The Guardian (Nigeria)

Osun council election and challenge to statusquo

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in court, said the election as proposed by the OSIEC, was not known to the law in Nigeria.

State Chairman of the party, Soji Adagunodo said, “The PDP would not participat­e in an election not recognized by the constituti­on. We have a national constituti­on and we are running a presidenti­al system of government in Nigeria.

“Now, they want to enact a parliament­ary system of government at the local government level and this particular matter is a subject of litigation in the Federal High Court in Abuja. We will not take part in an election that the court might notify afterwards, so we are not going to commit our resources to an illegal election and local government system.”

Three chieftains of the party, Kolawole Osunkemita­n, Douglas Adeyinka Oyinlola and Aderemi Adeniran Adelowo, had on December 4 last year, secured an Abuja Federal High Court’s interim order that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Accountant­General of the Federation and the Ministry of Finance should withhold statutory allocation­s to the state’s councils from the federa- tion accounts and suspend the election from holding.

But the state government which said its actions concerning the conduct of the election and the administra­tion of the councils were covered by the State of Osun Local Government Areas (creation and administra­tion) Law, 2015 and the State of Osun Local Government Areas amendment (No 1) Law, 2017, passed by the State of Osun

House of Assembly and signed by the governor, contested the order and got a reprieve when the court held on January

24, 2018, that the order has lapsed by effusion of time.

The court further held that they were caught by the provision of Order 26, Rule 12 of the Federal High Court Civil Procedure Rules which provides that an order granted upon an ex parte applicatio­n will lapse where a person affected by the orders filed an applicatio­n to discharge and/or vary the orders and the applicatio­n is not heard within 14 days of filing and adjourned the case till March 12, 2018.

Despite the technicali­ties that created a space for the election to hold, another legal front was opened by a human right activist, Barrister Kanmi Ajibola, at an Osun State High Court sitting in Ilesa where he urged the court to declare as unconstitu­tional the law that the state government relied on to administer the councils.

According to the lawyer in a suit where he joined Governor Rauf Aregbesola, the House of Assembly, OSIEC and 8 political parties, the court should declare the law that proposed a parliament­ary system for the state’s local councils null and void.

Besides, he stated that the makers of the law, “State of Osun House of Assembly” and the person who signed it, “Governor of the State of Osun” and the law itself “State of Osun Local Government Areas (creation and administra­tion) Law, 2015,” upon which the processes of the election are based, are strangers to the 1999 Constituti­on and are non-existing.

Ajibola who claimed in a 56-paragraph affidavit that he was billed to contest the chairmansh­ip under the platform of PDP and was already adopted as a sole candidate in Oriade local council, also sought a declaratio­n that “the 1999 Constituti­on having been modeled on the presidenti­al system of government, it is unlawful and unconstitu­tional for the 1st and 2nd defendants, by legislatio­n, to introduce a parliament­ary system of government into the election and administra­tion of the Local Government in Osun State.”

While the outcome of the legal fireworks in Abuja and Ilesa is being awaited, the APC, basking in the victory that gave it total control of the councils, described the election as a triumph for the people and one big step forward for the popular desire of Nigerians to revert to parliament­ary democracy.

In a statement by the Directorat­e of Publicity, Research and Strategy and signed by its Director, Kunle Oyatomi, the party congratula­ted the people “for the emphatic statement they got across to the haters of progress in Osun that the people know what they want and they will not allow themselves to be deceived by the shenanigan­s of the opposition.”

According to the party, “beyond the electoral victory, is the political step forward into the less expensive parliament­ary democracy, which will now start in Osun’s local government setting for the first time in 52 years since our parliament­ary democracy was destroyed by the military in 1966.

“When the import of this election will be addressed in the history books in the future, the State of Osun will be celebrated as a catalyst for the return of parliament­ary democracy if not in Nigeria, certainly in Yorubaland.

“Those who objected to the developmen­t met their waterloo in the court and owing to their obsession for retaining the presidenti­al system, they shot themselves in the foot, anticipati­ng victory at the court by not registerin­g to participat­e in the election. They miscalcula­ted so badly that it turned out a double tragedy for them. And as God would have it against the PDP and its co-travelers, their double tragedy translated into double massive victory for the APC and the people of Osun.”

Although the path that Osun has chosen for its council is in line with the public agitation for Nigeria to go back to the pre-military era governance system, it remains to be seen if the approach taken by the state government can stand the test of legal scrutiny.

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