Tag: Nwabueze

  • Tinubu, Ohanaeze, mourn ex-Minister Nwabueze 

    Tinubu, Ohanaeze, mourn ex-Minister Nwabueze 

    President Bola Tinubu has mourned legal luminary and former Minister of Education, Prof. Ben Nwabueze (SAN), who died at 91.

    Nwabueze was former secretary-general of Ohanaeze Ndigbo.

    In a statement yesterday by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, the President condoled with the family, as well as Anambra State. He described Nwabueze’s death as a profound loss, saying his knowledge of the law was outstanding.

    The statement reads: “Prof. Nwabueze’s contribution to the precedents and principles of the constitution is notable. His involvement in the drafting of 1979 Constitution is a legacy that stands him out as well as his contributions to the legal profession.”

    Ohanaeze said Nwabueze’s death was unfortunate and a huge loss to Southeast and Nigeria.

    Read Also: Ohanaeze, Igbo leaders express shock over Nwabueze’s death

    Vice President (Southeast), Damian Okeke-Ogene, said Igbo and Nigeria lost a gem. “It’s sad and unfortunate we lost Nwabueze at this moment. The defender of the defenceless and apostle of a corruption-free society. He will be missed for his fatherly advice.

    Lawmaker, Afam Ogene, described it as painful for him and his constituents.

    In a text, he said the former Ohanaeze chief died on Sunday.

    President-General of Atani town Union, (the deceased’s community), Arinze Nzeli, confirmed Nwabueze’s death. Nzeli said the legal icon passed on in his Lagos home, about 4pm Sunday. He had been ill for some time, he added.

    Nwabueze was born in 1931 and hailed from Atani, Ogbaru Local Government of Anambra.

  • BREAKING: Legal icon Ben Nwabueze dies at 92

    BREAKING: Legal icon Ben Nwabueze dies at 92

    Professor Ben Nwabueze (SAN), a leading Nigerian constitutional lawyer and former Secretary General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo worldwide, is dead.

    This was revealed by the President General of Atani Town Union, Arinze NZELI, who stated that the prominent legal Icon died at his Lagos apartment at 4 p.m. on Sunday, October 29.

    Nzeli said that the illustrious legal icon had been ill for some time before the terrible tragedy.

    The member representing the Ogbaru federal constituency in the Federal House of Representatives, Afam Ogene also confirmed the Incident in a Text, stating that the former Ohaneze Ndigbo Secretary-General died on Sunday.

    Read Also: Nwabueze faults Supreme Court validation of Buhari’s victory

    He was aged 92.

    Ben Nwabueze, hails from Atani, Anambra State. He is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and was born in 1931.

  • Court affirms Nwabueze as YDP National Chairman

    A Federal High Court in Lagos has upheld the appointment of  Henry Nwabueze, as Young Democratic Party’s (YDP) acting National Chairman.

    Justice Ayokunle Faji declared that Nwabueze’s appointment by the Founding Members Council (FMC) of the party, was lawfully done.

    The judgment followed a suit filed by an aggrieved member of the party, Mr Greg Fiberesima, seeking a declaration that he was entitled to assume the position of YDP acting National Chairman.

    In his originating summons, the plaintiff joined YDP and Nwabueze as first and second defendants respectively.

    Fiberesima sought an order for the defendants to submit his name as acting Chairman, pending the conduct of election to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of the former Chairman, Ambassador Raphael Horsfall.

    The plaintiff claimed that as the highest ranking member of the National Executive Committee from the Southsouth zone, he ought to be appointed acting chairman, after Horsfall, who is also from the Southsouth.

    But, opposing him, the defendants, through their counsel, Mr O.H. Igwe, urged the court to determine whether in view of article 29.2 of the YDP Constitution, the resolution appointing Nwabueze as acting Chairman was lawful.

    They argued that by the resolution of the FMC, The NEC and the Board of Trustees, the appointment of the second defendant as acting Chairman was constitutional and lawful.

    In his judgment, Justice Faji upheld the defendants’ argument, noting that the YDP Constitution regulates how offices are held. He added that in case of national officers, they are elected by the National Convention of the party, which holds every four years.

    “By Article 31.3, where there is a vacancy in any of the offices of the party, the Executive Committee at the appropriate level, shall appoint another person from the same area or zone where the officer originated from, pending the conduct of election.

    “It is instructive that plaintiff’s demand to be made acting chairman was directed to the chairman of the FMC by a letter dated 23/6/2018; this shows that plaintiff acknowledges the role of the FMC in the process.

    “However, from the counter affidavit, the FMC chose not to accede to this, because of a crisis generated by the situation, as it was contended that the tenure of Amb. Horsfall had itself expired at the material time.

    “Plaintiff did not file a reply affidavit to this,” the court held,”

    The court held that by plaintiff’s exhibit YDP4 letter dated 10/10/2016, the tenure of the National Executives of the YDP was to last till the National Convention of 2017.

    It held that it would therefore, seem that as at 22/6/2018, the tenure of the previous acting chairman from Southsouth zone had expired.

    According to the judge, by Article 29.2.1 of the YDP Constitution, the FMC is empowered to resolve all crises in the party, adding that the situation was a clear crisis, which it was proper for the FMC to resolve the way it did.

    The court held that Article 31.4 and 29.2 are strong pedestals upon which the FMC acted, adding that even though the resolution was not exhibited, the facts in paragraphs eight and nine of the counter affidavit were not denied.

    The court consequently held: “The first defendant was right in sending the name of the second defendant to INEC, as acting National Chairman.

    “I hereby, find no merit in plaintiff’s claim which is hereby dismissed,”

  • 2019: Nwabueze leads campaign for Atiku

    SOME Igbo leaders, including politicians and chiefs, promised yesterday to support Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar.

    They spoke in Enugu after a meeting where elder statesman Prof. Ben Nwabueze, 86, called on them to “do me the honour of achieving the success of the (Atiku/Peter Obi) ticket before I am gone”.

    “We must ensure the survival of the Igbo race in Nigeria and it is only through the success of that ticket that we can get it”, she said

    Nwabueze, who chaired the meeting, explained that the ticket would “ensure our survival”.

    At the meeting were: Ambassador George Obiozor, Senator Ike Nwachukwu, Ohanaeze President Chief Nnia Nwodo, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, Prof ABC Nwosu, Senator Chris Anyanwu, Senator Theodore Orji, Senator Ben Obi and Chief Achike Udenwa.

    Also there were Prof. Uche Azikiwe, Chief Onyema Ugochukwu, Chief Emeka Ugwu-Oju, Chief Garry Igariwey, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, Ambassador Frank Ogbuewu, Prof Osita Ogbu, Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo, Chief Lawrence Nwuruku, Prof Walter Ofonagoro and Archbishop Maxwell Anikwenwa.

    There were also Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), Commodore James Aneke (retd), Prof Elochukwu Amucheazi, Prof Uzodinma Nwala, Senator Adolphus Wabara, Air Comdr Allison Madueke (retd), Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe, Prof. Anya O. Anya and Prof Chudi Uwazurike, among others

    In a five-point resolution issued at the end of the summit, with the theme “Ndigbo 2019 and Beyond”, read by Agbakoba, the leaders said the position was based on the restructuring agenda put on the table by Atiku/Obi, which four zones of the country had agreed on.

    The resolution states:

    “The Igbo people of Nigeria held a one day non-partisan and inclusive summit convened by elders, traditional and religious leaders on Wednesday 14th November 2018 to consider Ndigbo’s place in the polity, especially in light of the forthcoming 2019 elections.

    “The summit deliberated on the state of Ndigbo in Nigeria today, especially after years of exclusion from the centre.  This country has never been so divided as it is today.  We Igbos have always yearned for a level playing field with justice, equity and fairness.

    “The summit recognised the nomination of His Excellency Mr. Peter Obi, former Governor of Anambra State, as the vice presidential candidate of the PDP and fully endorses this nomination. It was acknowledged that this nomination puts Ndigbo back in the centre of governance.  It is, therefore, important that Ndigbo should rally behind the Atiku/Obi ticket.

    “We identify with the Atiku/Peter Obi ticket on the restructuring agenda as has been reiterated by four zones of the country, namely: Southsouth, Southwest, Northcentral and Southeast. We believe that as long as the federating units remain weak the centre will continue to be weak. We equally move to appreciate the position of the Atiku/Obi ticket in promoting national unity.

    “In conclusion, the summit reiterated that the time is now for Ndigbo to mobilise and organise effectively to realise the Atiku/Obi ticket. We are not campaigning against anybody, we are simply campaigning for our very survival. Igbo votes must count wherever Ndigbo live in Nigeria.”

    But the Enugu-based Zikist-Buhari Movement described the decision to support Atiku as tackles for the Igbo in the Nigeria polity.

    The pro-Buhari group, which uses the ideology of First Republic President Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe as guide, said in a statement by Acting Secretary Godwin Onwusi, that in 2015, Ohanaeze Ndigbo opted for Goodluck Jonathan and it turned out to be “a fatal decision for Ndigbo as a nation to put our eggs in one basket”.

    He added: “History will not forgive Igbo leaders if we willfully put all our eggs into only Atiku basket and drop the more fruitful Buhari basket.

    “In deep reflection, we asked ourselves, what option in a scenario where two Fulani Muslim brothers – Buhari and Atiku – are front liners in the 2019 presidential election, who could the great Zik choose if he were alive?

    “In answering this germane question, we said two major critical issues will readily come to Zik’s mind – one, whom between the two of them has the support of the North, two, what is their programme?

    “As a pragmatist, the great Zik would readily choose President Muhammadu Buhari who has uncommon cult followership in the northern belt. This choice is based on the pragmatism that for us to achieve the Igbo presidency, we need Buhari’s supporters not only in the north but nationwide. If we want additional state, Buhari stand a better chance to persuade his people.”

    “On the second issue, the great Zik would be attracted by His Excellency Atiku Abubakar’s promise to restructure the country in six months in office; but as a pragmatist he will reason that it cannot be achieved by Fiat-Executive-Order. We cannot fathom why eminent Igbo leaders like Professor Ben Nwabueze fail to reason with the great Zik?”

    “Whereas the Atiku restructuring mantra is appetising, the truism is that it cannot be done by Fiat-Executive Order, but by the amendment of the rigid 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. All that glitters is not gold, the sage says, for Atiku cannot restructure without the core North.”

    ZMB stated that APC and, by extension President Buhari, was not against restructuring, per se, but wants an orderly restructuring; otherwise, they could not have set up the Malam El-Rufia Committee on Restructuring and its report receiving attention.

    On the issue of four years, Buhari’s remaining four years after 2019 is cast on constitutional stone while Atiku’s is at best pledge. In sum, we call Ndigbo both at home and abroad, to join the ZBM to actualise this noble objective,” it stated.

     

    ‘It’s an affront on Igbo nation’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) chided those who did “the purported endorsement,” which it described as “an affront on the Igbo people who were frontline victims of the 16 years of the PDP misrule.”

    The ruling party’s spokesman, Lanre Issa-Onilu, said last night that “the APC considers Atiku and his PDP co-travellers as people who have lost any sense of shame.”

    The statement said “It will be interesting to know what the PDP will be telling the Igbo people during the campaign.

    “The South East people have three and half years of visible progress in terms of massive infrastructure and the thousands of common people who are benefiting from the social investment programmes under the APC government compared to the PDP’s 16 years of retrogression.

    “We in the APC are confident that the Igbo won’t be fooled by any group, by whatever name, to sell a thoroughly discredited party like the PDP to the very discerning Igbo people.”

  • Nwabueze faults Buhari over June 12

    A senior member of the defunct Interim National Government (ING), Professor Ben Nwabueze, yesterday denounced the June 12 declaration made by President Muhammadu Buhari as a masterstroke of mischief and insincerity.

    Nwabueze, a Senior Advocate of  Nigeria (SAN) and Secretary of Education in the Ernest Sonekan-led ING, said there was  no legal justification whatsoever for the president’s action on the declaration and his conferment of the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR) on the winner of the June 12,1993 presidential election, Chief M.K.O. Abiola.

    He claimed that in the face of the law, for instance, the June 12 election is deemed not to have taken place, and consequently the date cannot be declared the Democracy Day and a public holiday.

    Nwabueze, in a statement in Lagos, queried the intention behind the president’s action, wondering whether it was “motivated by the public interest or by a political desire to secure the votes of Nigerians in the 2019 election, especially the votes of people of the South-West or to sow the seed of division among the members of the National Assembly in order to scuttle the threat to impeach him or to throw the country into turmoil or to smear the polity with the taint of illegality.

    ”A motive of mischief seems evident on the face of the declaration. It is indeed a masterstroke of mischief and insincerity, a deceitful contrivance, suddenly and mischievously trumped up to rescue his dying image three years after his installation as president,” he added.

    The senior lawyer argued that while it is indisputable that a presidential election was held on June 12, 1993,  it was “ annulled by a decree of the Federal Military Government (FMG), Decree No. 61 of 1993.”

  • Nwabueze, Anyaoku, Adebanjo, others set for consensus on restructuring

    •Elder statesmen plan to engage with Fed Govt 

    Eminent leaders of thought have concluded plans to mobilise national consensus on agitations for restructuring to forestall degeneration of ethnic acrimony, it was learnt at the weekend.

    This came to light after Thursday’s media interaction organised by a group of elder statesmen led by Prof. Ben Nwabueze, SAN in Lagos.

    Already, it was gathered that a high-powered team from southern Nigeria led by Prof. Nwabueze, including former Secretary-General of Commonwealth Chief Emeka Anyaoku, Gen. Alani Akinriade, Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Chief Ayo Adebanjo and Gen. Ike Nwachukwu, has already initiated “a major tactical national consultation”.

    Others in the team are: Mr. Donald Duke, Prof. Pat Utomi, Prof. Kimse Okoko, Solomon Asemota, SAN, Obong Victor Attah, Admiral Ebitu Ukiwe, Prof. Akin Oyebode, Dr. Kalu Idika Kalu, Chief Tola Adeniyi and Prof. Sola Ehindero.

    The group’s Head of Secretariat, Olawale Okunniyi, spoke at the weekend while clarifying issues after the inaugural public intervention of the emergent pan Nigerian Movement on Thursday.

    The move, Nwabueze said, was designed to forge a negotiated consensus among critical stakeholders on how best to restructure the country.

    Okunniyi, who also heads the Nigeria Political Summit Group (NPSG, said regional youth groups and ethnic militias are included in the consultation.

    He said: “This stakeholders driven initiative, under the auspices of Project Nigeria Movement is projected to surpass what PRONACO achieved under Chief Anthony Enahoro and Prof. Wole Soyinka between 2005 and 2007; when PRONACO convened a major peoples’ national conference of ethnic nationalities and social groups in Nigeria, leading to the unanimous adoption of a draft peoples constitution for Nigeria on August 26, 2006…

    “It could, therefore, be reassuring to recall how both progressive leaders rode in the same vehicle into the open hands of Chief Anthony Enahoro and other leaders at the PRONACO Secretariat on June 12, 2006.”

    He said the list of the “Northern/Middle Belt team for the national consultation on restructuring is still being composed by the leaders of the North”.

    Okunniyi said the labour movement and other social groups in the country have also been penciled for strategic consultation and mobilisation before a major interface with the Federal Government on the modalities for the restructuring.

  • Nwabueze, Oyebode, Okoko, others seek new constitution

    Nwabueze, Oyebode, Okoko, others seek new constitution

    Some eminent Nigerians rose from a meeting in Lagos yesterday, demanding a new constitution as a precursor of restructuring.

    To the Leaders of Thought, restructuring cannot be implemented by an amendment of the 1999 Constitution. A new constitution approved by the people at a referendum is necessary, they said.

    Addressing reporters after the meeting, the group’s chairman, Prof. Ben Nwabueze, noted that while the clamour for restructuring was sweeping across the country, “the National Assembly is still regaling us with talks about constitution amendment, buttressing its position with the erroneous assertion that the 1999 Constitution can only be amended or altered”.

    Nwabueze said: “The view that the 1999 Constitution cannot be completely abolished and replaced by a new Constitution is erroneous because the National Assembly fails to take into account the fact that the 1999 Constitution is only a schedule to Decree 24 of 1999”.

    He argued that the Decree is an existing law under section 315 of the 1999 Constitution and, like all existing laws, can be repealed by the National Assembly.

    “We think the way for Nigeria is for the people, in exercise of the power inherent in them as a sovereign people, to make, through a referendum, a new Constitution, consisting a new political order. The process must be led by a President, as the elected leader of the people imbued by an ardour for change.”

    The chairman said the group believed “that negotiated restructuring, implemented under a new constitution, is the best assurance for the realisation of our desire for one Nigeria”. “We members of Southern Leaders of Thought are committed patriots, imbued with an abiding faith in one Nigeria, and the belief that the majority of Nigerians share the same faith.”

    Nwabueze urged the Federal Government to give the people an opportunity to negotiate changes in governmental structures needed to accomplish their desires, believing that appropriate structures must be put in place for good governance.

    He told reporters that the leader of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, had mandated him to tell the Federal Government that he (Kanu) would caution his followers to slow down or call off the struggle for actualisation of Biafra if the government accepts the Leaders of Thought’s position on restructuring. According to Nwabueze, Kanu also promised to back down on the threat to disrupt the 2019 elections.

    Nwabueze said in a country with a vast expanse of territory, with diversity of ethnic nationalities, with divergent interests and outlook, a federal system is the most appropriate for us. We, therefore, demand the kind of federalism that existed under the 1960 and 1963 Constitutions, he stated.

    According to him, the essential purpose of restructuring is to enable the component ethnic nationalities grouped together by affinity of culture or language or territorial congruity to govern themselves in matters of internal concerns.

    He identified the factors that negate true federalism in Nigeria as over concentration of political power and resources at the centre. A way out, according to him is to revisit the exclusive and concurrent legislative lists with a view to devolving power to the States.

    At the meeting were Prof Kimse Okoko, Chief Solomon Asemota (SAN), Prof Sola Ehindero and Prof Akin Oyebode.

  • Nwabueze: only National Assembly can save democracy

    The National Assembly is the only institution that can save constitutional democracy from emasculation in Nigeria, eminent lawyer, Prof Ben Nwabueze, said yesterday.

    According to him, due to the tendency of the Supreme Court to have “special interests”, the Judiciary could no longer be trusted with that role.

    It was during the public presentation of a book by Prof. Nwabueze titled: “Save Our Constitutional Democracy From Emasculation’, in Abuja yesterday.

    The octogenarian constitutional lawyer urged the lawmakers to tighten the loopholes exploited by the Supreme Court to disregard section 141 of the Electoral Act that sought to remedy the decision in ex-Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s case.

    Amaechi was replaced as the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Rivers State governorship candidate in the 2017 election. The party won the election and its candidate Celestine Omehia was sworn in. But the Supreme Court nullified Omehia’s candidacy and pronounced Amaechi the candidate. Ameachi was then sworn in as governor. He spent eight years in office.

    House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara assessing an aspect in the book that refers to the Amaechi case, described it as a situation where the judiciary elected a governor who did not participate in the elections. He then asked: “Who can save our constitutional democracy from emasculation. Is it the Executive or Legislature or the Juduciary?”

    Dogara said politicians, players and stakeholders must study the Constitution for democracy to succeed, saying: studying the constitution would  allow them to understand the limits of their powers.

    “To be candid, majority of us do not even know what constitutional democracy means or entails.  Some of us in the system have not even studied the Constitution.”

    According to the Speaker, governance in Nigeria will be more effective when every player in the three arms of government are clear on what powers the Constitution grants to their offices and where those powers end.

    He said: “We come to Nigeria, where, for instance, the executive, or the President determines the priority of the nation or of his government but parliament can say no as representatives of the people,

    “And we have seen some of these contradictions played out in a country like the United States. We borrowed almost everything in our Constitution from the United States but there, the President ran for election on the premise that he was going to build a wall, it was one of his cardinal promises. As a matter of fact it was one of the basis for which he had appeal. On the Healthcare bill introduced in Congress, most members said, well, that may be the priority of your government but we don’t think that is the priority of our people, and it stalled.

    “And he promised that from day one, he will repeal and replace ObamaCare, if not the same day, if not the same hour after taking office but Congress sat and said no, that may be the priority of your government but it isn’t the priority of the people we represent, and the bill has not been passed. If it were in Nigeria, imagine the kind of discussion it would have generated such as parliament is frustrating the President, they don’t want him to succeed and so on and so forth.”

  • Abia poll: Court should follow rule of law, says Nwabueze

    Abia poll: Court should follow rule of law, says Nwabueze

    Constitutional lawyer and professor of law Ben Nwabueze (SAN) highlights the violations and abuses of due process of law in the tussle for the governorship of Abia State.

    On June 27, 2016 Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court (FHC), Abuja Division, removed Governor Okezie Ikpeazu from office as Governor of Abia State, after his election has been affirmed by the Supreme Court. He accompanied the removal with an order specifically directing the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue his rival for the office, Dr Uche Ogah, with a Certificate of Return. According to a statement by the Special Advisers on Legal Matters to Dr Okezie Ikpeazu, Hon Justice Okon Abang next proceeded “within a few hours” of the delivery of his judgment, to issue a Judgment Enforcement Order of his said judgment in “disregard and breach of the Judgment Enforcement Rules, which forbid the enforcement of a judgment before the lapse of Three (3) days after delivery.” Following the Judgment Enforcement Order made by the Hon Judge and served immediately on INEC, the latter in less than twelve hours of the service of the Enforcement Order on it, issued a Certificate of Return to Dr Ogah while Governor Ikpeazu and the other parties to the suit, as well as the Appeal Section of the FHC whose duty it is to compile the Records of Appeal, had to wait for eight (8) days before copies of the judgment were made available to them. This seems a brazen exhibition of judicial recklessness, which may fairly be described as judicial activism run riot. The removal of Governor Ikpeazu from office after his election has been affirmed by the Supreme Court, an action which Justice Okon Abang himself admits in his judgment to be something entirely “novel,” and, more obnoxiously, the order directing INEC to issue a Certificate of Return with immediate effect to Dr Ogah, is distinctly and manifestly careless and derogatory of the dictates of constitutional democracy and the rule of law, especially as he, as will be shown in another write-up, had no jurisdiction or power to sack Governor Ikpeazu or to issue the order to INEC. The decisions and orders of Justice Okon Abang had precipated, not surprisingly, a judicial drama, an unseemly one, sad to say. On 30th June, 2016, an interval of three days, another Judge of the same FHC, Justice Ambrose Allagoa, sitting in the Owerri Division of the Court, countered the removal order, affirming that Dr Okezie Ikpeazu remains still in office as Governor of Abia State. It is nothing short of a distasteful drama that two Judges of the same Federal High Court, should within a space of three days, give conflicting decisions on the same matter, one sacking the Governor, and other affirming his continued stay in the office. The contradictions stem from their divergent findings on the forgery allegation. Whilst Justice Abang based his sack order on the ground that Dr Ikpeazu’s tax returns submitted by him and his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to INEC contained false information, Justice Ambrose Allogoa of the FHC Owerri Division dismissed the forgery or falsity of information allegation as not having been proved, and accordingly affirmed that Dr Ikpeazu remains the Governor of Abia State. He is emphatic in dismissing the forgery allegation. Said he : “The plaintiff failed woefully to produce any evidence in proof of his allegation of forgery or fraud of tax receipts or Certificates….. It is the decision of the Honourable Court that the Tax Clearance Certificate and tax receipts presented by the 3rd Defendant for the purpose of contesting the 2015 gubernatorial election in Abia State is not false or forged by the 3rd Defendant or anyone else. The 3rd Defendant Dr Okezie Ikpeazu was not a person disqualified to contest the Abia State gubernatorial election by reason of any false or forged tax receipt and/or certificate.” Pages 53 & 59 of his cyclostyled judgment. The contradiction in the findings on this point by the two learned judges of the same court (the FHC) is remarkable, and suggests that something might be amiss with our judicial system. The State High Court too had been sucked into the vortex of the drama; for, on 8th July, 2016, Hon Justice C.H. Ahuchaogu of that Court, in a suit filed by Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, issued an injunction, operative while he (Dr Okezie Ikpeazu) remains in office, restraining INEC from issuing a Certificate of Return to Dr Uche Ogah (too late as the Certificate had already been issued), and the Chief Judge or any other Judge or judicial officer of the State High Court from swearing-in Dr Uche Ogah as Governor of the State. In the situation thus created, Abia State was thrown into a state of such tumultuous social discord in which the various clans, age-groups, people of different political and religious affiliations and other interest-groups in the state were pitched against each other in a social conflict marked by tension, with its deleterious impact on public order, social and economic activities and general well-being. The resultant situation was one of near abeyance of governance, of a looming anarchy, which seems, happily, to have abated somewhat. This is the distasteful and sorry state of affairs to which Abia State had been reduced since the 27th June 2016 judgment of Justice Okon Abang, a State christened at birth by its Founding Fathers as God’s Own State, and nurtured into harmonious co-existence among its inhabitants by its first Governor, Dr Ogbonnaya Onu, presently Minister of Science and Technology in the Buhari Administration. In all this, the State, its people and, indeed all Nigerians, are the losers and sufferers. Though not from Abia State, I, in particular, am deeply distressed and disquieted by these lamentable happenings.
    By resorting to the distasteful method of going to court, knowingly, it must be supposed, to unseat prematurely, an incumbent governor whose election had been affirmed by the Supreme Court, our apex and final court, Dr Uche Ogah breached the fundamental necessity for finality in litigation. The Supreme Court’s confirmation of Dr Ikpeazu’s election as governor of the State should have put the matter finally to rest in the interest of regularity, certainty in the law and orderliness. That is the understanding underlying the hierarchical grading of the courts and the system of appeals from the courts or tribunals at the base of the hierarchy, through the Court of Appeal, to the Supreme Court as the apex and court of last resort. Clearly, there is nothing in law to justify or warrant Dr Ogah breaching the fundamental necessity for finality in litigation in such flagrant manner, which has been rightly described as a “joker.” According to a write-up in The Niche of 17 July, 2015, Dr Ogah decided to “exploit one of his jokers. He approached the court to open what may be described as the “Pandora’s box”, by asking it, months after the Supreme Court’s confirmation of the validity of Ikpeazu’s election as governor, to nullify it (i.e. the election) on the ground that the tax receipts and the tax clearance certificate he submitted in support of his candidature contained false information, an issue not raised during the first round of the litigation that went from the Election Tribunal to the Court of Appeal and, then, to the Supreme Court. Contemporaneously Chief Nnanozie Nwosu, a fellow contender for the State governorship who was defeated at the PDP primaries for the office, filed another suit as sole plaintiff at the FHC Owerri against Dr Okezie Ikpeazu and others seeking to unseat him (i.e. Dr Ikpeazu) as governor on the ground, among other grounds, of alleged forgery of his tax clearance certificate. It is not as if our law provides no sanction or protection against a breach of the fundamental necessity for finality in litigation. It does, mainly through the sanction against abuse of court process. The Supreme Court has held in Osun State Independent National Electoral Commission and Anor v. National Conscience Party and Ors (2013) 9 NWLR (Pt 1360) 451, at pp. 466 – 467 that “once a court is satisfied that any proceeding before it is an abuse of process, it has the power and indeed a duty to terminate it.” Whilst the concept of abuse of judicial process involves “circumstances and situations of infinite variety and conditions”, a notable example of it is “where a multiplicity of action on the same subject matter are instituted against the same opponent, on the same issue”: Chief Great Ogboru v. Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan (2013) 13 NWLR (Pt 1370) 33, p. 46. “There must,” said the Supreme Court, “be an end to litigation”, at p. 60. The decided cases on abuse of court process are legion, the older cases of which include notably Saraki v. Kotoye (1992) 9 NWLW (Pt 264) 156. But the sanction or protection provided by the law against abuse of court process does not however avail where the parties, issues or reliefs claimed in a previous litigation are not the same as those in a later litigation. This is what made the sanction or protection unavailing in the present litigations.

    Knowing this, the plaintiffs in the later round of the litigation made sure they kept within the restrictions of the law. The sole plaintiff in the first round of litigation that went from the election tribunal to the Court of Appeal and from there to the Supreme Court was Alex Otti who contested the 2015 governorship election in Abia State as a candidate on the platform of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), while the defendants were Dr Okezie Ikpeazu, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), INEC and APGA. The allegation that Dr Ikpeazu’s tax receipts and tax clearance certificate were forged was, as earlier stated, not an issue during this first round. …To be continued Professor Ben Nwabueze

  • Nwabueze: I’m not against anti-graft war

    Nwabueze: I’m not against anti-graft war

    Eminent legal scholar Prof. Ben Nwabueze (SAN) yesterday declared that he was not against the Federal Government’s anti-corruption war.
    He alleged that former Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, who accused him of frustrating the crusade, was trying to wipe up sentiment against him.
    The former university don said his position was that the war should be fought within the constitutional framework.
    He said the violation of the constitution in a bid to fight corruption could also engender corruption.
    Nwabueze, a former Education Minister, said the governemnt had in the past violated the law while fighting graft, thereby indulging in the vice it was fighting.
    He recalled that while the government was trying to bring the former Inspector-General of Police, Tafa Balogun, to book, some infractions were committed.
    In a statement in Lagos, the legal luminary alleged that the anti-corruption war was a tool of vendatta against perceived opponents by the Obasanjo government.
    He described Ribadu as an ally of the former President when the violation of the constitution was in vogue.
    Nwabueze said: “My attention has been drawn to what Mallam Nuhu Ribadu said about me at a lecture organised by the Law Chambers of Joe Kyari Gadzama on Thursday December 1, 2016 on the theme, “Corruption and the Nigerian Economy: Lawyers as Change Agents.” He said, among other things, that I, with others, teamed up with politicians to frustrate and undermine the country’s efforts to fight corruption, and to discredit the work he, as Chairman of the EFCC, was doing in prosecuting the war.
    “Apparently, Nuhu Ribadu was reacting, as he is entitled to do, to what I wrote about him in my book, Current Issues and Problems in the Workings of Constitutional Democracy in Nigeria (2011), pages 92 – 101, titled Subversions of the Constitution by Nuhu Ribadu in the name of the War Against Corruption(photocopy attached herewith) – published in The Guardian.
    “What the public expects of Nuhu Ribadu is, not just to whip up sentiments in favour of himself, to play to the gallery or to curry favours with the Buhari Administration, but to adduce concrete evidence in rebuttal of the facts stated in my write-up, in order to show that his impugned actions as Chairman of the EFCC are not subversive of the Nigerian Constitution, and what positive effect his subversive actions have had in curbing or eradicating the rampancy of corruption in Nigeria.”
    Nwabueze maintained that while the country should fight corruption relentlessly, a total war on the cankerworm unrestrained by constitutional limitations on power is fraught with the danger of the emergence of personal rule.
    He added: “These are the exact words I used to express my position in my latest book, The National Question and Corruption (2016), chapter 10, pages 179 – 193.
    “ In the section of the chapter headed Final Remarks, I stated : In terms of checking, reducing or eradicating the incidence of corruption in the country, the truth is that, far from being checked, reduced or eradicated, corruption has vastly increased in its incidence, despite the subversions of the constitution ostensibly in the name of the war against it.
    “This shows that Obasanjo’s and Ribadu’s so-called war is nothing but a futile and ill-motivated vendetta against opponents.
    “ Perhaps, something needs to be said about certain assets claimed by Obasanjo and Ribadu to have been recovered.
    “The findings of a committee that probed the sale of properties found to have been corruptly acquired by former Inspector-General of Police, Tafa Balogun, and former Governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, revealed, according to report of its findings, that the sale was irregularly conducted, as no proper valuation of the properties was carried out and as other requirements of due process under the law were not followed; that of the nine buyers of the Tafa Balogun properties, six, whose names were stated as limited liability companies, were in fact non-existent, as they were not registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission; that the proceeds of the sale were paid into an unauthorised account, instead of into the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation as required by section 31(2) of the EFCC Act 2004; that the receipts of the lodgment of the proceeds were not deposited with the Auditor-General of the Federation in accordance with Financial Regulation 2520; that some cheques and bank drafts received in payment of part of the proceeds of the sales were left in the vaults of the EFCC where they remained and became stale. Above all, figures as to exactly how much was realised from the sales are conflicting, as no proper records of the sales were kept. About N12 billion, according to the probe report, was said to have been realized.