INEC Approaches Court, Seeks Order to Halt Judgment on ADC, Accord Deregistration

Olawale Olalekan
3 Min Read

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has officially approached the Court of Appeal in Abuja, seeking an order to halt a judgment that ordered the deregistration of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and four other political parties.

This comes after the Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday ordered the deregistration of ADC, Action Peoples Party (APP), Action Alliance (AA), Accord Party (AP), and Zenith Labour Party (ZLP) over their failure to meet the conditions for retaining their registration.

Hours after the judgment, INEC failed a stay of execution suit before the Court of Appeal.

INEC also backed an application filed by the affected parties, seeking to suspend the enforcement of the judgment pending the determination of an appeal.

At Tuesday’s proceedings, INEC said it was surprised that the high court judge delivered the judgment despite an earlier order of the appellate court halting its delivery.

Haliru Mohammed, counsel to the commission, told the three-member panel that INEC was neither notified of the judgment date nor served with any communication indicating that the decision would be delivered.

“My Lords, we are aware of an order that this court made on May 22, which stopped the delivery of the judgment of the lower court, which was initially reserved for delivery on June 5,” the lawyer said.

“We were not aware of any notice from the court regarding the delivery of the judgment. We only saw it as breaking news in the media.

“We therefore do not oppose the application of the appellant to stay the execution of the judgment.”

Shuaibu Aruwa, counsel to the ADC, alleged that the trial judge notified the party of the judgment through WhatsApp.

“Sincerely, my Lords, a lot has happened to the judiciary and this profession. What the trial judge did was dare this court of appeal by insisting that no one could arrest his judgment, even after his attention was drawn to the stay order from this court,” he said.

“The action of the trial judge calls for swift and extraordinary measures from this court. We have come to the stage where this court should press the reset button.”

Aruwa urged the appellate court to immediately suspend the judgment, arguing that it has the authority to protect the integrity of its own orders.

Other parties in the suit also warned that allowing the judgment to stand could create complications ahead of the by-elections scheduled for June 20 in six states.

Pan-Atlantic Kompass

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Olalekan Olawale is a digital journalist (BA English, University of Ilorin) who covers education, immigration & foreign affairs, climate, technology and politics with audience-focused storytelling.