From Tony John, Port Harcourt
A River State High Court in Port Harcourt has declared that the attempt to extend the tenure of office of local government chairmen is unconstitutional and ultra vires to their oath of office.
The presiding judge in suit no. PHC/1320/CS/2024, Justice Daketima Gabriel Kio, held that the Local Government Law No.2 of 2024, purporting to extend the tenure of local government chairmen for six months after the expiration of their tenures is invalid.
Justice Kio stated that it was inconsistent with the provisions of the 1999 Constitution and Section 9 (1) of the Rivers State Local Government Law No. 5 of 2018.
The chairmen of Opobo/Nkoro and Bonny LGAs, Enyiada Cookey-Gam, and Anengi Claude Wilcox, as well as four others were the applicants, while the Governor of Rivers State, Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, and Attorney General of Rivers State, among others, were the respondents in the suit.
Justice Kio further held that the applicable law in the circumstance is the Rivers State Local Government Law No.5 of 2018 that fixed three years’ tenure for local government chairmen and councillors, and not the Local Government Law No.2 of 2024, which was enacted to unlawfully extend their tenure.
The defected former members of the Rivers State House of Assembly led by Martin Amaewhule had purportedly attempted to extend the tenure of the local government chairmen in obvious defiance to the State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, with whom they have been having a running battle.
But the Opobo/Nkoro, Bonny, Ahoada-West, Ahoada-East, and Oyigbo LGA chairmen, not wanting to be dragged into any constitutional violation, approached the high court in the state to seek clarification on the issue.