Amaechi, Abe factions differ over S’Court verdict on APC primaries in Rivers
By Ikechukwu
Nnochiri and Egufe Yafugborhi
PORT HAR COURT— MONDAY’S verdict of the Supreme Court on the crisis in Rivers State All Progressives Congress, APC, was greeted with conflicting interpretations by the factions loyal to the Minister of Transportation, Chibuike Amaechi and Sen Magnus Abe’s camp.
PORT HAR COURT— MONDAY’S verdict of the Supreme Court on the crisis in Rivers State All Progressives Congress, APC, was greeted with conflicting interpretations by the factions loyal to the Minister of Transportation, Chibuike Amaechi and Sen Magnus Abe’s camp.
Senator
Magnus Abe and Transport Minister, Chibuike Amaechi
While Sen
Abe said the judgment was against the interest of the Ojukaye
Amachree faction loyal to Amaechi, Amachree stressed that the Supreme Court had
not set aside his chairmanship of the Rivers APC and the congresses it
conducted.
Abe
said: “This judgment is historic and affirms the position of a High Court in
Rivers State that the action of the party in excluding members from the
processes of the congresses and depriving them their constitutional right was
wrong. And to do so in the face of a clear order of a court of competent
jurisdiction was nothing but clear stupidity.’
On his part,
Amachree said: “In the appeal filed at the Supreme Court by Ibrahim Umar and 22
others of which the ruling was given today, three issues were canvassed before
the Supreme Court one of which was that the Appeal Court did not act correctly
by granting a stay of execution on the interlocutory orders of the State High
Court.
“The Supreme
Court agreed with them. However, the Supreme Court did not make pronouncements
on the other issues since the state High Court had already given a final
judgment on them, an action that has left the present development a mere
academic exercise.
“The Supreme
Court only granted the appeal in parts and did not make any consequential
orders that can only be a subject matter at the Appeal Court when the appeal
hearing of the State High Court judgment commences.’’
The Supreme
Court, yesterday, set-aside an interim order of the Court of Appeal in Port
Harcourt, which gave the All Progressives Congress, APC, the nod to conduct its
Ward, Local Government and State Congresses in Rivers State.
The apex
court, in a judgment delivered by Justice Centus Nweze, faulted the appellate
court for issuing an order for the stay of execution of a Rivers State High
Court order that barred the APC from going ahead with its planned congress,
pending the determination of a suit before it.
It noted
that the high court had on the basis of a suit that was lodged by one Abdulahi
Umar and 22 others, issued injunctive reliefs that expressesly forbade the APC
from conducting congress in the state.
According to
the Supreme Court, Justice Chiwendu Nwogu of the high court gave the interim
order of injunction on May 11, on a day that some hoodlums loyal to a faction
of the APC, besieged the high court premises in Port Harcourt.
It observed
that despite the attack and the restraining order from the high court, which
was further reaffirmed on May 13, the APC which was a Respondent in the matter,
went ahead and conducted its Ward, Local Government and State congresses on May
19, 20 and 21.
The apex
court said it was baffled that the APC, “in the most impundent manner”,
ran to the Court of Appeal to apply for stay of proceeding and execution of the
high court order with respect to the suit marked PHC/78/2018.
It observed
that while the appellate court declined to stay proceedings of the high court,
it however stayed the execution of the May 11 order by Justice Nwogu.
Dissatisfied
with the decision, Umar and 22 other litigants who dragged APC to court over
their alleged exclusion from the primaries, took the case to the Supreme Court.
They argued
through their lawyer, Mr. Henry Bello, that the Court of Appeal engaged in
judicial rascality by refusing to abide by Supreme Court decisions on the issue
of stay of execution of valid court orders.
The
appellants told the apex court that the Port Harcourt Division of the Court of
Appeal violated the principle of staris-decisis (judicial precedents) and
accorded favourable ruling to the APC, even when it was “in grave disobedience
to two orders of the lower court”.
They prayed
the apex court to set aside the order the Court of Appeal in respect of the
case marked CA/PH/198/2018.
Meantime,
while acceding to the Appellants’ prayer, the Supreme Court, held that the
appellate court should not to have vacated the injunctive order the Rivers
state high court issued against the APC on the conduct of its congresses.
Justice
Nweze held that the action of the appellate court amounted to “sacrilegious
exercise of judicial discretion”, saying it committed “gross insurbodination”,
by refusing to abide by precedents already set by the Supreme Court.
He said the
appellate court was wrong when it judicially indulged the APC, even in the face
of abundant evidence that the Party was in contempt of subsisting court orders.
“It is a
very serious matter for any one to flout a positive order of a court and still
approach the court for remedy.
“It is
unfortunate and wrongful for the Court of Appeal to have entertained a party in
contempt of a valid court order to the extent of granting judicial favour by
way of staying of execution of an injunctive order when the party at the center
of the dispute was in gross contempt of court”, Justice Nweze held.
Stressing
that the Respondent acted “in the most impundent manner”, the Supreme Court
held: “The simple truth therefore is that when the Respondent applied for stay
of execution, it was in gross abuse of a court order”.
“The court
guides its power jealously. Regrettably, the lower court condoled the Respondent’s
conduct”.
The Supreme
Court therefore granted “an order setting aside the stay of execution order
that the Court of Appeal granted to the APC on June 21.
“This appeal
is allowed and the ruling of June 21 is hereby set-aside. That shall be the
judgment of this court”, Justice Nweze held.
While
concurring with the lead verdict, another member of the apex court panel,
Justice Inyang Okoro, held that APC’s disobedience to the high court’s order
made it ineligible for favourable judicial discretion from the appellate court.
It will be
recalled that the Rivers State High Court had in a ruling on May 30, nullified
the Ward, Local Government and State congresses of the APC held on May 19, 20
and 21 respectively.
Justice
Chiwendu Nwogu maintained that the process that led to the emergence of Ojukaye
Flag-Amachree as Rivers Chairman of APC, was fraudulent.
He ordered
the party to return to the status quo of May 11, pending the determination of
the substantive suit.
Subsequently,
the court, on October 10, voided the nomination of Mr Tonye Cole as the
gubernatorial flag-bearer of the APC in Rivers State.
Justice
Nwogu declared that Ward congresses of APC in Rivers State were illegal, sayin
they were not conducted in line with the Party’s guidelines and constitution.
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