A Federal High Court in Lagos on Wednesday refused an ex parte
application to stop the Chief Judge of Bayelsa State, Justice Kate
Abiru, from swearing in the Rivers State Governor-elect, Chief Nyesom
Wike, on May 29, 2015.
Justice Ibrahim Buba, while turning down the application, said granting
such would amount to “adding insult upon the injury” of the people of
Rivers State, who currently “have no judiciary.” The judge held that
though the applicants had a meritorious cause of action because the
issues bordered on the sanctity of the constitution, granting their ex
parte application may occasion a state of anarchy in Rivers State. “I am
of the firm view that no court should make the order ex parte to
further compound the problems in Rivers State,” Buba held.
The applicants are three Lagos-based legal practitioners: Monday Ubani,
John Nwokwu and Gabriel Okoro. Joined as respondents in the suit marked
FHC/L/CS/769/2015 are the Attorney General of the Federation, Mr.
Mohammed Adoke (SAN), Bayelsa CJ, Justice Abiru and Wike. The plaintiffs
are contending that Justice Abiru cannot swear Wike in because the
constitution only allowed the chief judge of the state or the President
of the Customary Court of Appeal of Rivers State to do so. The Attorney
General of the Federation, Adoke, had, in a press statement on May 19,
requested Abiru to swear in Wike on May 29, because Rivers State
currently has no substantive chief judge. Adoke had reportedly said it
was to avert a likely constitutional crisis in Rivers State.
He said the directive was in line with the constitution and urged the
citizens to take note and respect it. But Nwokwu, who deposed to a
25-paragraph affidavit in support of the ex parte application, claimed
that Adoke’s directive “is already causing public confusion and
uncertainty in the country.” The applicants therefore sought an order
“restraining the 2nd defendant from administering the oath of office on
the 3rd respondent on the basis of the directive of the 1st respondent
and to stay all actions pending the determination of the substantive
suit.” In the alternative, they wanted the court to make an order
“restraining the defendants whether by themselves, agents, servants and
privies from taking any further steps in connection with the matter
pending determination.”
They had claimed that it would be in the interest of justice to grant
the ex parte application. Buba, however, refused it, saying “we cannot
all be shallow or be shallow-minded. There shall be no room for
anarchy.” He adjourned till June 29 to hear the motion on notice.
(Punch)
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