Election Petition: Stop Sending Junior Lawyers, INEC Tells Senior Lawyers

Election Petition: Stop Sending Junior Lawyers, INEC Tells Senior Lawyers

• Issues Certificate of Return to Nwajiuba

Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has urged senior lawyers engaged in the election petition process to stop sending junior lawyers to the headquarters of the commission to collect or process documents as regards election tribunal.

The INEC National Commissioner and Chairman Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Festus Okoye, made the call yesterday while presenting Certificate of Return to Hon. Emeka Nwajiuba, the House of Representatives member-elect, representing Okigwe South Federal constituency (Ehime, Mbano/Ihitte, Uboma/Obowo), in Imo State.

He said that INEC is irrevocably committed to obeying court orders and court judgments, stressing that as far as this commission is concerned, it is the duty and responsibility of courts to adjudicate on matters.

Okoye added that whenever the certified true copy of the judgment of court is served on INEC, the commission would obey and enforce all court judgments.

Okoye stated: “We are now in the election petition process and in almost all the election petitions, the commission is joined as a respondent. We want to appeal to senior lawyers who are representing both the petitioners and respondents to be circumspect, especially when issues concern their dealings with INEC.

“The headquarters does not warehouse ballot papers and other election materials. Election materials are warehoused either in the various local governments or at various offices of the commission.

“So, what happens is that when parties who are in the election petition process apply to the court for the inspection of the materials or for the photocopy of materials, those court orders are served on us. It is now the responsibility of the commission to direct the appropriate local government or appropriate state to release those documents to the lawyers who are engaged in the election petition process.

“Sometimes, senior lawyers send junior lawyers who know next to nothing about election petition to the commission and they drop letters in the national headquarters here and ask for documents that are ordinarily not supposed to be here, and when we don’t give them those documents they just work across the gate and address a press conference, claiming that the commission has refused to obey court order.

“I believe that senior lawyers should be very careful in the way they make some comments, and when they are sending people to collect documents or process documents; they should send lawyers who understand election petition process and how the system works,” Okoye explained.

The commission, however, assured that it was committed to giving all the political parties that are in the election petition process whatever documents they want.

The commission appealed to the political parties and the lawyers engaged in the election petition process to show leadership and courage when dealing with issues around whether the commission has obeyed a particular court order or not.

“Having said that, I want to present this certificate on behalf of the commission to Hon. Emeka Nwajiuba, the House of Representatives’ member-elect, representing Okigwe South Federal constituency on the platform of the Accord Party.”

Responding, Nwajiuba commended the electoral body and the judiciary for retrieving his mandate.

He added that though the election was conducted on the 23rd of February, with a rerun on March 9, and final collation on March 23, it took a long time for him to collect his certificate of return due to an earlier mistake by INEC in giving the certificate of return to a person who was adjudged by law as not being a candidate in the 2019 general election.

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