Dino Melaye, the senator representing Kogi West, has urged the Supreme Court to declare the petitions submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission seeking his recall as illegal.
The Senator in an appeal he filed against the March 16, 2018, judgment of the Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal, also urged the apex court to declare the recall process as illegal.
Melaye had on Tuesday, April 3, 2018, filed a seven-ground notice of appeal against the judgment of the Court of Appeal which had dismissed his suit instituted before the Federal High Court in Abuja to challenge the validity of the process of his recall which commenced June last year.
The Court of Appeal had in its March 16, 2018, judgment held that contrary to Melaye’s contention, the 90 days provided by the 1999 Constitution for the recall process to be concluded had not run out but had been paused since June 23, 2017, when he commenced the suit before the Federal High Court, Abuja.
With the Court of Appeal’s dismissal of the suit, the preconditions earlier given by the Federal High Court in Abuja for INEC to fulfill before continuing the recall were set aside.
The appeal court’s judgment, therefore, paved the way for INEC to continue the recall process which had been stalled by Melaye’s suit.
Following the Court of Appeal’s judgment, INEC had announced that the recall process would resume on April 28, 2018.
But on Tuesday, April 3, 2018, Melaye, through Mike Ozekhome, SAN, his lead counsel,filed his appeal against the judgment, contending that the three Justices of the Court of Appeal who delivered the unanimous judgment dismissing his suit erred in law.
Also on Wednesday, the senator filed a motion before the Court of Appeal seeking the stay of execution of the court’s judgment.
In his notice of appeal, apart from seeking the Supreme Court’s order allowing his appeal, he also urged the apex court to, among others, ”declare the petition purportedly presented to INEC for the recall of the plaintiff/ appellant as illegal, unlawful, wrongful, unconstitutional, invalid, null, void and of no effect whatsoever.
Read more at Vanguard