The type of respect or love the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, has for the recent judgement of a Federal High Court in Umuahia is akin to the one-million-man prayer rally held last Thursday in Abuja by some northern pastors for Bola Ahmed Tinubu. These prayer warriors believe that the former Lagos State governor is best suited to be the next President of Nigeria. Malami believes that deleting Section 84(12) of the amended Electoral Act is almost the best thing to happen to the Nigerian judicial system in recent time. Though great on the face of it, these actions appear highly suspicious and self-serving.
By the way, Section 84(12) stipulates that “no political appointee at any level shall be voting delegate or be voted for at the convention or congress of any political party for the purpose of the nomination of candidates for any election.”
What this means is that political office-holders such as ministers, commissioners and other appointees must resign from office three months before the commencement of party primaries, if they must participate as delegates or candidates for elections. The intention of this law is to give everybody equal opportunity and a level playing field in the process of electing candidates for elections. The fear is that, if political appointees are not checkmated this way, they will use their paraphernalia of office to muscle their way through such elections.
Those who argue to the contrary say there is already a constitutional provision regarding the participation of political office-holders in party conventions. The Constitution, they say, stipulates 30 days for the political office-holders to resign. In their estimation, Section 84(12) runs contrary to the Constitution and should be deleted.
This is the argument deployed at the Federal High Court in Umuahia, Abia State, recently. The plaintiff is one Nduka Edede of the Action Alliance. He had approached the court to seek proper interpretation of the controversial section of the amended Electoral Act, 2022.
Penultimate Friday, March 18, Justice Evelyn Anyadike ordered the AGF to delete that controversial section from the Electoral Act. According to her, the section is unconstitutional, invalid, illegal, null, void and of no effect whatsoever. The judge held that sections 66(1)(f), 107(1)(f), 137(1)(g) and 182(1)(f) of the 1999 Constitution already stipulated that government appointees seeking to contest elections should resign at least 30 days to the date of the election.
Specifically, Section 66(1)(f) states that “No person shall be qualified for election into the Senate or House of Representatives if: he is a person employed in the public service of the federation or of any state and has not resigned, withdrawn or retired from such employment 30 days before the date of election.” Sections 137(1)(g), 182(1)(f) and 107(1)(f) make the same provision for Presidents, governors and state assembly members, respectively.
Immediately the judge in Umuahia pronounced that Section 84(12) should be deleted from the amended and newly signed Electoral Act, Malami swiftly announced that he would obey the order of the court.
“The Act will be gazetted, factoring the effect of the judgment into consideration and deleting the constitutionally offensive provision accordingly,” he enthused.
Recall that President Muhammadu Buhari had similarly urged the National Assembly to delete that section when he signed the Electoral Act last February. According to the President, it would be denying serving political appointees their right to vote or be voted for at conventions or congresses of any political party for the purpose of the nomination of candidates for any election in cases where it holds earlier than 30 days to the national election. The President followed up with a letter to the National Assembly to delete the controversial clause. The Senate overwhelmingly rejected the President’s request on March 9, 2022.
No doubt, the President acts on the advice of his Attorney-General. Malami’s actions so far have also made it obvious that he wholly supports removal of Section 84(12) from the Act. He appears to have a vested interest in the whole matter. Is he interested in becoming the governor of his state as speculated? Let’s wait and see.
It is good that the National Assembly has resolved to appeal the judgement. Members of the House of Representatives in particular believe the controversial clause is directed at political appointees, not civil servants. Describing the action of the judge as an aberration, the Reps questioned why the National Assembly was not joined as a respondent to the suit.
Human rights lawyer, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN, agrees with them. He prayed that the judiciary should not destroy Nigeria in our lifetime. Wondering how a court could nullify an Act of the National Assembly without joining the institution that made the Act, Adegboruwa quipped: “When a defendant (FG) rejoices over a judgement delivered against it as a party, then you know there is a problem in Nigeria.”
Incidentally, many senior lawyers hold divergent views on this matter. Some have argued that political appointees are also public servants because they also render public service. But the majority of the lawyers believe that Section 318(1) of the 1999 Constitution, which the court relied on to order the removal of the controversial clause, deals only with public servants, not political appointees.
Lagos-based lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, explains that career public servants are those employed in the public service and whose employments are pensionable, who may retire, withdraw their services or resign. On the other hand, political appointees, he argues, comprise government ministers, commissioners, heads of departments and agencies of government, and special and personal advisers and assistants. These officers, he notes, do not retire from appointments though they may retire from politics.
There are many other contentious issues in this case. For instance, although Section 6 of the 1999 Constitution empowers superior courts to declare an Act of the National Assembly that is in conflict with the Constitution null and void, does the court have the powers to order anybody outside the legislative arm to delete any section of the Constitution? Is it right for the court to review the matter in the first place when the amended Electoral Act is yet to be published in an Official Gazette of the Federal Government of Nigeria?
In my layman’s view, the actions of the AGF with regard to this controversial section are suspicious. The speed with which the court delivered the judgment (within one week or so) and the swiftness of the AGF in announcing that he would implement the judgement are amazing. The case should go the whole hog. The onus is on the Supreme Court to resolve this issue at the appropriate time.
Re: Soludo: The coming of Ijele Anambra
Indeed no state in Nigeria can boast of being blessed with a governor of Prof. Soludo’s pedigree. And Anambrarians trust that he will deliver. We have the belief that he will rescue us from the perfidy of March 2014 to March 2022 (eight years of the Locusts reign). He came at a most critical period in our State’s history; a juncture between hanging on and total collapse. His experience, reach and capacity are the exact compass our State needs to get out of the woods. He has started well yet he must do something about the religious dichotomy entrenched in the State by the past administration. He should equally prioritise enthroning thriving constitutional democracy at the third tier of government. Prof Soludo has a name to protect, he cannot afford to fail.
– Aloy Uzoekwe, [email protected], 08038503174
Casmir, Anambra State is destined to reach the Promised Land. It requires a Governor who is very disciplined, human and material manager, visionary, friends of the downtrodden, God-fearing, respecter of rule of law and promoter of indigenous technology. In his few days in the office, he has given people hope to trust him. His ideology of ‘stop economic waste’, love of home-made goods is very commendable. This and many other achievements will announce the presence of Ijele Anambra as the captain of Nigeria’s Light of the Nation.
– Pharm. Okwuchukwu Njike, +234 803 885 4922
Dear Casmir, Soludo’s election and inauguration as the governor of Anambra State is one big thing that has happened to not just Ndi-Anambra but the entire south east region. I think he has proven records and intellectual capacity to take Anambra to great heights. His take-off shots and policies are signs of great things to come. I hope he doesn’t deviate in the long run.
– Onyejaka Alex Arinze, [email protected]
Dear Casmir, Charles Soludo should improve on social democracy. The state assembly should legislate right of inheritance for the girl child and right of family headship for the daughter if born first. Childless widows/divorcees should be given a reasonable part of their husbands’ wealth for the care while it lasted. Intertribal/ interracial marriages should be allowed by families and third party interference should faze out. There should be right to dating and lifestyle for girls above 18 without interference.
– Cletus Frenchman Enugu, +234 909 538 5215
Dear Casy, the celebrated slap in Awka, as caused by the slap recipient, on 17th March, 2022 demonstrates recidivism and a running zero respect for the unfortunate Oga. It is also a microcosm of the ordeal most men pass through in their homes today. While some men become glorified husbands and swallow the rot, some others reject it hence, the resultant marital breakages that adorn the marital landscape these days. Solution? An unfettered return to the days of yore when virtuous Igbo women, as wives, call their husbands Nna anyi as a mark of respect which, in turn, engenders sustained marital peace that even rubs off on the external public. As for the Ijele, Charlie Nwangbafor and his amiable Deputy, Dr Onyekachi, may God provide them the wisdom of the biblical Solomon and the strength of arch angel Michael to steer the ship of Anambra’s statecraft.
– Steve Okoye, Awka, 08036630371
The late Mrs. Madeiline Albright (first woman U.S. Secretary of State) would certainly have wished Mrs. Ebele Obiano a special place in hell for waging a war against a fellow woman. Anambra, we are often told, is a land that is flooded with millionaires. The coming of Ijele Anambra, one hopes, shall open many more doors of millionaires for the good of Anambrarians and the Igbo nation generally.
– Edet Essien Esq., Cal. South, 08037952470
Dear Casy, the coming of Ijele Anambra was both timely and welcome. He is a sage, an icon, innovator and Mr. Solution as he was called at the UNN when he held sway as an economic guru. God has answered Anambra people’s prayers. Obiano’s leadership was a disaster.
– Eze Chima C, Lagos, +2347036225495
Casmir, although Soludo’s inauguration was marred by the unexpected side attraction of the ‘dirty slap’ debacle, I see a prophetic angle to it -all mischief makers in the state would be ‘slappingly’ and ‘soludoly’ rewarded if they don’t move in the Soludo direction.
– Mike, Mushin, Lagos, +2348161114572
Professor Charles Soludo, it is well. Use the little resource at your disposal to start building a new Anambra, since former governor Obiano emptied the treasury.
– Gordon Chika Nnorom, Umukabia, +2348062887535

Follow Us on Google