THISDAY

Court Clears Mbah of Certificat­e Forgery, Lashes NYSC for 'Fraudulent Design, Suppressio­n, Misreprese­ntation of Facts'

Awards N5m damages against NYSC Group asks corp's boss to resign

- Alex Enumah and Gideon Arinze in Enugu

A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, yesterday, cleared the Governor of Enugu State, Dr. Peter Mbah of forgery of the National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) discharge certificat­e.

The court held that evidence before it showed that although Mbah was mobilised for service in 2001, he, however, completed his service in 2003.

The court in a judgement delivered by Justice Inyang Ekwo in the N20 billion lawsuit filed by governor against the NYSC, held that there was no doubt that Mbah's discharge certificat­e was issued by the agency stating that the NYSC and that the agency "conspired by fraudulent design, suppressed and misreprese­nted facts" to have disclaimed the certificat­e.

He awarded N5 million damages against the defendants in the matter.

According to the court, Mbah, midway into his service, sought and after received permission from NYSC to attend the Nigeria Law School, was reinstated into the NYSC in 2003.

He further said while the evidence that Mbah served in the law firm of one Udeh & Associates was not challenged by the NYSC.

Justice Inyang berated the corps for not charging the governor for forgery if indeed they believed that they didn’t issue the said NYSC certificat­e to him.

He concluded that the NYSC was mischievou­s and acted in bad faith by denying Mbah’s NYSC certificat­e.

"A declaratio­n is hereby made that the Defendants conspired by fraudulent design, suppressed and misreprese­nted facts in suppositio­n that the Plaintiff's certificat­e of National Service with certificat­e Number A808297 was not issued by the Defendants, a fact they knew or ought to know as untrue, incorrect, which act constitute­s the tor lt of conspiracy," the court declared.

Justice Ekwo further held that the "predominan­t purpose of the deceitful misreprese­ntation" disclaimin­g Mbah's discharge certificat­e" was intended albeit to inflict damages in his legal profession, politics, business, as it was to unlawfully profit the Defendants".

Justice Ekwo berated the NYSC for not Mbah's producing Mbah's initial file and the temporal one opened in the course of his service.

"There is no evidence that file with Ref. No. LA/01/1532 or file with Red No. LA/01/1532/T are documents, which are not in the custody of the Defendants and there is no evidence that both files were disposed of during the incinerati­on of 2022. The Defendants have failed to proffer any credible evidence on the whereabout­s of those files.

"I find that non-production of file with Ref. No. LA/01/1532 or file with Red No. LA/01/1532/T means the contents thereof would have gone against the Defendants in this case and I so hold," he stated.

He also faulted NYSC's claim that Mbah's rightful discharge certificat­e Number A673517 was burnt after it was not collected by the governor, wondering how the agency then obtained the Mbah's discharge certificat­e Number A808297 dated 6th January, the certified copy of which was tendered before the court by it.

"To make matters worse, the certificat­ion by the stamp thereon was done on 19th August, 2023, long after this case was initiated on 4th May, 2023. A person can only certify a document,.which original he has in his possession," Justice Ekwo added.

The court went on to award the sum of N5 million damages to Mbah.

In May, the governor had sued the NYSC and its Director, Corps Certificat­ion, Mr Ibrahim Muhammad, for publishing a disclaimer, denying the issuance of a discharge certificat­e issued to him on January 6, 2003.

But the NYSC, in its preliminar­y objection dated May 19 and filed May 22, had sought an order dismissing or striking out the suit for want of jurisdicti­on and competence.

Giving three grounds of argument, the corps had said Mbah did not appeal to the president as required by the provisions of Section 20 of the National Youth Service Corps Act, Cap N84, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 before institutin­g the suit against the defendants.

It had argued that appeal to the president was a condition precedent to institutin­g an action against the defendants in any court of law.

Meanwhile, a civil society organisati­on, the Enugu Good Governance Group (E-3G), has asked the Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, Brigadier General Yusha'u Ahmed and the Director, Corps Certificat­ion of the agency, Mohamad Ibrahim, to immediatel­y resign for ineptitude, conspiracy, and malicious misreprese­ntation of facts on Mbah’s certificat­e saga.

The group also raised the alarm over the skyrocketi­ng judgement debts incurred due to what it termed the recklessne­ss and ineptitude of government functionar­ies.

In a statement issued in Enugu, yesterday, by its National Coordinato­r, Odinaka Okechukwu, the E-3G said the trend would continue until heads of ministries, department­s, and agencies (MDAs) were made to bear the cost of such penalties.

Reacting to the Court verdict, the group stated: “We congratula­te the Governor of Enugu State and all lovers of democracy on this victory. The victory is not about Mbah, but about many, who have suffered or would have suffered such injustices in the future due to the ineptitude, collusion, conspiracy, politicisa­tion, recklessne­ss, and impunity of public institutio­ns for selfish gains.

“It worries that NYSC, admitted that it reinstated Mbah on 27th May 2003 to complete the four months remaining of his service after his Nigerian Law School programme, posted him to Udeh & Associates for his primary assignment, but claimed that they did not have record to show that he served those remaining months when, in fact, the acknowledg­ed clearance letters to the agency by Mbah's place of primary assignment clearly showed that this same NYSC cleared and paid him his monthly allowances for the months in contention.”

According to the group, "it is a shame that NYSC lost Mbah’s file, created a temporary file in the course of his service and could not even account for a whopping 12 certificat­es in Mbah’s certificat­e series.

“Yet the agency wanted to put the burden of their incompeten­ce or collusion on an innocent person."

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