The
Presidential Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Abuja has dismissed
preliminary objection the Independent National Electoral Commission,
INEC, filed to challenge the non-inclusion of Vice President Yemi
Osibanjo, SAN, as a party to the petition challenging the outcome of the
February 23 presidential election.
In a unanimous decision, the
tribunal held that the objection was not grounded in law. court INEC had
in the motion it filed on May 5, asked the tribunal to strike out the
petition over failure to join the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osibanjo as
a necessary party in the case.
It argued that by section 133
and 137(2) of the Electoral Act, Prof. Osibanjo, was a co-winner of the
presidential election and therefore an indispensable party whose right
to the fair hearing would be adversely affected. INEC contended that
failure to join Osibanjo as an interested party in the petition robbed
the tribunal of its jurisdiction to entertain the petition. However, the
tribunal, in the lead ruling that was delivered by its Chairman,
Justice Mohammed Garba, dismissed INEC’s objection as lacking in merit. The tribunal held that Osibanjo was not a necessary party whose participation in the proceeding was indispensable.
Relying
on section 187(1) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, the tribunal
stressed that like in Governorship election, President Buhari was the
actual candidate and therefore the necessary party in the petition. It
noted that both President Buhari who is Osibanjo’s principal and the All
Progressives Congress, APC, were duly joined as the 2nd and 3rd
Respondents, respectively. It described the office of the Vice
President as an appendage, stressing that Osibanjo could only be
regarded as an interested party but not a necessary party.
“Prayer
of the 1st Respondent seeking to strike out the petition is not
well-grounded in law, it lacks merit, it is refused and hereby
dismissed”, Justice Mohammed held. Other Justices on the presidential
tribunal that agreed with the lead ruling are Justices Abdul Aboki,
Samuel Oseji, Joseph Ikyegh, and Peter Olabisi Ige. The tribunal had
announced that it would first determine all the pending rulings before
it would deliver judgment on the substantive petition. It will be
recalled that the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, had
on February 27, declared that Buhari won the presidential contest with
15,191,847 votes to defeat his closest rival, Atiku, who it said polled a
total of 11,262,978 votes.
However, in their joint petition
marked CA/PEPC/002/2019, Atiku and his party, insisted that data they
secured from INEC’s server, revealed that contrary to the result that
was announced, they defeated President Buhari with over 1.6million votes
The petitioners maintained that proper collation and summation of the
presidential election results would show that contrary to what INEC
declared, Atiku, garnered a total of 18,356,732 votes, ahead of Buhari
who they said got a total of 16,741,430 votes. They alleged that INEC
had at various stages of the election, unlawful allocated votes to
President Buhari, insisting that the announced result did not represent
the lawful valid votes cast.
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