Prof Mahmoud Yakubu |
Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC,
Prof Mahmoud Yakubu, has asked the Court of Appeal to quash the arrest
order issued against him by the Federal High Court in Abuja on alleged
disobedience of court orders.
The INEC Chairman had gone to the Appeal Court to challenge the arrest order
issued against him on Wednesday by Justice Stephen Pam, less than 24
hours the arrest order was made.
In the notice of appeal filed through his lead counsel, Chief
Adegboyega Awomolo SAN, Yakubu claimed that Justice Pam acted in
bad faith in the issuance of the arrest order because he had already
filed a pending appeal against the order and the attention of the judge
drawn to the appeal.
Among others, Yakubu claimed that up till date, no order was enrolled
and served on him for his personal appearance in court as required by
law.
He averred that the warrant of arrest against him was a nullity
because none of the parties in the contempt case applied for issuance of
bench warrant except the judge who did so on his own.
The INEC chief maintained that he had not disobeyed any court order
because he was not present before the court when the alleged order
directing his personal presence was made and that Justice Pam who issued
the order has no jurisdiction to punish him for the alleged
disobedience of court order committed ex-facie curie (outside the
court).
Yakubu in the notice of appeal predicated on five grounds claimed
that the Federal High Court Judge was wrong to be a judge of his own
order allegedly not obeyed outside the face of the court.
He maintained that he was no longer a contemnor at the Federal High
Court under the strength of his appeal lodged at the Court of Appeal
challenging the justification of the contempt charge against him.
Besides, Yakubu asserted that Justice Pam committed a grave
miscarriage of justice when he unilaterally struck out a motion on
notice he filed on July 31 praying his court to adjourn the contempt
charge against him pending the determination of his appeal on the
contempt charge at the Court of Appeal.
He insisted that the trial court breached section 36 of the 1999
constitution by striking out his motion without hearing it, thereby
denying him his right to fair hearing in the determination on merit of
his application.
He, therefore, prayed the Court of Appeal for an order setting aside
the entire ruling of Justice Pam delivered on August 1, during which a
bench warrant for his arrest was issued.
Yakubu also prayed for an order of the appellate court remitting the
contempt charge marked FHC/ABJ/CS/854/2015 back to the Chief Judge of
the Federal High Court for reassignment to another judge of the court
for hearing and determination of the matter, on the grounds that Justice
Pam had exhibited patent bias against him in his handling of the
matter.
Respondents in the notice of appeal are Ejike Oguebego and Chuks
Okoye, Chairman and legal adviser respectively of the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) Anambra State, who instituted the contempt charge for
themselves and on behalf of other members of the Executive Committee of
the party in the state.
It would be recalled that Justice Pam had on Wednesday issued a bench warrant against the INEC
Chairman following his failure to appear before the court on three
occasions to defend himself in the contempt charge brought against him
by the Anambra State PDP.
Specifically, Yakubu was dragged before the Federal High Court for
disregarding the judgment of the Supreme Court delivered in 2014 which
ordered INEC to recognized Ejike Oguebego-led executive as the authentic
leadership of PDP in Anambra State.
No date has yet been fixed for hearing of the appeal.
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