The leadership of Labour Party on Tuesday, raised the alarm that the party and its presidential candidate, Peter Obi, have yet to receive the Certified True Copy of the Supreme Court judgment that affirmed President Bola Tinubu as the winner of the February 25 poll.
It claimed that the apex court did not deliver a judgment on Obi’s case against Tinubu, describing the situation as embarrassing and depressing.
The apex court had on October
26 ended the 171-day legal tussle with the rejection of the election appeals
filed by Obi and his Peoples Democratic Party counterpart, Atiku Abubakar.
In the lead judgment delivered
by the Chairman of the seven-man panel, Justice Inyang Okoro, the apex court
refused to consider the academic records of the President obtained from the
Chicago State University, which Atiku sought to tender as fresh evidence to
prove his allegation of certificate forgery against the ex-Lagos governor.
The other justices on the
panel-Uwani Aji, Mohammed Garba, Ibrahim Saulawa, Adamu Jauro, Abubakar
Tijjani, and Emmanuel Agim, agreed with the lead judgment dismissing Atiku and
Obi’s appeals.
But one month after the
judgment, the party’s National Secretary, Umar Farouk, lamented that they have
yet to receive the CTC of the verdict.
In a statement issued on
Tuesday, Farouk also stated that the party found the position taken by the apex
court regarding the judgment in her appeal ‘extraordinary, terribly shocking,
most unprecedented and unacceptable.’
He said, “The LP had, out of an
abundance of caution, by letter dated October 27, 2023, applied to the Chief
Registrar of the Supreme Court for the certified true copy of the judgment in
the LP appeal. There was a reminder through another letter on November 8, 2023.
However, to date, the requests have been ignored.
“The LP is also aware that by
the provision of Section 294(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), every court established under the Constitution
(which necessarily includes the Supreme Court) has a duty to furnish all
parties to the cause or matter determined with duly authenticated copies of the
decision within seven days of the delivery thereof. The Supreme Court has
failed to do this in the present appeal.
“In conclusion, the LP finds it very embarrassing and depressing that the Supreme Court would, after hearing the appeal by our party, refuse to deliver any judgment and also fail to avail our party of any copy of whatever it considers to be its decision. This constitutes an unmitigated breach of the constitutional right of LP and her candidate to a fair hearing.”
According to him, the only area
where the relevant parties agreed in the two appeals was 25 per cent votes in
Abuja, noting that the other issues submitted to the Supreme Court for
determination in the two appeals differed remarkably.
The LP secretary also expressed
regret that the court failed to give a second thought to the grounds for appeal
they raised such as the forfeiture of funds being proceeds of narcotics
trafficking contained in the LP petition; double nomination of the 3rd
Respondent (who was not even a party in the PDP petition) and failure to comply
with the mandatory requirement of Section 73(2) of the Electoral Act, 2022, the
consequence of which allegedly renders the election invalid.
Other sources of concerns
Farouk raised was the Supreme Court’s refusal to consider the implication of
the certified true copies of 18,123 blurred and unreadable polling unit result
sheets they tendered in court after they were downloaded from the result viewing
portal and the ones issued to the party and its candidate by the Independent
National Electoral Commission.
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