Presidency: Atiku knows fate Feb 21

eligibility to contest for president, Court adjourns suit challenging Atiku’s eligibility to contest presidency till Dec 6, Nigeria sprinting towards disaster

A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Monday, fixed February 21, 2022, for judgment in a suit seeking to challenge former Vice President Atiku Abubakar’s eligibility to vie for the office of the president.

Justice Inyang Ekwo fixed the date after taking arguments from counsel to the parties in the suit.

A group, an Incorporated Trustees of Egalitarian Mission for Africa (EMA), in a suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/177/2019 had sued Atiku, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) as first to fourth respondents respectively

EMA is challenging Atiku’s eligibility to contest for presidency on the grounds that he was not a Nigerian citizen by birth.

The group asked the court to hold, among others, that considering the provisions of sections 25(1) &(2) and 131(a) of the constitution and the circumstances surrounding the former vice president’s birth, he cannot contest for the top office.

Also, the Adamawa State government, through its Attorney-General, had, on July 27, sought an order of the court to be joined in the suit.

The court, in the motion dated April 26 and filed on June 24, granted the prayer of the Attorney General of Adamawa State to be joined in the case as fifth defendant.

The Adamawa State government had told the court that Atiku was eligible to vie for the office of the president.

It said Atiku, against whom the suit was primarily directed, is a citizen of Nigeria from Adamawa who had been elected as a governor of the state in 1999 and served as the vice president of the country between 1999 to 2007.

It stated that the suit threatened the right of not just the former vice president to contest the office of the president “but that of the citizens of Nigeria, of Adamawa origin covering 12 out of the 21 Local Government Areas in the state.”

When the matter was called on Monday, counsel to the plaintiff, Akinola Oladimeji, disclosed that the matter was slated for hearing of his originating summons.

“We have amended originating summons in response to 1st to 5th defendants counter affidavits,” he said.

Eyitayo Jegede, who appeared for Atiku, said a notice of preliminary objection was filed.

Jegede, after withdrawing two motions earlier filed, one of which challenged the jurisdiction of court, urged the court to dismiss the plaintiff’s application.

He argued that a previous case relied upon by the applicant in filing the suit did not relate with the matter at hand.

The senior lawyer also argued that the matter was already stale as it was tied to 2019 election in which his client vied for the election, challenged the poll and was unsuccessful. He said this defined the futility of the plaintiff case.

Corroborating Jegede’s submission, counsel to the PDP, Adedamola Falokun, said he also filed a notice of preliminary objection, describing the matter as a pre-election matter and urging the court not to waste its time on it.

“I stand in alignment with the learner SAN that this matter is stale. They filed this before 2019 election that the 1st defendant (Atiku) should not be cleared.

“The 1st defendant had been cleared, he contested and lost in the election. And you are still talking about 2019 when we are in 2021 and in few days, we will be in 2022,” he said.

The lawyer argued that there was no single line in the plaintiff’s application that specifically stated on good ground why Atiku could be debarred from being cleared from contesting election.

He urged the court to dismiss the suit with punitive cost against the plaintiff.

Also lawyers to the 4th (AGF) and 5th (AG of Adamawa) defendants also presented their arguments in the matter.

The plaintiff’s lawyer, Oladimeji, disagreed with counsel to the defendants. He said the suit sought to know the citizenship of Atiku, clarifying that the suit was not a pre-election one.

“For the purposes of clarity, a pre-election matter is filed by an aspirant in an election. The plaintiff is not an aspirant, it is only seeking an interpretation into the questions raised,” he said.

Oladimeji argued that even though Atiku was said to have been born in Nigeria, he was not a Nigerian citizen. He stated that for the fact that the mistake had been done in time past did not mean that this should continue.

He said the interest of the group was for the court to interpret the constitution within the ambit of the law.

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