Enugu State Election Petition Tribunal has rejected a request by legal representatives of Governor Peter Mbah of Enugu State to strike out a petition seeking to disqualify him over the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) certificate forgery scandal.
The candidate of the Peoples Redemption Party
in the March 18 election, Chief Chris Agu had dragged Mbah to the tribunal
demanding that the PDP candidate be disqualified for submitting a forged NYSC
certificate to INEC prior to the election. Agu is also seeking among other
things to be declared winner of the election on the basis that he won the
majority of valid votes during the election.
The chairman of the tribunal, Kudirat Akano,
after examining arguments from both sides, ruled that the motion to strike out
the case was premature, insisting that certificate forgery was a weighty
matter. She also ruled that whatever counter or objection against the petition
should be done at the end of the trial, when the tribunal will give final
judgement on the validity or otherwise of their demand.
Speaking after the session on Friday, counsel
to Chief Agu, Barr Alex Amujiogu said that lawyers informed the tribunal that
they have exchanged their pretrial forms but revealed that there were some
documents which were yet to be viewed by both counsels.
He said, “We also proposed in our individual
capacity on how we intend the lawyers to go on to pursue the case so that at
the end of the day, the tribunal will issue a pretrial report on how the
parties are to present and conclude their cases. So the only issue that is now
left in the pretrial is that there are some documents which were alluded to by
the respondents which have not been front-loaded.
“So the tribunal in its wisdom is asking that
the counsels should meet and ensure that all necessary documents which need to
be tendered at the trial are in the purview of fellow counsels. The tribunal
adjourned the matter to June 14 to conclude pretrial and to enable the tribunal
to issue a report or a guideline on how the trial will commence.”
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