Ekiti State
Governor Ayodele Fayose and his deputy, Kolapo Olusola, have raced to a
Federal
High Court in Abuja to stop the 19 All Progressives Congress members of the
state House of Assembly from impeaching them.
But they met a
brick wall as the judge, Justice Ahmed Mohammed, turned down their request and
granted only the prayers contained in their ex parte application relating to
the service of the court processes on the defendants.
Fayose and
Olusola, in the ex parte application, asked for an interim order
stopping the impeachment notice served on them and the moves to
remove them from office.
Rather than
granting the prayers for interim injunction, Justice Mohammed ordered the
defendants in the suit, including the Speaker of the House, Adewale Omirin, and
the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Ayodeji Daramola, to appear in his court
on April 16.
They are to show
cause why the order of interim injunctions being sought by the
plaintiffs should not be granted.
Apart from Omirin
and Daramola, the other defendants in the suit are the
Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, and the Independent
National Electoral Commission.
The
plaintiffs, apart from Fayose and Olusola, are the House of Assembly and
Olugbemi Dele, who was appointed by seven Peoples Democratic Party
lawmakers as their speaker.
Counsel for the
plaintiffs, Ahmed Raji, had in the ex parte application dated April
7 urged the court to set aside the impeachment notice and restrain
the defendants from taking any further steps in that direction.
The lawyer argued
that the impeachment notice signed by Omirin amounted to impersonating the
“incumbent speaker (Dele).’’
He said, “The
kernel of our complaint is that a former speaker of the Ekiti State House of
Assembly, in the person of the 1st respondent (Omirin) is trying to impersonate
the 1st plaintiff (Dele), who is the current speaker of the parliament.”
Part of the orders
sought by the plaintiffs are: “An injunction restraining the 1st
defendant (Dele) and other errant members of the 2nd plaintiff (House of
Assembly) from further taking any step or engagining in unlawful activities
relating to the impeachment of Ayodele Fayose and Kolapo Olusola as governor
and deputy governor of Ekiti State.
“An interim order
of injunction restraining the Chief Judge from taking any step or
action in relation to the request of the 1st defendant (Omirin) for the purpose
of appointing a panel of seven persons to investigate the purported allegations
of gross misconduct against Fayose and Olusola.
“An interim order
restraining the police from continuing to abet, give cover, protection or lend
credence to the activities of the 1st defendant and other errant members of the
2nd plaintiff for self-help in disruption of legislative proceedings in
the House of Assembly.
“An interim
order setting aside the purported notice of impeachment and all the
steps taken by the 1st defendant and other errant members of the 2nd plaintiff
in relation to the purported issuance and service of the notice of impeachment
for the purpose of commencing and concluding impeachment proceedings
against Fayose and Olusola.”
The plaintiffs had
urged the court to grant the prayers and make the interim injunctions to
subsist pending the determination of their motion on notice for interlocutory
injunctions seeking the same set of prayers.
Raji urged the
court to grant the prayers “in the interest of justice, public order, peace and
safety of the people of the state.”
But the
judge rather than granting the interim injunctions ordered the parties
to appear in court to convince him on why the plaintiffs’ prayers
should not be granted.
Justice Mohammed
ruled, “The order is hereby made directing the 1st to 4th defendants (Omirin,
IG , INEC and Ekiti CJ) to appear before this court on April 16, 2015 and show
cause why the interim order sought by the plaintiffs via an ex parte motion
dated April 7, 2015 should not be made by this court.”
The court granted
leave to serve Omirin and Justice Daramola, who reside in Ekiti State, outside
jurisdiction.
It also ordered
that Omirin and the CJ be served through advertisement in a
national newspaper.
It also made a
separate order that the CJ be served with processes of court through the office
of the Chief Registrar of of the Ekiti State High Court.
In their main suit
marked FHC/ABJ/CS/302/2015, the plaintiffs are seeking nine prayers among which
is “an order setting aside the purported notice of impeachment and all steps
taken by the 1st defendant (Omirin) with other errant members of the 2nd
plaintiff in relation to the purported issuance and service of the
said notice of impeachment for the purpose of commencing and concluding the
impeachment proceedings against Fayose and Olusola,
except and until there is absolute compliance with provisions of section 36(1)
and section 188(1), (2), (3) and (4) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).”
The move by the
APC lawmakers to sack Fayose and Olusola had led to mayhem in parts
of the state on Monday and Tuesday.
During protests on
Tuesday by Fayose supporters, a man, Modupe Olaiya, was shot dead in Efon
Alaaye.
Olaiya’s death
became a subject of controversy with Fayose accusing the APC lawmakers being
culpable in a in a petition he sent to the IG.
“The APC lawmakers
were escorted by five fully armed riot policemen, who I later
discovered were brought from MOPOL 20 in Lagos State,” he added.
He listed the
mobile policemen as Sgt Oyelakin Zacchaeus (F/No 386073), Cpl Adewuya Clement
(F/No 396903), Cpl James Ogunji (F/No 386976), Cpl Ebute Michael (F/No 343469)
and Cpl. Ibrahim Zock (F/No 235510).
Fayose
urged Abbah to investigate the role of the policemen in the whole saga.
He said, “To my
surprise, instead of the police arresting the lawmakers, they were allowed to
return to Osogbo, Osun State where they came from.
“As I write, the
entire Efon Alaaye community is tense, with the people expecting justice to
prevail on the gruesome murder of Modupe Olaiya.
“It is therefore
on this note, and most importantly, the need to restore the confidence of the
people in the police that I implore that you use your good offices to order a
thorough investigation into the murder.
“It is also
important that the involvement of the above listed mobile policemen is
ascertained as they were not from Ekiti State and were not deployed to escort
the lawmakers to the state by the state police command.”
Olaiya’s
mother, Apeke, told journalists in company with her
daughter-in-law, Yinka, that one of the lawmakers killed her son.
She said, “It
(killing) happened at Fabo, at Efon Junction on the way to Ijebu-Ijesha.
“They said he
(lawmaker) was coming with some OPC (Odua Peoples Congress) members from Lagos
and they made a detour in Osun State, but they were coming to Ekiti through
Ijebu-Ijesha.
“What I learnt was
that when the convoy arrived at Fabo Junction, they opened fire on
the protesters who had mounted a roadblock, claiming that that Efon
people were heady and stubborn.
“I was told that
my son had hidden behind a car when everyone else had scampered to safety. He
was shot in the back while crawling out of danger to the bush.
“The vehicle with
which he was being taken to the hospital ran out of fuel on the way, they
continued with a motorcycle, which also ran out of fuel at Adagba farm
settlement. They eventually got another motorcycle with which they got him to
Odufunke Hospital, where the doctor had to call the police to ascertain his
identity, having been brought as a gunshot victim.
“While all these
were going on, my son had started to foam from the mouth and while they were
trying to give him blood, he gave up the ghost. His pregnant wife, Yinka, has
two children. I don’t know what to do now. Olaiya is my fourth child and had
been the sponsor of the family.”
She spoke at the
Government House in Ado Ekiti.
But the APC
lawmakers accused the governor of inducing the mother and other family members
of the deceased to make the claim.
According to them,
Olaiya was felled by soldiers’ bullets at Efon Alaaye.
“We have confirmed
that Fayose gave the woman huge sum of money and asked her to start crying,
rolling on the floor with persistent mentioning of Hon. Ogundele as the one who
shot the boy,” they said in a statement by Omirin’s Special Adviser,
Media, Wole Olujobi.
The statement
added, “Modupe Olaiya was actually killed by security agents while thugs armed
with guns and other dangerous weapons massed up at the Itawure security
checkpoint violently protesting and blocking the route through which the 19 APC
lawmakers were coming to Ado Ekiti.
“Residents of Efon
Alaaye have confirmed that the incident happened long before the lawmakers
arrived at the checkpoint when the thugs became unruly and started shooting at
the security agents.
“In the exchange
of gunfire, Olaiya was felled and taken to the morgue. His body was later shown
to residents by government officials alleging that Ogundele, who was nowhere
near the scene, was implicated.
“The lawmakers
were not even aware of the incident because they were still far away from the
spot when the incident happened. So, it will be mischievous if the lawmakers
are linked with the incident.
“Nigerians should
recall that the Ekiti State High Court once dismissed Fayose as an incorrigible
liar and peddler of mischief. Nigerians should therefore note the deceit
involved in this show of shame. Is it the family of the deceased that should
visit the governor in his office or the governor that should visit them to
sympathise with them in their house?
“This is another
propaganda typical of Fayose’s mischief to get at the opposition. What Fayose
is doing is to stoke crisis that will lead to the arrest of Hon. Ogundele so
that he will not be around on Saturday for the House of Assembly poll in which
the man is seeking re-election.
“This is another
stunt from a man who trades and trafficks in lies and mischief as essential
instrument of governance.”
No plan to
shift Ekiti election –INEC
Meanwhile, INEC
has said that there is no plan to postpone Saturday’s election in Ekiti State
despite the crisis rocking there.
It said the crisis
had nothing to do with the commission’s preparation for the election.
The Chief Press
Secretary to the Chairman of the commission, Kayode Idowu,
disclosed this in an interview with one of our correspondents in Abuja on
Wednesday.
Idowu said, “INEC
is not involved in the crisis going on in the state and we have no plan to
shift the election.’’
Sabotage: Court refuses to stop Fayose’s impeachment
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, April 09, 2015
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