Tribunal: APM to open, close case against Tinubu June 21
The Allied Peoples Movement, (APM) has told the Presidential Election Petition Court, (PEPC) that it will open and close its case in one day with just one witness to call.
The hearing in the petition filed by the APM to challenge the outcome of the 2023 presidential election has stalled due to the petitioner’s inability to get hold of a Supreme Court judgment delivered on May 26 on a related matter.
The judgement of the Supreme Court affirmed President Bola Tinubu’s eligibility to contest the Feb. 25 presidential election.
When the petitioner was billed to open its case, counsel to President Tinubu drew the attention of the court to the fact that the main issue the APM raised in its petition, was already decided by the apex court.
At the resumed hearing of the petition on Monday in Abuja, counsel to the petitioner,
Mr Gideon Idiagbonya told the court that the petitioner had only one witness to call.
“My lords, we intended opening our case today but in the cause of having a pre-trial conference with our sole witness, we realised that certain documents we intend to tender are not in the file handed over to us by the previous counsel.
“In view of this, we ask for another date to enable us open and close our case in one day since we have just one witness,” he said.
The counsel told the court that the petitioner had perused the judgment of the Supreme Court and was of the opinion that his client could still proceed with the petition.
Responding, counsel to the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC), Mr Abubakar Mahmoud, SAN said he had no objection to the application for an adjournment.
For his part, Olanipekin told the court that he had also read the judgment and he insisted that the judgment had settled the issues raised by the petitioner.
Olanipekin, however, did not oppose the application for an adjournment.
Similarly, counsel to the All Progressives Congress, (APC) Mr Charles Edosanwan, SAN, and Mr G.M Isho, counsel to the 5th respondent, Mr Kabiru Masari did not oppose the application for an adjournment.
The Chairman of the court, Justice Haruna Tsammani, adjourned hearing in the petition until June 21 for the petitioner to open and close its case as counsel had told the court.
NAN reports that the judgment in question was delivered on May 26 by the apex court and it dismissed the Peoples’ Democratic Party’s (PDP) suit which sought to nullify President Tinubu’s election based on allegations of double nomination against his running mate, now Vice-President Kashim Shettima.
The APM had in its petition marked: CA/PEPC/04/2023, contended that the withdrawal of Kabiru Masari, who was initially nominated as the vice presidential candidate of the APC invalidated Tinubu’s candidacy in view of Section 131(c) and 142 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended.
The party argued that there was a three-week gap between the period that Masari, who is listed as the 5th respondent in the petition, expressed his intention to withdraw, the actual withdrawal of his nomination, and the time Tinubu replaced him with Shettima.
It further argued that Tinubu’s candidature had elapsed as at the time he nominated Shettima as Masari’s replacement.
According to the petitioner, as at the time Tinubu announced Shettima as the vice presidential candidate, he was no longer in a position, constitutionally, to nominate a running mate.
This, according to the APM was since he, (Tinubu) had ceased to be a presidential candidate of the APC having regard to the provisions of Section 142 of the 1999 Constitution.
The petitioner further argued that Masari’s initial nomination activated the joint ticket principle enshrined in the constitution, stressing that his subsequent withdrawal invalidated the said joint ticket.
The party prayed the court to declare that Shettima was not qualified to contest as the vice presidential candidate of the APC as of February 25 when the election was conducted by INEC.
This, according to the petitioner was on the grounds of having violated the provisions of Section 35 of the Electoral Act, 2022.
The petitioner, therefore, asked the court for an order nullifying and voiding all the votes scored by Tinubu in the presidential election in view of his non-qualification as a candidate of the APC.