A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the Independent National
Electoral Commission to nullify the certificate of return issued to
Christian Abah for the Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadibo Federal Constituency seat
in the House of Representatives of the forthcoming 8th National
Assembly.
Justice Adeniyi Ademola, delivering judgment in the
suit challenging Abah’s eligibility to stand for the election, held that
the allegation of certificate forgery levelled against him, by the
plaintiff, Mr. Hassan Saleh, was established to be true.
Abah was
said to have forged an Ordinary National Diploma certificate in
Accountancy purportedly obtained from the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi, in
1985.
Justice Ademola said his findings revealed that an earlier
judgment of the National/State Assembly Election Petition
Tribunal sitting in Makurdi delivered on September 6, 2011, and a
letter by the Registrar of the polytechnic, Mr. Suleiman Buba, affirmed
that the certificate presented by by Abah to INEC was forged.
The
court ordered the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Solomon Arase, to
immediately commence prosecution of Abah for forgery and perjury.
Abah,
who is a member of the Peoples Democratic Party, had earlier been
declared unopposed and elected being the only candidate presented for
the March 28, 2015 election.
The court in his judgment declared
all the votes that accrued to him in the PDP’s primary held on December
6, 2014, as wasted and also declared Saleh, who came second as the
winner of the primary.
He ordered INEC to issue a fresh certificate of return to Saleh.
The
court also ordered the incoming Speaker of the 8th National Assembly
to swear in Saleh as the member representing Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadibo
Federal Constituency.
The court also berated the conduct of the
counsel for PDP and Abah in the suit, Mr. S.I Ameh (SAN), for the
frivolous applications and tactics to delay the hearing of the case.
Justice
Ademola therefore ordered that the processes filed in the suit and his
judgment be served on the Nigerian Bar Association, the Legal
Practitioners Disciplinary Committee, the Legal Practitioners Privileges
Committee with a view of taking appropriate sanction against Ameh.
The judge also imposed a N450,000 fine on the three defendants – the PDP, INEC and Abah in favour of the plaintiff.
The
court berated both the INEC and PDP for promoting “the culture of
impunity” by their failure to disqualify Abah from participating in the
election in view of the court judgement that had since 2011 affirmed
that he (Abah) presented a forged certificate for the purpose of
standing for an election.
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