BREAKING NEWS
Election Sequence: AGF, Malami Slams National Assembly
The Attorney-General of the Federation, AGF, and
Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, has said that the leadership of the
National Assembly has resorted to threats and intimidation, in a bid to force
the judiciary to support its move to re-order the sequence of the 2019 general
election.
The AGF personally appeared before the Federal High
Court in Abuja yesterday for hearing of the suit filed by the Accord Party.
The senior lawyer berated the Upper legislative
chamber, describing its response to the order the court made to preserve the
Res (subject matter) of the case as “a sad development.”
Malami tackled the lawmakers after counsel to NASS,
which is the 1st defendant in the matter, J. B. Daudu, SAN, drew attention of
the judge to the furore he said the preservative order the court made on March
14, generated in both national and international media.
Daudu had insisted that the court order, which
stopped the NASS from taking further action on the Electoral Act (Amendment)
Bill, 2018, that President Muhammadu Buhari declined to assent to, “has once
again, placed the judiciary in the eye of the storm.”
Daudu made the assertion while responding to remarks
by counsel to the plaintiff, Chief Wole Olanipekun, SAN, who decried that
decision of the court to protect the subject matter of the case his client
brought before it by asking all the parties to maintain the status quo, was
grossly misconstrued “in some quarters.”
Olanipekun said, “What happened in this court on
March 14 was that though the plaintiff’s counsel applied for a preservative
order in form of some injunctive reliefs, the court, in its wisdom, simply
ruled and held that parties should maintain status quo antebellum.
“Unfortunately my lord, this has been misinterpreted
in diverse and several quarters, including the 1st defendant, as the court
preventing it from carrying out its legislative duties.”
Displeased by the comments, the AGF urged the court
not to allow itself to be intimidated, saying his office would support the
judiciary to discharge its constitutional duties.
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