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Ogun-East
senator in the National Assembly, Buruji Kashamu, has withdrawn a N20.1bn libel
suit he instituted against former President Olusegun Obasanjo before a Federal
Capital Territory court in Abuja.
It was learnt that the presiding judge, Justice
Valentine Ashi, struck out the suit on May 26, 2015, following the notice of
discontinuance of the suit filed by the plaintiff.
Kashamu, a Peoples Democratic Party chief in Ogun
State, was said to have anchored his decision to withdraw the suit on “an
ongoing settlement talks” between him and Obasanjo.
But the lawyers who are representing the former
President in the suit said they were not aware of such talks.
The Punch report continues:
Kashamu had on February 6, 2014, sued Obasanjo for
“maliciously and recklessly” publishing a letter titled, ‘Before it is too
late,’ addressed to former President Goodluck Jonathan in December 2013.
The newly-inaugurated senator had asked the court to
award him N20bn as aggravated and exemplary damages, and another N100m against
Obasanjo for maliciously portraying him as a fugitive wanted for drug- related
offences in the United States of America.
Kashamu had already called two of his three proposed
witnesses before he decided to withdraw the suit.
The two witnesses who had appeared before the court,
Haruna Rasheed and Omotayo Alade-Fawole, testified that the publication of
Obasanjo’s letter in the media portrayed Kashamu in a bad light and destroyed
their long years of business relationship with him.
But before he could call his third witness, Kashamu on
December 5, 2014, moved the court to grant an order restraining Obasanjo from
going ahead with the public presentation of his book, “My Watch.”
Kashamu had anchored the prayer on the grounds that
the book touched on the subject matter of the libel suit.
But Obasanjo had shunned the court order and went
ahead to present the book in Lagos on December 9, 2014.
The plaintiff, however, returned to court on December
10, to report that Obasanjo had flouted the December 5 court order.
Justice Ashi, in a ruling, held that Obasanjo was in
contempt of court for flouting his order and directed the various security
agencies to seize the copies of the books wherever they were found.
The judge also gave Obasanjo 21 days to show cause why
he should not be punished for contempt.
The judge later lifted all orders against Obasanjo in
a ruling delivered in April following counter arguments by Obasanjo’s lawyer,
Mahmud Magaji (SAN).
Proceedings
were to resume on the main libel case, when Kashamu brought an application for
the withdrawal of the suit.
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