By Ikeddy ISIGUZO
When the polls failed to produce a president, by INEC's
results, the Supreme Court was to provide clarity in the disputes most of which
centred on Tinubu’s qualification. Allegations against Tinubu included
perjuries on these:
. Name
. Age
. Gender
. Nationalities
. Parentage
. State of Origin
. Academic records, at home and abroad
Nobody in Nigeria's variegated history had arrived a
critical juncture in his political ventures with these baggage. Only Tinubu
could bear them with glace that made grace appear mannerless.
One of these issues, if a court interrogated it, could have
hurled Tinubu out of the race. The courts, with judges learned in law and
order, logic, over-looked them to slice legitimacy to Tinubu.
Justice John Inyang Okoro, Chairman of the Supreme Court
panel that sanctified Tinubu had given a hint on the court's thinking when
admitting documents from the parties. He chose Chicago State University's
documents to illustrate the Supreme Court's position. "When you have
documents that are coming from the same university, one positive and one
negative, I don’t know how we will resolve that, Justice Okoro said. Chris
Uche, lawyer to Atiku Abubakar, addressed the concern. "Depositions are
more effective in law than writing letters,” Uche said. The Supreme Court again
cleared Tinubu on the wavering weights of Chicago. The Court seemed to have
found no value in documents deposed in Chicago courts.
Never mind that Tinubu's lawyer had argued that a release of
his academic records in Chicago State University would batter Tinubu beyond
redemption.
"The court has done justice to all issues put up for
consideration in the petitions on the merits of the law, without fear or
favour. There is no doubt, with the profound judgment of today, that our
electoral jurisprudence and constitutional democracy are further consolidated
and embedded more indelibly in our national identity because of the diligence
and undaunted professionalism of the Honourable Justices who presided over the
matter," Tinubu's statement read. When you read the statement slowly, in
search of something you could have missed, you realise that the piles of
evidence that were trucked to court meant nothing.
Supreme Court read a judgement that at most dissolved the
issues where they were supposed to be resolved. The debris are settling at the
bottom of our legal “precedents”. They would haunt Nigeria. Many Nigerians
wanted to be surprised by the Supreme Court. They got the wrong surprise.
An obviously elated Tinubu continued, "While the
verdict of today has laid to rest the agitating discourse over who truly won
the 2023 Presidential election and met the constitutional requirements as laid
out by law, I want to reiterate that my faith in our nation’s judiciary has
never been shaken, not even for a moment, because I know that our hallowed
courts of law will not fail to administer justice to all Nigerians in all
matters and at all times”.
He has set the pace for his followers to regurgitate claims
that the judgement had added a thing to Nigeria’s electoral jurisprudence, a
term that has fallen into unattended disrepute. They are celebrating the
victory.
Here are some of the issues that attended the judgement that
stuttered at the inter-section of points of law, and points of lure. Justice
Okoro, berated Allied Peoples Movement, APM, whose case seemed the most
unsettling for Tinubu, for filing an appeal he described as baseless, and one
that contributed extra load for over-worked Supreme Court judges.
Litigants, not the appointing authorities were now
responsible for the work load of the Supreme Court, according to the erudite
Justice Okoro.
The appeal would amount to a total waste of time and an
academic exercise since the party only wanted the apex court to “state the
law”, Okoro ruled. APM withdrew the appeal. What was wrong in a party asking
the Supreme Court to “state the law”?
Was Justice Okoro bound by Justice Haruna Tsamani's
judgement on 6 September 2023 against APM at the Tribunal? APM had argued that
Tinubu should be disqualified because his running mate violated the Electoral
Act by being nominated also as a senatorial candidate.
“There exists no
display of intention by the fourth respondent (Mr Shettima) to stand as the
nominated candidate of the second respondent (Mr Tinubu) for the
vice-presidential position and also the senator representing Borno Central
district in the general elections of February 25, 2022,” Mr Tsamani said.
“There cannot be any other interpretation in the circumstance unless there is
clear intention to knowingly stand as a candidate for two elective posts in
same election cycle.” What is clear intention when violating the law? A
candidate was nominated as a senatorial candidate. He did not resign and
accepted nomination as a vice-presidential, and Justice Tsamani, who has been
elevated to the Supreme Court, was discussing intention? He said nothing about
Shettima’s nomination being made outside the deadline for nominations.
“No person is permitted to further litigate on it in any
action or proceeding. It is therefore settled and remain settled that this
petition which questions the qualification and seeks to disqualify third and
4th respondents (Messrs Tinubu and Shettima, respectively) from contesting as
president and vice president of Nigeria on grounds of double and multiple
nominations has no substance,” Tsamani concluded.
Did Tsamani mean that the matter could not be heard at the
Supreme Court by stating his decision was final? Did Justice Okoro confirm that
APM could not have litigated the matter after Tsamani had ruled, “It is
therefore settled and remain settled that this petition which questions the
qualification and seeks to disqualify third and 4th respondents (Messrs Tinubu
and Shettima, respectively) from contesting as president and vice president of
Nigeria on grounds of double and multiple nominations has no substance”?
In a country many live daily expecting miracles on the heels
of copious hours of supplications to the Almighty, and unknown beings, some
held to a last shred of hope that the Supreme Court would lift the veil on
Tinubu. That is where most of the disappointments lie.
For documents that the Supreme Court would not award any
value, why was Justice Okoro concerned about the conflicts they bore?
Tinubu was intentional and open about how he wanted to be
President. He had said at a Lagos book launch in 2018 that power was never
served a la carte.
After his December 2022 London engagement at Chatham House,
he had told his disciples over a meal that, "Political power is not going
to be served in a restaurant. They don’t serve it a la carte. At all cost,
fight for it, grab it and run with it”. Was that not what he did at the
election?
There were more questions about Tinubu than what he did in
Chicago. His ability to graduate from Government College, Lagos, four years
before it was built, sustains my interests in the President. How was that
resolved beyond reasonable doubt?
Finally…
JIKA Attoh, broadcaster, my brother and friend, transited on
Wednesday 25 October 2023. Tributes have been pouring in about the impacts he
made. There would be more on this later. My condolences to his family and
friends. May the Almighty rest him.
Isiguzo is a major commentator on minor issue
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