On Monday, March 2, a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja rejected an
application for an order to stop the Independent National Electoral
Commission from making use of the electronic card readers in the
forthcoming general elections.
The ex parte application, was filed in behalf of four political
parties – the United Democratic Party, Action Alliance, Allied Congress
Party of Nigeria and Alliance for Democracy.
The parties’ argument was that the use of card reader Machine for the
forthcoming election was contrary to the amended Electoral Act 2010 and
that their members across the country who had been enlightened on the
accreditation procedure as contained in the Electoral Act 2010 would be
disenfranchised as they were not educated on the use of card reader.
In his ruling on the application filed on behalf of the political
parties by four Senior Advocates of Nigeria, Justice Adeniyi Ademola,
held that INEC deserved to be given a chance to state its defence before
making a final pronouncement on their request.
Ademola stated that the political parties had duly proved that they
had legal rights to institute the action and that the case was one that
could be litigated on, but however, insisted that he could not grant the
interim orders sought by the applicants without first hearing from
INEC.
In futherance to the ruling, the court ordered INEC to file its defence within four days of receiving the court papers.
The hearing of the substantive suit has been fixed for March 10.
hmmmm, we are watching!
No comments:
Post a Comment