The Court of Appeal in Abuja on
Monday upheld the judgment of the Ekiti State Governorship Election Petition
Tribunal which affirmed Governor Ayodele Fayose of the Peoples Democratic Party
as the winner of the June 21, 2014 poll.
The Independent National Electoral
Commission had declared that Fayose polled 203,090 votes to defeat the then
incumbent governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, of the All Progressives Congress who
polled 120,433 votes in the election.
Though Justice Abdul Aboki-led
five-man panel dismissed the appeal filed by the All Progressives Congress, it
found merit in the appellant’s complaints that the military was used to harass
and intimidate its supporters and leaders during the poll.
In a unanimous judgment, the
appellate court held that the Justice Siraju-Mohammed-led tribunal in its verdict
delivered on December 19, 2014, “hurriedly” dismissed the appellant’s
allegations of harassment by the military on the grounds that it lacked
jurisdiction to hear such.
He held that though the tribunal
had rightly struck out the names of the Chief of Army Staff and the Inspector
General of Police as respondents in the petition in accordance with provisions
of the Electoral Act, it ought to have determined the appellant’s complaints
and considered the two parties as agents of INEC or individuals working on
behalf of the commission.
The court however held that the
entire appeal lacked merit since the main issues of alleged forgery of Higher
National Diploma by Fayose and request for his disqualification on the grounds
of his earlier impeachment from office in 2006 had been resolved against him.
It however reiterated that the use
of Armed Forces in the conduct of elections was in violation of section
217(2)(c) of the Constitution and section 1 of the Armed Forces Act.
It cited and relied on a judgment
delivered by Justice R. M Aikawa of the Federal High Court in Sokoto on
January 29, 2015 barring the use of the armed forces in the conduct of
elections.
The appellate court therefore barred
the use of the Armed Forces in the conduct of future elections in the country
as such constituted a violation of both the Constitution and the Electoral Act.
Justice Aboki held, “Even the
President of Nigeria has no powers to call on the Nigerian Armed Forces to
unleash them on peaceful citizenry who are exercising their franchise to elect
their leaders.
“In the event of insurrection or
insurgency, the call in Armed Forces to restore order must be with approval of
the National Assembly… as provided in section 217(2) and 218(4) of the
Constitution as ammended.
“The question is that who ordered
deployment of military or soldiers in the Ekiti governorship election? Was
there any act of insurrection to warrant the call on the military to restore
order? And was such deployment in accordance with sections 217 (2)(c) and 218(4)
of the constitution?
“There is nothing before us in the
records in answering the posers positively.
“With this, whoever unleashed
soldiers on Ekiti State disturbed the peace of the election on 21st June 2014,
acted in flagrant breach of the Constitution, and flouted the provisions of the
Electoral Act which required enabling environment by civil authorities in the
conduct of elections.
”We resolve that although the
tribunal has no jurisdiction over the 4th and 5th respondents (Inspector
General of Police and Chief of Army Staff), in the circumstances, that did not
stop it from making a pronouncement on deprecating the unlawful role of the
military in the conduct of election in Ekiti State.
APC Lost again as Appeal Court affirms Fayose’s victory, bars soldiers from polls
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Monday, February 16, 2015
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Reviewed by Unknown
on
Monday, February 16, 2015
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