TINUBU ASKS COURT TO DISMISS SUIT SEEKING HIS IMPEACHMENT
President Bola Tinubu has asked the Federal High Court in Abuja to dismiss a suit that is seeking to compel the National Assembly to initiate impeachment proceedings against him over alleged rights violations.
The suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1334/2024, was brought before the court by a legal practitioner, Mr. Olukoya Ogungbeje.
The plaintiff, in his suit that has the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Prince Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, as the 2nd defendant, is seeking six principal reliefs from the court.
He urged the court to declare that alleged persistent suppression of peaceful protests organised by Nigerian citizens by the President Tinubu-led administration amounts to an impeachable offence.
The plaintiff alleged that the government had between August 1 and 10, 2024, violently clamped down on peaceful protesters across the federation, an action he argued constituted misconduct and a ground for Tinubu’s impeachment from office.
The plaintiff maintained that section 143 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, empowered the National Assembly to set machinery in motion for Tinubu’s impeachment.
However, in a joint preliminary objection filed against the suit, both President Tinubu and the AGF queried the locus standi or legal right of the plaintiff to institute the action.
Aside from praying the court to dismiss the suit for being incompetent, the defendants insisted that the action failed to disclose any reasonable cause of action to warrant an exercise of judicial discretion in his favour.
In the process filed by their team of lawyers led by Mr. Sanusi Musa, SAN, Tinubu and Fagbemi further challenged the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter.
The defendants prayed for “an order striking out this suit for being incompetent as this suit is not initiated by due process of law having been initiated under a wrong procedure.”
Adducing 18 reasons why the case should be terminated, the defendants argued that the plaintiff filed the action on behalf of faceless citizens, noting that he did not disclose the persons whose rights were allegedly violated. The defendants argued that by the provision of Section 46 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, only the person whose right was breached has the right to file an action before the court to seek redress.
According to the defendants, “Pursuant to the provision of Section 46 (3), the Chief Justice of Nigeria has brought into being the Fundamental Rights (Enforcement Procedure) Rules, 2009, which makes ample provision of the procedure to follow in filing an action with respect to a breach of the Fundamental Rights of any Nigerian.”
They argued that the plaintiff’s questions two and three for determination were in respect of the alleged breach of the 1999 Constitution by the 1st defendant (President Tinubu) vis-a-vis Section 143 of the said constitution. The defendants argued that the plaintiff failed to disclose any of his rights that were breached.
Likewise, in a counter-affidavit deposed by one Gbemga Oladimeji, a principal state counsel in the Federal Ministry of Justice, he averred that contrary to the plaintiff’s claim, the President Tinubu-led government has been a promoter of democratic tenets. He averred that the president had always allowed people to air their grievances and conduct peaceful protests.
“I know for a fact that the protest conducted between 1st August 2024 and 10th August 2024 was peaceful, as there was a court order limiting the protesters to demonstrate within a confined location,” he added.
The deponent added that during the protest, security agents under the control of the president were present to protect the protesters and ensure that their civil action was not hijacked by hoodlums, he averred, adding that “I know as a fact that the 1st defendant has always ensured that law and order are adhered to strictly by the security agencies and institutions of the arm of government.
“Contrary to the deposition in paragraph 26 of the Affidavit in support of the Originating Summons, I know as a fact that the 1st defendant has not violated any provision of his oath of office and allegiance.
“There has been no breach on his part that would warrant his impeachment from office as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”
Meanwhile, VANGUARD reports that Justice James Omotosho has adjourned the case till March 4 to enable the counsel representing the plaintiff, Mr. Stanley Okonmah, respond to the preliminary objection by the defendants.