Obi’s petition stepped down over poor scheduling of documents

Bola Tinubu and Peter Obi

The Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) for the third time this week, was forced to step down hearing in the petition filed by Mr Peter Obi and the Labour Party due to poor scheduling of documents.

Obi and his party are before the election petition court challenging the election of President Bola Tinubu and the Vice-President, Senator Kashim Shettima.

Chairman of the court, Justice Haruna Tsammani, at the resumed hearing on Thursday, had to step down the petition, on account of poor scheduling of documents the petitioners sought to tender to prove their allegation of electoral malpractice during the Feb. 25 presidential election.

At Thursday’s proceedings, the court observed that the documents were not properly scheduled as it had ordered counsel to do.

There was some confusion as a lot of discrepancies were noticed as Mr Emeka Okpoko, SAN from the Obi legal team attempted to tender documents from the 23 local government areas of Benue.

All efforts to reconcile the discrepancies and reschedule the documents were futile forcing the judges to rise for about 15 minutes to allow the petitioners rectify the confusion.

The court asked Okpoko to rather file a different schedule of documents he had prepared which the court said was easier to understand than the earlier filed schedule.

The five Justices then retired to their chambers to await the time the legal team would put its house in order.

The confusion happened right in the presence of Obi, his running mate, Mr Datti Baba-Ahmed, the suspended Chairman of the party, Mr Julius Abure and other Labour Party members.

"

No comments
Leave Your Comment

About

Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a man of many traditional honours across the country, from north to south, west to east. The array of titles he has garnered was only comparable to that of Chief Moshood Abiola, winner of the 1993 Presidential election.

Newsletter

Subscribe to our Newsletter to be updated.

en_USEnglish