It was
gathered that Supreme Court on Friday sacked a member of the Delta State House
of Assembly representing Ugelli North Constituency II, Mr. Edoja Akpodiete.
The apex
court ordered him to refund to the state coffers all the salaries and
allowances he had collected since he had been occupying the seat since 2011.
It was the
first time the Supreme Court would be ordering any person to refund the money
earned from office that he or she illegally occupied.
In its lead
judgement delivered by Justice Walther Onnoghen, the Supreme Court ordered that
Mr. Jenkins Gwede of the Democratic Peoples Party to take over the seat from
Akpodiete.
The court
held that the Independent National Electoral Commission had wrongfully issued
the certificate of return to Akpodiete even when it was aware that he had
ceased to be the sponsored candidate of the Democratic Peoples Party over 45
days before the state House of Assembly election was conducted on April 26,
2011.
The Apex
court described INEC’s action as worrisome and therefore awarded a cost of
N650,000 each against the electoral body and Edoja.
The court
affirmed the documents tendered by Gwede’s lawyer, Mr. Ikhide Ehighelua,
showing that the DPP had notified INEC of its choice of Gwede as its candidate
after Akpodiete formally withdrew from the election and the party returned the
N2m he paid for nomination form to him.
Justice
Onnoghen held that the INEC had “foisted on the electorate of Ugelli North
Constituency II of Delta State House of Assembly a pretender to the seat who
not only withdrew from the election in writing but collected the deposit he
paid to the 4th respondent (DPP) for the said election.”
It therefore
ordered that the 1st respondent (INEC) to issue the appellant with a
certificate of return in respect of the House of Assembly election held on
April 26, 2011.
A Federal
High Court in Asaba had dismissed Gwede’s case in a judgement delivered on June
27, 2012 for lack of jurisdiction to entertain the matter because it was
election related.
Through his
lawyer, Mr. Ikhide Ehighelua, Gwede had appealed to the Court of Appeal in
Benin, which in its judgement delivered on May 22, 2013 had resolved the issues
raised in his favour but refused to make any consequential order.
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