Ganduje $5m Bribery Scandal: Kano Court Stops Assembly’s Probe Panel

Ganduje $5m Bribery Scandal: Kano Court Stops Assembly’s Probe Panel

Ibrahim Shuaibu in Kano

A Kano High Court presided over by Justice Ahmed Tijjani Badamasi Thursday in Kano granted an Order of Injunction restraining the Kano State House of Assembly’s Investigative Committee from further investigating the $5million bribery allegations involving Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje.

It should be recalled that the court had earlier ordered the state House of Assembly to maintain the status quo ante pending the determination of the originating summons filed by the National Coordinator of Lawyers for Sustainable Democracy in Nigeria, Mohammed Zubair, which ruled in favour of the plaintiff.

On behalf of himself and the Lawyers for Sustainable Democracy in Nigeria, Zubair had sued Kano State House of Assembly’s Chairman of the Investigative Committee on the bribery allegation against Ganduje, Baffa Babba Danagundi, and the state Attorney-General, challenging the constitutionality of the Assembly investigating the bribery allegation, which is a criminal case.

Counsel to the plaintiff, Nuraini Jimoh, in the last sitting before the judgment, argued that the Kano State House of Assembly lacked the powers to probe the criminal allegations against Ganduje.

The Assembly, according to him, only has the powers to make laws, establishing an anti-graft agency which, by law, can investigate such matter.

In his submission, the state Attorney-General, Ibrahim Muktar, who is also the Third Defendant in the litigation, aligned himself with the position of the counsel to the plaintiff.

”By virtue of my office, my own is to follow the law. I have perused the application, I stand with the plaintiff and I adopt all the processes by the plaintiff, including his argument.”

Also, the Attorney-General urged the court to disregard the counter affidavit filed by the First and Second defendants, arguing that, “It is not safe for the court to rely on the entire affidavit,” because the identity of the witness was not disclosed.

While citing Section 115 of the Evidence Act (2011), he insisted that the affidavit lacked credibility.

Counsel to the defendants, Mohammed Waziri, in his argument, told the court that the Kano State House of Assembly Investigative Panel engaged in a fact-finding mission, and not the investigation of criminal allegation.

While delivering judgment yesterday, Justice Badamasi ruled in favour of the plaintiff, stating that the power of investigation by the state House of Assembly, as contained in Section 128 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, “is neither absolute, nor at large. It is restricted by sub-section two of the same Section,”

At the close of the day, counsels to both the plaintiff and the defendants not only congratulated the judge for his “deep sense of judgment,” but also agreed to abide by the verdict.

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