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PEPT verdict: Nigeria’s judiciary as democracy undertakers

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PEPT verdict: Judiciary as undertakers of Nigeria’s democracy

By Ikechukwu Amaechi

On Wednesday, September 6, the Presidential Election Petitions Tribunal (PEPT) delivered judgement in the petitions filed by Atiku Abubakar and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Peter Obi and the Labour Party, and the Allied Peoples Movement (APM) challenging the declaration of Bola Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress (APC), as winner of the February 25 presidential poll.

It is instructive that the ruling came exactly on the day the respondent, President Tinubu, marked his 100th day in office. It is also worth noting that as the judgement was being delivered in Abuja, a confident Tinubu, the man in the eye of the storm, was in far-away New Delhi, India, at the summit of the group of twenty most industrialised nations (G20), the premier forum for international economic cooperation, on the invitation of the incumbent chairman, Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India.

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I doubt if there is any Nigerian who was in doubt what the outcome of the case would be. Before Tinubu left Nigeria for India on Monday, his spokesman, Ajuri Ngelale, told Nigerians that he was “not worried” about the outcome of the court matter.

The braggadocio and hubris of the Tinubu loyalists in the week leading up to the judgement day betrayed their uncommon confidence. It was the kind of confidence borne out of prior knowledge of what was to come.

As the PEPT was delivering its judgement on Wednesday, a friend of mine, a senior lawyer, sent me a text enquiring if I was watching the “show” on television. He said the judges couldn’t even have done a better job as defence attorneys. “All they did was to mount a vigorous defence of the respondents and ridiculing the petitioners all in the name of delivering a judgement,” he wrote. I asked him if the judiciary can ever be redeemed and his answer was a categorical No!

I was saddened. Make no mistake about it. I have never believed that Nigerian courts are capable of delivering justice particularly in matters of high-octane political value like this one. But never in my wildest imagination did I believe that things could go so awry. The brazenness of the pronouncements and rationalisations was unbelievable. So, I was not saddened because I was disappointed. No! But to realise that many lawyers are increasingly losing faith in the ability of the courts to deliver justice is a bad omen.

I have had discussions in recent times with many politicians who have been in courts either defending their “mandates” as declared by the electoral umpire or trying to retrieve their alleged “stolen mandates.” It has been a tale of woes on both sides. The only determinant factor is money – loads of money. More often than not, the man with the deepest pocket triumphs. It is justice for sale.  

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READ ALSO: PEPC verdict: Nigeria’s journey to perdition has fully begun

But the outcome of this case should worry all well-meaning Nigerians because it impugns on our so-called democracy. For democracy to be “government of the people, by the people, for the people” as former U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, noted in his famous Gettysburg address on November 19, 1863, the votes of the people must be the sole determinant of who gets elected.

That is not the case in Nigeria, as indeed it is not in many other African countries, where the inalienable right of the people to decide who governs them is trampled upon and elections are not free and fair.

In every milieu where might is right, and those who are powerful can do what they wish unchallenged, even if their action is, in fact, unjustified, woe betides anyone who stands in their way. That is clearly the case with our dear country where a few people have totally captured the State.

There is everything wrong with our democracy. In a country where there is no difference between private and public purse, swearing in “winners” of a contentious election before the final determination is made in court is injurious not only to the so-called losers but the Nigerian state itself.

The odds are deliberately stacked against the petitioners. Attempt by the National Assembly in 2014 to make a law that would make the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) take the responsibility of proving the credibility of elections in the country before tribunals or regular courts failed. If that Bill had scaled through, the resultant Act would have placed the burden of proof on the INEC, instead of the litigants. It would have also reduced the difficulties petitioners normally face while trying to get the necessary documentary evidence in support of their petitions.

In their ruling yesterday, the five Justices blamed the petitioners for not producing enough evidence of electoral malfeasance even when they were well aware that the Professor Mahmoud Yakubu-led INEC blatantly refused to avail them those documents, flagrantly disobeying the Tribunal’s order.

While the alleged losers who, for all I care, may indeed be the winners, are further stretched financially in courts, those that have been declared winners, who may indeed be the losers, make use of public funds in defending their “mandates” in court.

Not only that, they deploy the resources of the state – human and material – maximally. For instance, Tinubu has been using the enormous privileges and powers conferred on him by the office of the president to consolidate power and entrench himself.

He appointed his loyalists as Service Chiefs in the first few days of his presidency. In a country where the military swear allegiance to the President rather than the Constitution, and are only interested in regime protection rather than protection of the Nigerian state, wielding the coercive powers of the state makes all the difference.

Immediately the PEPT announced the judgement date, the Department of State Services (DSS) issued an ominous warning against anyone who may have the appetite to protest the ruling. Before Tinubu jetted out to India, he had a meeting with the Service Chiefs behind closed doors. The military top brass came out of the meeting to warn would-be “troublemakers.”

While the petitioners were struggling with finances and other logistics, the President was busy making juicy appointments and dispensing political patronage. Prince Lateef Fagbemi, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), one of Tinubu’s lawyers at the tribunal, is now the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice.

The president and his Attorney-General are in a pole position to act as benefactors to the Justices and extend some favours to them. The petitioners don’t have such privileges. In a country where judges are vulnerable, where the Chief Justice, the head of the third arm of government could be muscled out of office like the former President Muhammadu Buhari did to former CJN Walter Onnoghen, the fear of the executive is the beginning of wisdom for any judicial officer.

Even presidential candidates of some political parties are seriously lobbying President Tinubu for a slice of the national cake and pledging their unalloyed loyalty.

I doubt if there is any Nigerian who sincerely believed that the PEPT will sack Tinubu. And yesterday’s judgement will only be a fait accompli at the Supreme Court should the petitioners decide to go on appeal.

Those who insist that what happened at the Tribunal on Wednesday is evidence that Nigeria is a rogue state, may not be wrong after all. Someone quipped, “After seeing this, do you still want to waste time on Nigeria’s judiciary and rogue politicians?” Some do but I don’t.

Tinubu has wangled his way to the presidency and used the judiciary to legitimise his position. Four years from now, he will, once again, use the full powers of the Nigerian state to secure a second term irrespective of what the people say or do.

Ours is a democracy where the people have no say. As a pall of silence descends on Nigeria once again as it was the case when Prof Yakubu declared the presidential election result in the wee hours of the morning when most people were asleep, highly distraught but subdued Nigerians will pick the pieces of their lives and move on.

But I foresee danger. Aside Nigerians like myself who have vowed never to vote again in any election and the attendant voter apathy that will entail, those who are still foolhardy to throw their hat into the electoral ring may decide that henceforth every electoral battle must be waged, won or lost at the polling booth rather than waiting for INEC to make a declaration and embark on a wild goose chase at the courts. When the judiciary wittingly or unwillingly becomes democracy undertakers, that is a recipe for anarchy!

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