POLITICAL parties across the divide, including those not directly
affected, have risen in unison to reject Thursday’s announcement by the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), de-registering 28 of
the 57 parties in the country. They have described the action as another
illegal move to stifle democracy in Nigeria.
The electoral body
in a statement in Abuja by its Secretary, Alhaji Abdulahi Kaugama, said
the action was taken in exercise of INEC’s powers as enshrined in the
I999 Constitution (as amended) and the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended).
But
Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court, Lagos Friday said he
would deliver judgment in the suit filed by the National Conscience
Party (NCP) challenging the powers of INEC to de-register political
parties on March 6, next year.
He fixed the date following the adoption of written addresses by parties in the suit.
Coordinator
of Patriotic Alliance (PA), an amalgamation of political parties with
progressive leaning, Chief Maxi Okwu, immediate past Chairman of
Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), Chief Emmanuel Osita Okereke, and
National Chairman of the Movement for the Restoration and Defence of
Democracy (MRDD), Mohammed Danjuma said the action was undemocratic.
Okwu,
a lawyer and one-time Secretary General of the Conference of Political
Parties (CNPP) and current National Chairman of the Citizens Popular
Party (CPP), said the action was a clear violation of the country’s
constitution.
He said nowhere has a political party been
proscribed by fait, saying the existence and death of parties are
determined by the electorate and the founders of such parties to take
decisions on their fate.
According to him, Section 40 of the
Nigerian constitution provides Nigerians with fundamental rights and
freedom to associate, and that includes forming a political parties with
people of like minds, adding, however, that there is no way a mere
Electoral Act could nullify what was contained in the constitution,
which is a grundnorm in the country. “To me, that decision is
questionable, in terms of law,” he said.
In the same vein, Okereke
and Mohammed, whose parties were affected in the purge, believed that
INEC and its leadership had ulterior motives in taking the course of
action they took.
Okereke, who until recently was the head of
IPAC, accused INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, of acting against an
existing court order.
He insisted that INEC had no power to
de-register political parties since their existence was a constitutional
matter in the first place, stressing that it was not mandatory for
political parties to contest elections or field candidates for all every
elections. According to him, parties could exist to mobilise the people
for a specific purpose at other levels of existence, other than
contesting elections.
Mohammed blamed politicians for always
playing into the hands of undemocratic elements, recalling how elected
politicians always invited the military any time their interests were
threatened.
For him, terminating important structures, such as
political parties that would facilitate the growth of democracy, was not
in the best interest of the country’s democracy.
The MRDD leader
made allusion to the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in the case initiated
by the late fiery Lagos lawyer, Chief Gani Fawehinmi (SAN), against
INEC, which opened the door for the registration of more political
parties.
On its part, Hope Democratic Party (HDP) warned INEC to
be careful in its actions, saying it should have encouraged political
parties to merge, instead of their abrupt deregistration.
The
party’s National Chairman and presidential candidate in the last general
election, Mr. Ambrose Owuru told The Guardian that INEC ought to be
careful in the way it conducts its affairs so as not to jeopardise
Nigeria’s democratisation process.
Former National Chairman of the
Justice Party (JP) until recently, Chief Ralph Obioha asked INEC to
rethink the decision, saying the action was not good for the continuous
growth and development of democracy in Nigeria.
He said that it
was wrong for INEC to deregister the parties, especially when grants
were no longer made available for them to function, stressing that it
would not only discourage participation in politics, but would also go
to show that only parties with moneybags could operate in the country.
National
Secretary of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Alhaji Sani
Abdullahi Shinkafi, implored INEC to administratively reconsider its
action, as not doing so would ultimately work against the intent and
spirit of Nigerian constitution, which specifies the need for Nigerians
to freely associate with one another, without let or hindrance.
He
said the de-registration of parties would close up the much-needed wide
and open political and democratic space, which ordinarily allows every
shade of opinion to be democratically expressed and be heard.
Founder
and presidential candidate of the Fresh Democratic Party (FDP), Pastor
Chris Okotie, said: “It is obvious that the scar embedded in the psyche
of PDP in last year’s presidential election has inspired the fear of
authentic opposition parties.
“This is nothing short of vindictive purposelessness and transgression of the constitution.
“I
am hopeful and faithful in God that the Judiciary will erase this
aberration by INEC from our political landscape. Definitely I will
proceed to court to challenge the deregistration.”
Founder and
presidential candidate of Nigeria Advance Party (NAP), Dr. Tunji
Braithwaite, described the INEC action as an exercise in futility.
He
said: “We, in NAP, as well as those of other progressive parties ignore
INEC’s faulty step. We know Jega is doing his paymaster’s bidding in
furtherance of their hidden Agenda to give themselves a term-elongation
without going through elections. And this is ironical, since they are
adept in electoral malpractices. Why don’t they just continue their
practices?
“The fact of the matter is, we do not even need
“registration” to be very active and effective in political action
against the oppression and the defrauding of the Nigerian masses, by
those who, willy-nilly find their way to government.”
But former
Minority Leader in the House of Representatives, Farouk Adamu Aliyu, and
the Jigawa State Chairman of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Adamu
Turaki, have commended INEC for following due process in the
de-registration of the parties.
The former lawmaker said it was a
very good development and urged INEC to de-register more, some of which
he said were just the creation of the PDP-led government.
He urged
INEC to come up with a novelty that will see to fewer parties
participating in election during election year to avoid the cumbersome
nature of printing of ballot papers.
NCP was not included in the
INEC de-registered of the parties, ostensibly because Justice Abang had
on September 12, this year restrained it from deregistering it, pending
the hearing and final determination of the suit.
But the court had refused the NCP’s request to allow other parties to benefit from the same order.
NCP
is by the suit, challenging the provisions of Section 78(7)(ii) of the
Electoral Act 2010, which empowers INEC “to deregister political
parties, for failure to win presidential or governorship election or a
seat in the National Assembly or State House of Assembly.”
Counsel
for the NCP, Marcus Eyarhono, urged the court to declare the said
provision of the Electoral Act as “null and void and of no legal effect
whatsoever,” because it violated certain provisions of superior laws.
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