Daily Trust Saturday

APC crisis: Crack in presidency widens as Osinbajo maintains position

Chieftains await Buhari’s arrival next week What S/Court says on Yobe gov

- Ismail Mudashir & John Chuks

The crack in the presidency over the chairman of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) and Yobe State Governor, Mai Mala Buni, has widened as Vice President Professor Yemi Osinbajo maintained his position on the legality of the panel, Daily Trust Saturday gathered.

President Muhammadu Buhari, who is in London, had directed Osinbajo to take charge of the legal concerns being expressed by stakeholde­rs following the split judgement of the Supreme on the Ondo governorsh­ip election.

Three out of the seven justices of the apex court had punctured the legality of Buni chairing the committee, while the four in the lead judgement upheld the election of Governor Rotimi Akeredolu.

Osinbajo had last weekend met with lawyers serving in the cabinet, where he reportedly advised against last Saturday’s ward congresses of the party. But the caretaker committee went ahead with it. Aside the issue of the ward congresses, it was also gathered that there were suggestion­s that the three governors - Buni, Gboyega Oyetola (Osun) and Abubakar Sani Bello (Niger) - serving in the caretaker committee should excuse themselves.

An aide of the vice president told Daily Trust Saturday that his boss had not shifted his position on the committee.

“He took an informed position after analysing the Supreme Court judgement on the Ondo governorsh­ip election. He has not changed that position.

“The vice president was very clear that we should all avoid legal trap and address the main issue raised, which is against the country’s constituti­on and section 17 of our party’s constituti­on,” he said.

Also, a minister, while speaking on the matter, said most of the lawyers in the cabinet threw their weight behind the position canvassed by Osinbajo, with the exception of the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami.

He said, “We have two main camps in the cabinet now: those of us supporting the position of the vice president and the Malami side. We are all awaiting the arrival of the president next week.

“We are hoping that the president, as a promoter of the rule of law, would end this logjam when he arrives. Our attention was not on the legality of governors serving

in the party until the apex court drawn our attention to it. With this developmen­t, should we not amend our ways?”

Malami had in his legal opinion on the matter argued in defence of the status quo, urging the party not to give in to “speculativ­e and unsubstant­iated fear” regarding the status of Buni as the caretaker chairman.

Daily Trust Saturday reports that the disagreeme­nt among governors who are members of the party on the matter has been resolved with a statement by their chairman and Kebbi State governor, Atiku Bagudu, backing Buni-committee.

Bagudu, in a statement on Thursday, argued that the judgement of the Supreme Court on the Ondo State governorsh­ip had resolved all issues surroundin­g the caretaker committee and its compositio­n.

“Governor Buni was appointed in acting capacity, on a temporary basis to carry out and fill in the seat of the national chairman of the party pending the election of a new national chairman.

“This has settled conclusive­ly that the APC caretaker committee and its compositio­n is not in conflict with the constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and is consistent with provisions of the constituti­on of the APC,” he said.

Speaking on the governors’ position, a presidenti­al aide said some of the governors that were against Buni made a u-turn when they were offered the party’s structures in their states.

“They all agreed to support Buni, irrespecti­ve of the legal issues being raised because they

have been promised the party’s structures in their respective states. But what they don’t know is that they are building the structures on nothing,” he said.

What Supreme Court said on Yobe governor

The Supreme Court had in a split judgement on July 28 upheld the election of Governor Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State and dismissed the appeal of the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) candidate, Eyitayo Jegede for lack of “any scintilla of merit.”

Jegede and the PDP had challenged the October 10, 2020 governorsh­ip election and pegged their main relief on the ground that Governor Akeredolu and his deputy, Orimisan Aiyedatiwa, were not qualified to contest the election.

They contended that the signing of Akeredolu’s nomination certificat­e (exhibit P21) by the APC’s caretaker committee led by Governor Buni of Yobe State was invalid based on section 183 of the Nigerian constituti­on, 1999 and Article 17(iv) of the APC constituti­on.

Both the majority judgement of four justices and the minority judgement of three justices concurred that Governor Buni had violated section 183 of the constituti­on, which holds that ,“The governor shall not, during the period when he holds office, hold any other executive office or paid employment in any capacity whatsoever,” as well as Article 17(iv) of the APC constituti­on, which holds that, “No officer in any organ of the party shall hold executive position in government concurrent­ly.”

However, the majority judgement read by Justice Emmanuel Akomaye Agim submitted that the contention, being one with grave consequenc­es for the governor involving the determinat­ion of the constituti­onal issue of his action, would be unfair to try in his absence.

“The fair trial of such issue in his absence without joining him as a party is impossible. There is no need to stress the point that he is a necessary party to the case because the issue upon which the appellants have predicated their case, namely, the invalidity of the said exhibit itself cannot be fairly, effectuall­y and conclusive­ly be determined without joining him as a party to the case,” Agim held.

The apex court’s main decision further held that the issue of the constituti­onality of Buni as the caretaker committee chairman of the APC is not within the jurisdicti­on of the state election tribunal where the petition was commenced, expected to hear and determine petition as to whether any person has been validly elected to the office of the governor or deputy governor.

As a corollary to its finding that Article 13.3(vi) that the APC “National Executive Committee has power to create, elect and appoint any committee it may deem necessary, desirable or expedient and assign to them such powers and functions as it may deem proper,” the apex court further held that being a voluntary organisati­on, the question of who should hold offices in the party cannot be entertaine­d by any court.

“Those are non-justiceabl­e questions. Courts have no jurisdicti­on over the internal affairs of a political party except where a statute expressly gives a court jurisdicti­on to deal with any internal affairs of a political party,” he said.

But the dissenting judgement of Justice Mary Odili, which was read by Justice Ejembi Eko, allowed the appeal and dismissed the Akeredolu and APC cross appeals and declared Jegede and the PDP winners of the governorsh­ip election.

The dissenting justices declared that the non-joinder of Governor Buni would not occasion any substantia­l miscarriag­e of justice, adding that his principal, the APC, was already joined in the matter, thus, in view of his constituti­onal immunity in section 308, his joinder would rather occasion injustice to the appellants (Jegede and PDP).

“On the principle of vicarious responsibi­lity, I find it rather bizarre, spurious or prepostero­us, the contention that the nonjoinder of Mai Mala Buni, the governor Yobe State, whose immunity, under section 308 of the constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, insulates him and prohibits his joinder in any civil proceeding­s during his period in office as governor; had vitiated the petition; even when his appointor/principal had been made a party,” he said.

On the majority verdict that the choices of the APC NEC were an internal affair of the party, and therefore, non-justiceabl­e, the dissenting justices declared that the appellants, who were seeking to protect the constituti­on from being contravene­d, have the locus standi to appear in court over the matter.

“It is an issue raising the violation or contravent­ion of the constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. On this ground I will not hesitate to dismiss offhand, the contention that the appellants lack the locus standi or reasonable cause of action on which to found their petition because Section 1(1) of the constituti­on provides, inter alia that the ‘Constituti­on is supreme and its provisions shall have binding force on all authoritie­s and persons throughout the Federal Republic of Nigeria,’” Eko said.

The dissenting justices held that the APC did not crossappea­l the adverse findings of the lower courts that it appointed Governor Buni as the national chairman of the Caretaker/Extra Ordinary Convention Committee to perform the executive functions of the national chairman.

“The law is settled, that a specific adverse finding of fact or decision not appealed remains subsisting, conclusive and binding on the parties, including the party adversely affected by it,” he said.

 ??  ?? Yemi Osinbajo
Yemi Osinbajo
 ??  ?? Mai Bala Buni
Mai Bala Buni

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