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Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) - Politics - Nairaland

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Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Racoon(m): 10:45am On Feb 29, 2020
Notes From Atlanta(By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.)

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

Justice Ibrahim Tanko Muhammad’s Supreme Court will go down in history as easily Nigeria’s most blatant bastion of supreme injustice. In the last one year, it has shaped up to be the graveyard of electoral mandates.

It either sanctifies transparent electoral heists, such as Buhari’s blazing mandate theft, using the most astonishingly illogical arguments or reverses approximations of people’s choices such as in Zamfara, Imo, and Bayelsa. In inflicting legal violence on people’s choices, the Supreme Court appears to have no care for basic consistency.


In what seems like an attempt to compensate for its disastrously indefensible usurpation of the electoral mandate of former Imo State governor Emeka Ihedioha, the Supreme Court on February 13 overturned the mandate of  former Bayelsa State governor-elect David Lyon and his deputy governor-elect Biobarakuma Degi-Eremieoyo because some names in the credentials the former deputy governor-elect presented to INEC have changed over time and have inconsistent spellings.

I initially thought Degi-Eremieoyo forged his certificates—like many Nigerian politicians do. But he apparently didn’t. He only changed his names—and the spellings of some—in the course of his life, and supported some of the changes with sworn affidavits. But the Supreme Court was persuaded that those changes were sufficient grounds to invalidate the legitimate votes he and his boss earned from Bayelsa voters.

This is both culturally insensitive and a violation of the sanctity of the vote. I will only discuss the cultural insensitivity of the judgment because it has implications for a whole host of Nigerians. Because there’s a vast disconnect between the colonially inherited orthography we use and the sound systems of our indigenous (and, in some cases, borrowed precolonial) languages, it’s impossible to maintain consistent spellings for all our names.

For instance, my credentials have many variants of the spelling of my first name. In my primary school certificate, my teacher spelled it as “Faruk,” and there’s nothing I can do about that. When I got to secondary school, I realized that the correct orthographic rendition of the name from Arabic is “Farooq,” so I adopted that spelling.

However, when Bayero University issued me my certificate, I saw that my name was spelled as “Farouk” even though I’ve never spelled it that way. Should I be held responsible for this? But it gets worse: my transcript spells my first name as “Farooq.” In other words, my certificate and my transcript have different spellings of the same name.

To make matters even more complicated, a few years after my graduation from the university, I changed my last name from Adamu, which is my father’s first name, to Kperogi, which is my family name that my father, uncles, and cousins, bear (bore in the case of my dad) as their last name.  Is the Supreme Court suggesting that I can’t win an election because of the differences in the spellings of my names and because I changed my last name to my family name?

The inconsistencies in the names we bear in Nigeria can sometimes start from our birth certificates. For instance, when I was born in a Baptist missionary hospital in my hometown, a white American nurse by the name of Miss Masters who delivered me and who could speak, read, and write my native Baatonu language, wrote my name as “Imoru Sabi” in my hospital birth certificate.

Apparently, my father told her my name was “Umar Farooq.” But she used her judgment to take only “Umar,” which she chose to write as “Imoru”—exactly the same way an uneducated Borgu person would pronounce Umar—and added “Sabi,” the generic name for every second son in Borgu, as my middle name.

For some reason, she entirely omitted “Farooq” (which she might have spelled as “Faruku” given her penchant for Borgu phonological fidelity) from my name, but that was the name by which I was known and called when I grew older. No one called me Umar or Sabi.

That was why when I came of age and my father handed my birth certificate to me, I told him it wasn’t mine. I knew I was Sabi by default since I am my parent’s second son, but no one ever called me that, and “Imoru” totally threw me off until my dad explained to me what had happened.

Muhammadu Buhari had similar issues. His father was called Adamu Bafale. His primary school certificate probably either lists Adamu or Danbafale as his last name. I say this because his late older brother, Mamman, was formally called Mamman Danbafale (Danbafale means “son of Bafale” in Hausa), so I won’t be surprised if either Adamu or Danbafale appears in Buhari’s primary school certificate.

In any case, Muhammadu and Buhari are his first and middle names. By the way, why doesn’t he bear a surname? Most importantly, though, the British colonial educators who registered Buhari at the Provincial Secondary School in Katsina spelled his name as “Mohamed,” and it’s that variant of his name’s spelling that still appears in his school certificate, which I am now convinced he actually has, contrary to widespread notions that he doesn’t.

However, although the official records of his secondary school spell his first name as “Mohamed,” he prefers to spell it as “Muhammadu.” In spite of the discrepancy between the official spelling of his name in his school certificate, about which he lied under oath that it was with military authorities instead of admitting that he had lost it, the Supreme Court said he was “eminently qualified” to stand for election.

If Buhari was “eminently qualified” in spite of the different spellings of and possible inconsistencies in his name from primary school to now, why should Degi-Eremienyo be disqualified? Why is what is good for Buhari bad for Degi-Eremienyo?


Now the elephant in the room is that Degi-Eremienyo is still a senator. If he was unqualified to be a deputy governor by reason of the inconsistent spellings of and changes to his name, can he be qualified to be a senator? Can his opponent sue to be declared the rightful senator of Bayelsa East Senatorial District even though he lost the election?

This goes to the heart of the doctrine of judicial precedent, which the Oxford Dictionary of Law defines as “judgement or decision of a Court used as an authority for reaching the same decision in subsequent cases.”

Clearly, Tanko’s Supreme Court, as I pointed out in my July 20, 2019 column titled “A‘Technically’ Incompetent Chief Justice of Nigeria,” doesn’t give a thought to precedents. That’s why its judgements are characterized by inconsistencies, and why there’s a spike in the number of lawyers who are asking the Court to review its judgements.

 “All over the world, courts rely on precedents to adjudicate current cases,” I wrote in my July 20, 2019 column. “Precedents may be modified, but they are rarely overturned without a compelling reason, certainly not within a few years after they were established. That is what legal scholars call stare decisis, that is, the doctrine that courts should follow precedent.

A Chief Justice that is ignorant about something as basic as ‘technicality’ is unlikely to know what ‘precedent’ means, much less something as rarefied as the doctrine of stare decisis.”

If Nigeria had a real parliament, I would have suggested that the National Assembly pass a law to undo the judicial violence of Tanko’s Supreme Court. Well, this is what you get when every branch of government is an extension of a confused and feuding executive branch.

https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2020/02/supreme-court-as-graveyard-of-electoral.html?m=1#.Xlnc6O7JE5g.twitter

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by SLAP44: 10:51am On Feb 29, 2020
Farooq, we entered a military junta in 2015. The courts are now a branch of the executive arm just like in 1984.

24 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Ifiegboria(m): 10:51am On Feb 29, 2020
We are not doing the right thing in every sector of this country

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Racoon(m): 10:53am On Feb 29, 2020
In spite of the discrepancy between the official spelling of his name in his school certificate, about which he lied under oath that it was with military authorities instead of admitting that he had lost it, the Supreme Court said he was “eminently qualified” to stand for election.

If Buhari was “eminently qualified” in spite of the different spellings of and possible inconsistencies in his name from primary school to now, why should Degi-Eremienyo be disqualified? Why is what is good for Buhari bad for Degi-Eremienyo?

Clearly, Tanko’s Supreme Court, as I pointed out in my July 20, 2019 column titled “A‘Technically’ Incompetent Chief Justice of Nigeria,” doesn’t give a thought to precedents. That’s why its judgements are characterized by inconsistencies, and why there’s a spike in the number of lawyers who are asking the Court to review its judgements.
This is what you get when the judiciary becomes an appendage of the executive.

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by kayusely70(m): 11:04am On Feb 29, 2020
A confused and consistently inconsistent lot.

2 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by sodiqapril(m): 11:04am On Feb 29, 2020
Farook is intelligent

31 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Herqqqqqq: 11:05am On Feb 29, 2020
Impossible

1 Like

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by blinking001(m): 11:05am On Feb 29, 2020
Confused people. A time will come when we'll all be ready to fight our common enermy but until then let's keep praying for a better Nigeria.
God bless Nigeria.

4 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by sotall(m): 11:05am On Feb 29, 2020
undecided
Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by lomprico(m): 11:05am On Feb 29, 2020
Very true

2 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by israelmao(m): 11:06am On Feb 29, 2020
The electoral corruption and malpractices being perpetrated by current Yakubu-led INEC and politicians have turned Supreme Court to dumpsite of people's mandates .

1 Like

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by debbysure001(m): 11:07am On Feb 29, 2020
We will get it right someday in this country.

1 Share

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by BreakingSecrets: 11:08am On Feb 29, 2020
We love President Buhari! we love triggered IP.OBS melting down and crying like a bunch of LOSERS!
GOD BLESS THOSE OF US WHO BELIEVE IN OUR PRESIDENT BUHARI AND ARE GRATEFUL FOR EACH DAY HE'S IN OFFICE.

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by YorubaKinging: 11:08am On Feb 29, 2020
Farooq, come to Nigeria and start your editorial if Dem born you well

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by lonelydora: 11:09am On Feb 29, 2020
INEC is the referee, Supreme court is the VAR

2 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by ajalawole(m): 11:10am On Feb 29, 2020
k
Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Idontgiveafuck2: 11:16am On Feb 29, 2020
THIS MAN IS VERY RIGHT. WHAT IS GOOD FOR BUHARI SHOULD BE GOOD FOR PLENTY DEGI

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by bayelsaowei(m): 11:17am On Feb 29, 2020
Hmmm...insightful...buhari where is your school cert..let's see your surname.. wink

1 Like

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Daviddson(m): 11:20am On Feb 29, 2020
This guy has shown by this article that he's apolitical. Despite his support for Atiku in the last election and his constant blizzards against Buhari's misrule, he's writing to defend David Lyon of APC.

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by emmykk(m): 11:20am On Feb 29, 2020
The 5 different names is absurd but the punishment is too heavy,wisdom should have been that the supreme court should have only hit the deputy governor elect hard instead of giving APC mandate to PDP in bayelsa state.

But I think the judges of the supreme court are not on the same page in case of imo election so they over react when bayelsa case come through


Incorrupt judges would have let IMO emeka ihedioha be and protect Davido Lyon mandate.


The day will allow Buhari to single handedly remove onnoghe and replace him with tanko that is the Genesis of all these judgment, they are now political supreme court judges.

So any when come your table slaughter ram

1 Like

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by jlinkd78(m): 11:21am On Feb 29, 2020
Everything u wrote here are completely in order. Despite my bias in favour of PDP being in charge in Bayelsa, I honestly feel sorry for d Degi guy after reading this. My opinion about your writeup from now will be straight as I now believe that u are not only intelligent but apolitical and a master in churning out unbiased essays. I will read your columns more from now cos truly truth is infectious.

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by Sufisunni: 11:23am On Feb 29, 2020
Farouk , thank you for this piece. I am 100% sure, even the judges have variant spellings of their names written on their certificates

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by leo2020: 11:26am On Feb 29, 2020
sodiqapril:
Farook is intelligent
it's Farooq

2 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by IpobAntidote: 11:27am On Feb 29, 2020
Trash as usual.

2 Likes

Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by TGM2015: 11:27am On Feb 29, 2020
SC is very very wrong on Bayelsa ruling and review.

The way and manner the judges treats the review confirmed my suspicion that the judgement was bought. Is this the first review that SC Court is receiving? Why is it that this very review is the one that get the lead lawyers heavy fine of N30 million paid to the defendant? Did the defendant request for it? When has Supreme Court become Father Christmas awarding financial benefits to defendants without requesting for it? Why N30M and not N300k? Why should the fine starts with this Bayelsa review?

Seriously, our Court should not destroy the basic of our electoral values where electorates decide who should rule them. Whether the electoral votes were manufactured, manipulated, etc is another case entirely, if petitioners cannot prove it was manipulated, like that of Imo Gubernatorial, it should be held valid. Making votes counts is the major responsibility of the Voters and INEC. Jega has help us, all votes as announced at the pooling unit is legally recognised as the authentic vote results. If Voters can stand firm and stand with their votes, it will result to announcing real votes (bought or natural conscience) or cancellation of entire result. It is more difficult to imposed/manipulate votes at pooling unit level if stakeholders (voters, party agents, traditional/community leaders, etc) are not compromised.

In my personal opinion, the ground of disqualification in Bayelsa is total wrong based on the principle of tradition and patterns of life. Because, critically looking into that issues, in Nigeria context, such irregularities in names is common. It is not only common but also a significant trends of people in the age/generation category of the Deputy governor. It is evidently clear to all, including PDP, that the state overwhelming voted for APC. If the purpose of election is for people to choose their political leaders, then the Bayelsa judgment do not and never fulfil that purpose.

The fair thing, in worst case scenario, is to allow the state to re-elect their political leader if the last one was not qualified in the eye of the law. The judgement do not give justice and fairness to the people of Bayelsa state and the review rulings was harsh/vindictive to the party who filed the review.

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Re: Supreme Court As Graveyard Of Electoral Mandates (By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.) by YeeboMuslim: 11:36am On Feb 29, 2020
Why is this thread quiet like this.

Are my fellow Ibo Muslims confused because their favourite Kperogi alluded to the fact that the lifeless one truly has a certificate or because he claimed that Bayelsa judgement was a miscarriage of justice

Back to the topic , I really pity the Bayelsa APC guy tho.

It's just like banning me for writing Igbo Muslims as Ibo Muslims or Igbo Muslims ...
I'm sure that would be unjust and unfair

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