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Election appeals to Supreme Court in great risk By: Sebastine T. Hon, SAN, is an Abuja based private legal practitioner. There exist serious lacunae in both the amended Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the procedural laws of the Supreme Court with respect to appeals to that court arising from election petitions. The first of such lacunae is the non-existence in the Supreme Court of Election Appeals Practice Directions, which are supposed to define timelines of appellate procedures and processes in such a way as to enable the Supreme Court determine appeals arising from election petitions within 60 days, as stipulated under Section 285(7) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended. This subsection provides thus: (7) An appeal from a decision of an election tribunal or Court of Appeal in an election matter shall be heard and disposed of within 60 days from the date of delivery of judgment of the tribunal or Court of Appeal. From the above provision, the Supreme Court must, per force ad legem, determine all election appeals within 60 days; otherwise, such appeals will automatically lapse. In spite of this very weighty constitutional provision, however, my lord the CJN has not yet, as has been done by the President of the Court of Appeal, enacted practice directions that would regulate in a fast track manner, appeals to the Supreme Court in such a way as to ensure that election appeals are determined within 60 days as laid down by the constitution itself. Without such practice directions, litigants before the Supreme Court will fall back on the regular Supreme Court Rules, which will clearly defeat the purport and intendment of Section 285(7) of the constitution. For instance, under the regular court rules of the Supreme Court, an appellant has 10 weeks within which to file his brief of arguments; while a respondent has 8 weeks to file his respondent’s brief. After that, the appellant still has 4 weeks to file his reply brief. This brings the total number of days for filing of briefs alone to 154, which is far in excess of the 60 days within which the Supreme Court must determine an appeal on an election matter before it. Also, under the Court of Appeal Practice Directions, 2011, briefs are not to be more than 30 pages, which again is aimed at fast tracking appellate processes in election matters, with a view to achieving the legislative mischief introduced in Section 285 of the amended constitution. This innovation introduced at the Court of Appeal is worthy of emulation by the Supreme Court. The CJN should immediately draw up practice directions fashioned in such a way as to achieve speedy dispensation or determination of appeals from election matters; otherwise the intendment of section 285(7) of the constitution will be defeated. The second issue of national importance is whether, when a retrial has been ordered by the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court, the initial period of 180 days the first trial tribunal had to hear and determine an election petition will still be reckoned with or not. For Section 285(6) of the constitution provides thus: (6) An election tribunal shall deliver its judgment in writing within 180 days from the date of the filing of the petition. The constitution, however, is loudly silent on whether this period of 180 days will be reckoned with when a retrial before another tribunal is ordered. This is where the appellate courts, particularly the Supreme Court which is the conscience of the nation, must step in immediately and proactively. Even if by way of obiter dictum, the Supreme Court should, as a matter of utmost urgency, make a pronouncement clarifying this constitutional gap, to avoid incorrect and mischievous interpretations, which if not checked timely, are capable of derailing our democracy. I personally subscribe to the interpretation that a retrial, if ordered, will still span through the constitutional 180 days. The reasons are twofold: (a) A retrial, as the name suggests, is a fresh trial, which in law should have all the trappings of a full trial, nothing more nothing less; (b) Any other interpretation will defeat the intendment of the amendments introduced in the new Section 285 of the constitution. The lawmakers did not intend and could not have intended to limit the traditional powers of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal to make relevant consequential orders in deserving cases, in this case, ordering retrials. And as canvassed above, once such retrials are ordered, they are to, by force of law, wear the full robes of a normal trial. Therefore, all stakeholders, particularly the CJN, should take immediate steps to nip these potentially combustible situations in the bud. Sebastine T. Hon, SAN, is an Abuja based private legal practitioner. |
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Don Jazzy makes Forbes Top 40 celebrity list The debut list of Forbes Africa 40 Most Powerful Celebrities In Africa includes actors, cerebral authors, musicians, movie producers, supermodels, TV personalities and athletes, drawn from all across Africa and traverses the generational divide. Top 10 below… 1. Chinua Achebe, 80, Novelist (Nigeria) 2. Youssou N’dour, 51, Musician (Senegal) 3. Didier Drogba, 33, Footballer (Cote D’Voire) 4. Angelique Kidjoe, 51, Musician (Benin Republic) 5. Akon, 38, Musician (Senegal) 6. Wole Soyinka, 77, Playwright (Nigeria) 7. Salif Keita, 62, Musician (Mali) 8. Yvonne Chaka Chaka, 46, (South African) 9. Oumou Sang, 43, Musician (Mali) 10. Femi Kuti, 49, Musician (Nigerian) 11. Toumani Diabaté, Musician (Mali) 12. Oliver Mtukudzi, 59, Musician (Zimbabwe) 13. Haile Gebrselassie, 38, Athlete (Ethiopia) 14. Khaled Hadj Ibrahim, 51, Musician (Algeria) 15. Samuel Eto’o, 30, Soccer Player (Cameroun) 16. Alek Wek, 34, Supermodel (Sudan) 17. Liya Kebede, 33, Supermodel (Ethopia) 18. Dobet Gnahoré, 29, Musician (Ivory Coast) 19. Genevieve Nnaji, 32, Actress (Nigeria) 20. Koffi Olomidé, 55, Musician (Congo) 21. Neill Blomkamp, 32, Movie Director (South Africa) 22. Souad Massi, 39, Musician (Algeria) 23. Baaba Maal, 58, Musician (Senegalese) 24. Hugh Masekela, 72, Musician (South Africa) 25. K’Naan, 33, Rapper (Somalia) 26. Amadou and Mariam, Musicians (Mali) 27. Awilo Longomba, Musician (Congo) 28. Eric Wainaina, 38, Musician (Kenya) 29. Binyavanga Wainaina, 40, Author (Kenya) 30. Ngugi Wa Thiongo, 73, Author (Kenya) 31. Freshlyground, Musicians (South Africa) 32. Chimamanda Adichie, 34, Writer (Nigeria) 33. Rokia Traoré, 37, Musician (Mali) 34. Tuface Idibia, 36, Musician (Nigeria) 35. P-Square, 29, Musicians (Nigeria) 36. Don Jazzy, 30, Music Producer (Nigeria) 37. D’Banj, 31, Musician (Nigeria) 38. Nneka, 31, Musician (Nigeria) 39. Asa, 29, Musician (Nigeria) 40. Patricia Amira, 33, TV Personality (Kenya)
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Rate The Fastest And Reliable Internet I think the era of slow internet in Nigeria is fast becoming a thing of the past with most of the GSM and CDMA providers trying to outshine each other by offering affordable and fast, reliable internet access. Last two weeks, I visited Benue state, I could download upto 750kbps on my GLO WCDMA/HSDPA But now in the South East, now i have a download speed of upto 2.15Mbps, streaming of video is even clearer than watching DSTV. Please let us share our experience with other service provider, but for me GLO lead for now, Find attached picture.
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By Our reporter Monday, August 22, 2011 Libyan rebels raced into the capital Tripoli yesterday and moved close to center with little resistance as Moammar Gadhafi’s defenders melted away. Opposition leaders said Gadhafi’s son and one-time heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, has been arrested. It was gathered that the fighters moved easily from the western outskirts into the regime stronghold in a dramatic turning of the tides in the 6-month-old Libyan civil war. Gadhafi’s rule of more than 40 years appeared to be rapidly crumbling. Earlier in the day, the rebels overran a major military base defending the capital, carted away truckloads of weapons and raced to Tripoli with virtually no resistance. In an audio message broadcast on Libyan state television after the rebels entered the capital, Gadhafi warned that Tripoli would be turned into another Baghdad. He called on his supporters to march in the streets of the capital and “purify it” from “the rats.” The rebels’ surprising and speedy leap forward, after six months of largely deadlocked civil war, was packed into just a few dramatic hours. By nightfall, they had advanced more than 20 miles to Tripoli. Thousands of jubilant civilians rushed out of their homes to cheer the long convoys of pickup trucks packed with rebel fighters shooting in the air. Some of the fighters were hoarse, shouting: “We are coming for you, frizz-head,” a mocking nickname for Gadhafi. In villages along the way that fell to the rebels one after another, mosque loudspeakers blared “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great.” “We are going to sacrifice our lives for freedom,” said Nabil al-Ghowail, a 30-year-old dentist holding a rifle in the streets of Janzour, a suburb just six miles west of Tripoli. Heavy gunfire erupted nearby. As town after town fell and Gadhafi forces disappeared, the mood turned euphoric. Some shouted: “We are getting to Tripoli tonight.” Others were shooting in the air, honking horns and yelling “Allahu Akbar.” Once they reached Tripoli, the rebels took control of one neighborhood, Ghot Shaal, on the western edge of the city. They set up checkpoints as a convoy of more than 10 trucks rolled in. The rebels moved on to the neighborhood of Girgash, about a mile and a half from Green Square. They said they came under fire from a sniper on a rooftop in the neighborhood. Sidiq al-Kibir, the rebel leadership council’s representative for the capital Tripoli, confirmed the arrest of Seif al-Islam to the AP but did not give any further details. Inside Tripoli, widespread clashes erupted for a second day between rebel “sleeper cells” and Gadhafi loyalists. Rebels fighter who spoke to relatives in Tripoli by phone said hundreds rushed into the streets in anti-regime protests in several neighborhoods. The day’s first breakthrough came when hundreds of rebels fought their way into a major symbol of the Gadhafi regime - the base of the elite 32nd Brigade commanded by Gadhafi’s son, Khamis. Fighters said they met with little resistance. They were 16 miles from the big prize, Tripoli. Hundreds of rebels cheered wildly and danced as they took over the compound filled with eucalyptus trees, raising their tricolor from the front gate and tearing down a large billboard of Gadhafi.
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