50 WRN 1, the Supreme Court reiterated the view that by virtue of paragraph 15 of Part 1 of the Third Schedule made pursuant to Section 153 (1) (f) and (i) of the Constitution, the Independent National Electoral Commission has power to organise, undertake and supervise all elections to the offices of the President, Vice President, the Governor and Deputy Governor of a State and the membership of the Senate, the House of Representatives and the House of Assembly of each state of the federation.

    No doubt, the National Assembly would have achieved its objective if it had incorporated the sequence of the general elections in the Constitution. But by providing that the INEC shall fix election dates “in accordance with the Electoral Act”, the interference in the exercise of the discretionary power of INEC’s constitutional power to fix the dates for the elections cannot be justified in law.

    As far as the constitution is concerned, the power of the INEC to organise, undertake and supervise the elections which has been interpreted to include the power to fix the dates for the general elections or determine the sequence of the elections has not been altered in any material particular.

    It is the height of legislative absurdity to say that the power donated to the INEC by the Constitution shall be exercised in accordance with the provision of an interior legislation.

    In Attorney-General, Abia State v. Attorney-General of the Federation (2002) 1 WRN 1 at 45 Kutigi CJN (as he then was) held that “where the provision in the Act is within the legislative powers of the National Assembly but the Constitution is found to have already made the same or similar provision, then the new provision will be regarded as invalid for duplication and/or inconsistency and therefore inoperative.

    The same fate will befall any provision of the Act which seeks to enlarge, curtail, or alter any existing provision of the constitution. The provision or provisions will be treated as unconstitutional and therefore null and void.”

    From the foregoing, it is submitted that the interference in the exercise of the powers of the INEC to appoint dates for holding the general election in Nigeria is illegal as the provision of the Electoral Bill 2018 is inconsistent with Sections 76, 116,132 and 178 of the constitution. To the extent of such inconsistency, the provision of the Electoral Bill is illegal, null and void as stipulated by section 1 (3) of the constitution.

    In other words, since the INEC has been empowered to organize, undertake and supervise all elections the National Assembly cannot rely on the provision of the Electoral Act to usurp the powers of the INEC to fix the dates for the elections.

    In view of the settled position of the law the INEC should not waste public funds by rushing to the Supreme Court to contest its own constitutional duty to organise, undertake and supervise the 2019 general elections.

     

  • Falana, Omatseye for NANS leadership summit

    Falana, Omatseye for NANS leadership summit

    Frontline rights activist Femi Falana (SAN) and Chairman of The Nation Editorial Board Sam Omatseye will deliver keynote speeches at the leadership summit organised by the Ogun State axis of Joint Campus Committee (JCC) – an arm of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS).

    The event with the theme: ”Good Governance and Nation Building: The Role of the Youth”, will hold today at DLK Event Centre in Leme, Abeokuta.

    A statement by the JCC Chairman Olawale Balogun said the summit would create a platform for students and youth groups to engage in discussion on how good governance could be entrenched.