Chairman
of the PDP Caretaker Committee, Ahmed Makarfi
|
The Peoples Democratic
Party defied an order by an Abuja High Court on Monday as it started the
screening of candidates vying for various offices as part of its national
convention billed for Wednesday in Port Harcourt, River State.
The
Punch report continues:
A
Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday had made an interim order stopping the
Ahmed Makarfi-led faction of the PDP from going ahead with its plan to conduct
the national convention of the party.
But
the National Convention Screening Committee of the PDP arrived in Port Harcourt
on Monday and started the screening of the candidates.
Prominent
candidates screened on Monday ahead of the convention were a former Deputy
National Chairman of the PDP, Chief Bode George; a former Education Minister,
Prof. Tunde Adeniran; a former governorship candidate of the PDP in Lagos State,
Mr. Jimi Agbaje; and the Chairman of Daar Communications Plc, Chief Raymond
Dokpesi.
The
Chairman of the Screening Committee is a former Governor of Benue State, Dr
Gabriel Suswam.
The Abuja court ruling
The
Abuja court on Monday had made an interim order stopping the Ahmed Makarfi-led
faction of the PDP from going ahead with the national convention.
Justice
Okon Abang ruled during the proceedings that the interim order would subsist
till when the motion filed by the Ali Modu Sheriff-led faction seeking an
interlocutory injunction against the convention was heard and determined.
The
judge then fixed Tuesday (today) for the hearing of the Sheriff faction’s
motion.
The
judge made the order after joining Makarfi and six other members of his
factional caretaker committee as defendants to the substantive suit which was
filed on July 1, 2016, by Sheriff and members of his faction.
Apart
from Makarfi, who was joined as the third defendant, others comprising Ben Obi,
Odion Ugbesia, Abdul Ningi, Kabiru Usman, Dayo Adeyeye and Aisha Aliyu, were
joined as the fourth to the ninth defendants.
Justice
Abang overruled the lawyers for the plaintiffs (Sheriff faction) and the PDP,
Chief Adeniyi Akintola (SAN) and Olagoke Fakunle (SAN), who had both contended
that Makarfi and the members of his faction were not entitled to be joined in
the suit as defendants having allegedly violated the court’s past orders.
Justice
Abang ruled that he could not determine if the Makarfi-led caretaker committee
members had flouted his orders since they were not yet parties to the suit.
After
joining the Makarfi-led caretaker committee members as defendants, Akintola
urged the court to go ahead to grant an interim injunction stopping the
convention in the absence of any undertaking by their (Makarfi faction) lawyer,
Ustaz Usman (SAN) that no steps regarding the convention would be taken by his
clients.
Akintola
also informed the judge and passed to him a copy of the ex parte order obtained
from the Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, by a member of the Makarfi-led
caretaker committee of the party, Ben Obi, on August 9, directing the
convention to go on.
Akintola
said the order was to prove that the newly joined parties were unwilling to
stay action by awaiting Justice Abang’s decision.
However,
Justice Abang, in granting the interim injunction on Monday, faulted Ben Obi’s
action of allegedly secretly approaching the Port Harcourt Division of the
Federal High Court to obtain the ex parte order directing security agencies and
the Independent National Electoral Commission to monitor the scheduled
convention.
The
judge ruled, “The action of Senator Ben Obi is unlawful and unfortunate.
“A
court of coordinate jurisdiction cannot make an order that will neutralize the
proceedings in another court of coordinate jurisdiction.
“The
Port Harcourt division of this court cannot make an order to neutralize proceedings in this court.
“Any
court of coordinate jurisdiction that takes delight in making ex parte order in
frustrating another court of coordinating jurisdiction’s proceedings is
entirely on its own.
“Assuming
a counsel that filed the ex parte application advised Senator Ben Obi properly,
the embarrassing situation of obtaining an ex parte order while the ruling of
this court was being awaited would have been avoided,” the judge held.
He
said he would have adjourned proceedings to hear the plaintiffs’ motion for an
injunction without making the interim order as requested by the lawyer to
Makarfi and others, Yunus Usman (SAN), but for an urgent and compelling need
for such an order in view of Obi’s action and the need to take care of
competing interests of parties before the court.
The
judge said, “Senator Ben Obi, with the greatest respect to him, is a senior and
responsible citizen of this country. He cannot undermine the authority of this
court. He ought to have waited for the court to deliver ruling in his
application, which has now been delivered in his favour.
“Therefore,
in the exercise of my disciplinary jurisdiction, where a party has taken the
law into his hands, and in line with the Supreme Court decision in the case of
Lagos State and Ojukwu, in the interest of justice and competing interests of
parties, an order is hereby made in the interim, suspending the PDP convention
slated for the August 17, 2016, in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, pending when
the plaintiffs’ motion on notice dated July 20, 2016 is heard and determined.”
‘Convention will go on’
However,
the PDP on Monday said the party’s national convention scheduled to hold on
Wednesday would go on as planned.
The
Chairman of the National Caretaker Committee of the PDP, Senator Ahmed Makarfi,
stated this while reacting to the order of the Federal High Court, Abuja, which
stopped the convention.
He
said, “The convention is going ahead as the Abuja Federal High Court is not
superior to the Port Harcourt Federal High Court which earlier today gave us
the goahead. Court of Appeal will sort it out .”
Rivers court okays PDP
convention
But
a Federal High Court sitting in Port Harcourt directed the police and the
Department of State Services to provide security for the PDP convention.
The
court presided over by Justice Ibrahim Watila mandated the Inspector-General of
Police and the Director General of the DSS to ensure security of lives at the
event.
The
Secretary of the PDP National Convention Planning Committee, Senator Ben Obi,
had for himself and other members of the National Convention Planning
Committee, approach the court to, among other reliefs, refrain the police, DSS
and the Independent National Electoral Commission from interfering in the
successful conduct of the national convention.
Ruling
on the suit marked, FHC/PH/CS/585/2016, Justice Watila validated the holding of
the PDP national convention by also ordering INEC to ensure that it monitored
the event in line with the law.
The
IGP, Rivers State Commissioner of Police, DSS, Director of DSS, Rivers State
Command and INEC were identified as first to the fifth defendant in the
application filed Senator Ben Obi.
Justice Watila adjourned the suit to August 16, 2016, for the hearing of the originating summons filed by Senator Obi.
No comments:
Post a Comment