After two lawyers with different briefs claiming to represent the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) clashed at the Appeal Court yesterday, the leadership of the Labour Party has alleged that it is a ploy to frustrate the effort of House of Representatives member, Amobi Ogah from reclaiming his mandate.
Recall that on September 6, the National Assembly Election Tribunal sitting in Umuahia, sacked the Labour Party’s Ogah, and declared Nkeiruka Onyejeocha of the APC, who is the current Minister of State for Labour and Employment, winner of the Isiukwuato Umunneochi Federal Constituency election.
Ogah immediately filed an appeal to challenge his sack. Confusion, however, arose on Thursday when two legal practitioners showed up, each brandishing a letter of authority to speak on behalf of INEC, when the case came up for hearing in Lagos, the venue of the Appeal Court.
The drama has forced the leadership of the Labour Party to write a letter titled, “Open letter to INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, on the show of infamy and dishonour by the commission in election appeal held in Lagos”, to the commission’s chairman, pleading with him not to scuttle the appeal of its candidate.
Reacting at a press conference on Friday, the National Publicity Secretary of LP, Obiora Ifoh, also read out the letter and described the incident as a deliberate act by the commission to frustrate their effort at reclaiming Ogah’s mandate.
He said, “Mr Chairman Sir, we, therefore, bring to your notice an ugly incident that happened yesterday October 19 at Lagos State, venue of the Appeal Court on case No. CA/OW/HR/AB/06/2023 between the Labour Party candidate, Hon. Amobi Ogah, who is the plaintiff and the All Progressives Congress candidate, Nkiruka Onyejeocha, who is the respondent. INEC is also a respondent in that matter.
“What played out yesterday was unbelievable hence we call on you to nip the development in the bud to avoid a messy situation. INEC had engaged a Senior Counsel, J.O. Asoluka (SAN), as its lawyer with a letter of authorisation to represent the commission. But at the commencement of the hearing at the Appeal Court, another lawyer surfaced with a letter of authority to take over the case of the same INEC without prior notice to J.O. Asoluka (SAN), that the new counsel had been engaged. They also did not see any need to inform the plaintiff of the development as required by law. When the matter thus came up, a squabble ensued between the two counsel as to who had the authority of INEC to represent it in the case.
“Mr Chairman Sir, it has now dawned on us that the change of legal guard without properly notifying the interested parties was carefully orchestrated by the commission in an alliance with our opponents with the intention to stall proceedings at the Court of Appeal and frustrate our candidate’s appeal that was due for hearing on Thursday.”
An emotional Ifoh disclosed that they were even more embarrassed to observe some expelled LP members, who had joined the Lamidi Apapa-faction fraternising with members of the ruling party at the court.
The LP spokesman stated that the sight made them start suspecting the court drama must have been stage-managed to embarrass their candidate.
“We are raising this alarm because time is of the essence, even though, the collaborators achieved their intentions as the appeal could not be heard and was adjourned by the court to enable INEC to put its house in order and determine who of the two counsel, has her authority to represent her in the appeal.
“We are therefore using this platform to urge you (INEC chairman) to investigate the inglorious roles which the legal department of the commission is playing and sanction erring officials. The role of INEC in this matter is simply to defend the outcome of the election which it conducted and on which it declared Hon. Amobi Ogah as the duly elected candidate to represent Isikwuato/Umunneochi Federal Constituency in the National Assembly.
“The commission must reject any semblance of compromise. Nigerians are still looking up to it to redeem its image, the aftermath of the controversial 2023 general elections. It must not allow a few pliable members of the Commission to further taint the integrity of the commission,” he stated.
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