The National Working Committee of the ruling Peoples
Democratic, (PDP) has suspended Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, former National Chairman
of the party.
Also suspended was Aliyu Abuba Gubrin, the party member who
challenged the emergence of Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu as the chairman, in succession
to Tukur.
A statement issued, Thursday, by Victor Kwon, PDP`s
National
Legal Adviser, said, “The NWC hereby suspends Dr.
Bamanga Tukur and Aliyu Abuba Gubrin for one month and refers them to the
National Disciplinary Committee for infringing on section 58(1)(a)( b)( h)( l)
of the PDP Constitution 2012( as amended).
“The National Working Committee of the Peoples Democratic,
PDP, at its 395th meeting held yesterday, December 3, 2014 reviewed recent
national developments as they affect the party.
Among others, the NWC deliberated on the court case
instituted against the National Chairman of the Party, Adamu Mu’azu, by the
former National Chairman, Bamanga Tukur.
“The NWC reasoned that for instituting a claim and counter
claim in suit FHC/ABJ /821/2014; Gurin vs PDP & 3 others without first
exploring and exhausting the party’s internal mechanism of redress and for
attempting to stop the forthcoming National Convention to nominate the party’s
presidential candidate as well as regularize the position of the National
Chairman and other members of the National Working Committee is unacceptable.
“The NWC hereby suspends Dr. Bamanga Tukur and Aliyu Abuba
Gubrin for one month and refers them to the National Disciplinary Committee for
infringing on section 58(1)(a)( b)( h)( l) of the PDP Constitution 2012( as
amended).
In a statement yesterday, Tukur who is also the chairman of
the Nigerian Railway Corporation tried to extricate himself from Gubrin’s legal
challenge against Mu’azu.
Former national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party,
Alhaji Bamanga Tukur on Wednesday denied insinuations that he was behind the
legal moves to remove his successor, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu to enable him return
to the office from which he was forced to resign recently.
Tukur resigned after much pressure from chieftains of the
party in the wake of the defection of five aggrieved governors to the All
Progressives Congress, APC
Speaking through his lawyer, Mr. Adamson Adeboro, Tukur told
Judiciary Correspondents in Abuja on Wednesday, that he was joined as a
defendant alongside Mu’azu, the PDP and the Independent National Electoral
Commission, INEC, in the matter by the plaintiff, Aliyu Gubrin, and that his
lawyer only filed a counter-claim on his behalf.
According to Mr. Adamson, “My client, Bamanga Tukur was not
the plaintiff in the suit filed to oust Adamu Mu’azu. As a matter of fact, he
was joined as 2nd defendant in the suit”.
Justice Evoh Chukwu had last Tuesday dismissed the suit
seeking to oust Mu’azu as the national chairman of the PDP on the ground that
the litigant does not have locus standi to institute the action.
The plaintiff, Mr. Aliyu Gubrin, has however filed an appeal
against the judgment at the Court of Appeal but no date has been fixed for the
hearing of the appeal by the appellate court.
In the appeal, Gubrin is urging the court to set aside the
judgement of the lower court and rule that Mu’azu’s appointment as the national
chairman of the party was illegal and also insists that Justice Chukwu erred in
his decision when he held that he lacks the locus standi to institute the
action.
He faulted the trial court’s position on the
constitutionality of Tukur’s resignation noting that the court erred when it
held that the PDP complied with the provision of the party’s constitution
without making a pronouncement on whether the 30 days notice required under
Section 47(5) of the party’s constitution is discretionary which, according to
him, led the court in reaching wrong conclusions thereby occasioning
miscarriage of Justice.
He further stated that the court was wrong in its judgement
when it held that the appointment of Mu’azu complied with the PDP Constitution
but failed to consider the provision of section 85(3) of the Elctoral Act and
Section 223(1) of the Nigerian Constitution which expressly provided for an
election of political party chairman rather than appointment as in the case of
Mu’azu.
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