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Nullifies direct, indirect primaries, party to challenge ruling
A Federal High Court in Port Harcourt has delivered judgments in two
separate suits, asking the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) not to acknowledge Rivers State’s All Progressives Congress (APC)
candidates at the general elections.
Justice Kolawole Omotosho gave the injunction yesterday sequel to a
suit by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which prayed it to compel
INEC to obey the judgment of a high court nullifying all Rivers State
APC primaries and congresses.
The judge maintained that Rivers APC would not participate in the
gubernatorial, Senate, House of Representatives and House of Assembly
elections.
Omotosho, therefore, directed INEC to remove all APC candidates from ballot papers and other electoral materials.
Relying on the ruling and orders of Justice Chinwendu Nworgu of the
Rivers State High Court, Omotosho insisted that APC acted in
disobedience to court orders, and so it could not benefit from the same.
He declared: “An order is made stopping Rivers APC nominees from
parading themselves as candidates for the 2019 general elections.”
He explained that all the primaries conducted by the Rivers State
APC, having been nullified by the state high court, remain invalid
because the judgment has not been set aside. Omotosho further argued
that the APC in Rivers State has no right to nominate any candidate for
all the elections.
Reacting, counsel for candidates of the APC, Mr. Emenike Ebete, said
his clients would challenge the ruling and file a stay of execution. He
said INEC could not execute the judgment of the Federal High Court as
the ruling would not be the final declaration on the matter.
Counsel to PDP, Dike Udena, lauded the judgment, saying since the APC
failed to comply with the Electoral Act, it could not participate in
the general elections.
Senator Magnus Abe’s lawyer, Henry Bello, also said his client and others would appeal the judgment.
The court also refused to grant the application of Abe and other
candidates of the Peter Odike faction, asking to be declared authentic
candidates of the party in the state.
Omotosho held that the plaintiffs do not have legal standing given
the fact that they hinged their request on the ruling of the state high
court, which nullified primaries conducted by the APC. He held that the
plaintiffs could not be nominated by the APC for the general elections,
since a state high court had earlier set aside all primaries.
He, therefore, issued a restraining order, asking INEC not to
recognise the candidates of the APC until a higher court of competent
jurisdiction sets aside the ruling.
The APC in Rivers said it totally agreed with the court that Abe and
other members of the party, who claimed they emerged through alleged
direct primary polls, were not and could not be declared candidates of
the party in the general elections.
In a statement issued by its state publicity secretary, Chris
Finebone, the APC said its acceptance of the ruling on Abe was because
the national body neither authorised or conducted the alleged direct
primary as required by its constitution and guidelines and nor did INEC
monitor the same.
The party, however, stated that it did not agree with the court that
the Davies Ibiamu Ikanya and Peter Odike-led executive committee was
still subsisting.
He stated: “The APC has the powers to dissolve its executive
committee and that power was exercised on May 21, 2018. The APC, having
dissolved that executive, it ceased to exist and could not be
resurrected, even if the court finds, albeit wrongly, that there was no
valid congress to replace the dissolved executive.








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