Amaechi Vs Omehia: S’ Court fixes Nov 11 for hearing of appeals
In the midst of the hot politics in Rivers
State, the Supreme Court yesterday set aside November 11, 2013 to hear
the appeal filed by Governor Chibuike Amaechi against legal moves by his
political rival and former governor, Celestine Omehia to unseat him.
Before fixing the date at the instance of counsel to Omehia, Chief
Udechukwu Nnoruka Undechukwu, five jJustices of the apex court led by
Justice Walter Onnoghen consolidated the multiple appeals brought in
respect of his re-election that took place in April 2011 as against
August 2011.
Justice Onnoghen said he was reluctant in granting the adjournment in
view of the fact that the matter being a political case, was time bound
and needed to be dispensed with expeditiously.
He wondered why Omehia, who had previously accused the appellant
(Amaechi) of delay tactics would turn around to delay the hearing of
the appeal.
Although it was Governor Amaechi that approached the court to
challenge the decision of the Court of Appeal to join the sacked
governor, Celestine Omehia, in the substantive appeal before it. Other
parties in the mater also followed him to the apex court with their own
appeals.
The genesis of the present appeal was when the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) in 2010 published a timetable for the 2011
general election and the governorship election in Rivers State was
slated for August 2011.
The election timetable released by the electoral body also affected
five other states, whose governors then, were seeking tenure elongation
and were caught up in the staggered elections which the 2007 electoral
disputes foisted on the polity.
Prompted by this development, Governor Amaechi’s legal adviser, Chief
Cyprian Chukwu filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Abuja against
the governor and INEC, contending that the date fixed by the INEC’s
timetable was wrong.
The fulcrum of his suit was that since the Supreme Court decision
which brought Amaechi to power in 2007 was that it was the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) that won the April 2007 governorship election in
Rivers State, Amaechi’s tenure started counting on May 29, 2007 and not
on October 27, 2007 when he was sworn in after Omehia was sacked.
In his judgment, Justice Abdul Kafarati back dated Amaechi’s tenure
and said even though the governor was sworn in on October 26, 2007, his
tenure would end on May 28, 2011 or May 2015 as the case may be. His
reasoning was that since the Supreme Court said it was the PDP that won
the April 2007 governorship election in Rivers State, and not the
candidate (Amaechi), the tenure started counting on May 29, 2007 when
Omehia was sworn in.
The judge held that the period spent in office by Omehia, who was
sacked by the Supreme Court, formed part of Amaechi’s tenure of four
years, adding that it was wrong in law for the governor to expect that
his tenure elongation would run till October 2011 because his election
of April 14, 2007 under PDP platform was never nullified by any court.
The judge ruled that the Supreme Court in its judgment in October
2007 only asked Omehia to vacate office on account of illegal occupation
for the rightful person and never cancelled the poll or ordered any
fresh one.
[The Sun]
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