|
Bayelsa crisis :Sylva wins at Appeal
Court Sun Jan 8,2012

Sylva
The Court of Appeal, Abuja Division Saturday dismissed the
appeal brought by the Peoples Democratic Party [PDP],
challenging the competence of the suit filed by Bayelsa State
Governor, Chief Timipre Sylva, seeking to be retained as the
candidate of party for the 2012 governorship election or a
contestant at any PDP primary election for the state
gubernatorial race.
The PDP had appealed on the premise that Sylva’s suit was
incompetent and that the Federal High Court, which entertained
it lacked jurisdiction to do so.
But ruling on the appeal, the Appeal Court held that Sylva was
right in approaching the Abuja Division of Federal High Court to
stop PDP from conducting another primary for the purpose of
selecting the party’s candidate for the next governorship
election on account that the January 2011 primary election which
he won was valid and he had not resigned his mandate thereof.
In a judgment prepared by Justice Zainab Bukachuwa, the Appeal
Court agreed with the Governor’s counsel, Prince Lateef Fagbemi
[SAN] that the trial judge at the Federal High Court, Mr. Judge
Gabriel Kolawole had the jurisdiction to hear Sylva’s suit.
But Justice Bukachuwa held that Kolawole went too far when after
assuming jurisdiction, proceeded to threaten PDP with various
sanctions should the party fail to appear before him to show
cause why Sylva’s application to stop the primary should not be
granted.
Bulkachuwa held that Mr. Judge Kolawole’s pronouncements showed
bias and therefore while ordering that the case be remitted to
the high court for a full trial by another Judge not him [Kolawole].
The court rejected PDP’s argument that the Electoral Act 2010
had robbed the high court of the jurisdiction to entertain the
case.
In doing so, it held that many of the reliefs sought by Sylva
were against the Independent National Electoral Commission and
that INEC being an agent of the Federal Government, the proper
court to sue it (INEC) was the Federal High Court. Reacting to
the ruling, Chief Press Secretary to Governor Sylva, Mr. Doifie
Ola, described the ruling as a victory for justice, a victory
for democracy and above all, a victory for Bayelsa. He advised
the PDP leadership to take advantage of this new window, and
embrace Sylva as its rightful candidate for the February 11,
2012 Bayelsa State Governorship election.
Justice Kolawole of the Federal High Court had in November last
year given PDP 72 hours to come and show cause why he should not
grant Sylva’s prayers among which was to declare him the
governorship candidate of the party.
The judge granted the order, following an ex parte application
filed on Sylva’s behalf by Fagbemi (SAN}.
The judge warned that he would not hesitate to nullify any step
taken by the PDP in defiance of his order, once the defendants
were served the order and the originating summons.
He gave the defendants 72 hours to show cause why all the
reliefs sought by Sylva should not be granted and adjourned the
matter till November 22 for hearing. The defendants were the
PDP, its acting national chairman, Abubakar Kawu Baraje, and the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The court held
that the era when political parties manipulate processes leading
to the emergence of candidates were over, based on the 2010
Electoral Act as amended. Kolawole said: “When I looked at the
totality of the facts in the substantive
Originating Summons and when these are considered vis-à-vis the
extant provisions of the Electoral Act as Amended, my view is
that the Court will not in any way be handicapped, even if the
exparte orders, in particular, prayers 1 – 3 are not granted
because the court retains the power to direct the 1st Defendant
(INEC).’ Kolawole said in terms of political parties’ candidates
who may have been unlawfully excluded either from the parties’
primaries or from the elections to accept and act on the name(s)
of such candidates as the authentic candidates sanctioned and
approved by the court.
“The new Electoral Act as Amended is a clear departure from the
1983 Act by which on the authority of the Supreme Court’s
decision in Onuoha V. Okafor, the political parties were “god
unto themselves” in terms of the choice of candidates. This
court had intervened in quite a number of political parties’
cases when candidates were being manipulated by the leadership
of the political parties.
“It is in this regard that I really do not see the Plaintiff
being exposed in the long run to such injury, loss or damage
that may, applying the Supreme Court’s decision in Kotoye V.
CBN, supra be described as ‘irreparable or irretrievable’.
Whatever be the case, I have no doubt that this court has the
judicial powers to make appropriate orders as the justice of the
case will require.
“Let me state, for the avoidance of doubt, that in relation to
prayers 1 – 3 of the Motion Exparte, the Plaintiff has made out
a strong case which ordinarily should enable this court to grant
the said prayers. But in the light of the analysis I have done
as regards the statutory powers which the court has pursuant to
Electoral Act, 2010 as amended, the 2nd Defendant [PDP] does
not, in the long run, have the final say because the court can
always make appropriate orders as the justice of the case will
require to redress any wrong that may be occasioned by my
judicial hesitation in granting the said prayers 1-3 on the
motion exparte.”
PDP was dissatisfied with the order and filed an appealed at the
Court of Appeal. Sylva, who is seeking re-election, had been
excluded from the primary by the party. He is bitter that the
party is planning to dump him after winning the January 12
primary before the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) postponed the governorship election.
The INEC action was based on an order of an Abuja High Court
which declared that the tenure of five governors continue beyond
May 29 because they won re-run elections.
The verdict was upheld by the Court of Appeal, Abuja. The
governor is contending that his candidacy subsists as nobody
petitioned against his success at the said primary election to
the screening appeal panel or any other body or committee of the
2nd defendant
|