There
are strong indications that President Goodluck Jonathan and the National
Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Dr. Bamanga Tukur, have begun fresh
moves to seize the control of the party in the South-West from former
President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Investigations
on Tuesday also showed that the moves were to ensure that Prince Olagunsoye
Oyinlola did not return as the PDP National Secretary.
Oyinlola,
a political protegee of Obasanjo and former Osun State governor was
on Monday directed to step down by Tukur. The action
was viewed by political observers as part of the strategies by the
President and his team to whittle down the former President’s influence,
especially in the South-West PDP.
Tukur,
whose emergence as the PDP national chairman was influenced by Jonathan, had
named the Deputy National Secretary, Chief Solomon Onwe, as
acting National Secretary. He had cited some sections of the party’s
constitution to justify his action.
Before
Monday’s development, a Federal High Court in Abuja had last Friday sacked
Oyinlola while ruling on a suit by a faction of the PDP in Ogun State.
The faction had gone to the court to challenge the emergence of the former
governor as PDP national secretary, claiming that he was foisted on the
South-West PDP by Obasanjo.
Sources
close to the Presidency told one of our correspondents in Abuja on Tuesday that
Jonathan and Tukur were not comfortable that the South-West PDP was being
controlled by Obasanjo and indirectly, by the governors.
One
of the sources claimed that the PDP regarded the South-West as strategic
to its presidential primaries in 2015 and the general elections.
The
South-West may not produce a presidential candidate for the PDP in 2015
but block votes from the zone could determine the eventual winner
of the presidential election.
The
PUNCH
learnt that one of the strategies being planned by the PDP
leadership headed by Tukur was to organise a fresh congress
in the South-West to pick a replacement for Oyinlola.
This
plan is contained in the legal advice given to Tukur by a Senior Advocate of
Nigeria, Mr. Joe Gadzama.
It
was this same advice that Tukur used to order that Oyinlola be replaced by
Onwe.
Investigations
showed that the planned congress might give anti-Obasanjo forces in the
South-West the advantage to produce the national secretary.
The
PDP, in Ogun, Obasanjo’s home state, is divided into two with the
former President supporting the Senator Dipo Odujurin- led executive, while
a businessman, Chief Buruji Kashamu is backing the Adebayo Dayo-led
executive.
The
Kashamu-led faction has been having a series of legal battles with the
Obasanjo-backed faction, which culminated in the removal of Oyinlola.
Sunday
PUNCH had on January
13 reported that Jonathan had taken the battle for the soul of the PDP to Ogun
State with the unfeterred access a former governor of the
state, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, had been having in the Presidency.
One
of Daniel’s loyalists, Alhaja Salimot Badru, was recently appointed by
Jonathan as a member of the Federal Capital Development Authority.
On
Monday, The PUNCH reported a
source at the PDP meeting as saying that an ex-convict, Chief Bode
George, was nominated by Jonathan as a member of the Adamawa State
Reconciliation Committee.
Daniel
and George are at loggerheads with Obasanjo.
Gadzama,
in the memo to Tukur, said the party must organise a fresh congress in the
South-West within 21 days to replace Oyinlola.
The
memo reads in part, “The National Working Committee of the PDP shall ensure, in
accordance with the order of the honourable court; that a valid congress of the
South- West chapter of the PDP is constituted within 21 days from January
11, 2013 to replace the 1st defendant with another candidate.”
It
also said that since the court’s judgment that sacked Oyinlola was a
declaratory one, it was unlikely that he would get a stay of execution order
from the Court of Appeal.
Counsel
to Oyinlola, Otunba Kunle Kalejaye (SAN), had told The PUNCH in Ibadan,
Oyo State on Monday, that it was proper for his client to ask for stay of
execution on his sacking pending the determination of his appeal.
“I
had been asked so many questions about whether the judgment was declaratory and
whether it could be stayed. It is only a declaratory order that cannot be
stayed. Even the order removing him is not declaratory. It is a positive order
of court,” Kalejaye added.
Meanwhile,
the PDP has said the removal of Oyinlola was not as a result of any personal
animosity between him and Tukur.
The
party, in an unsigned statement, said that his sacking was a result
of court judgment that ousted him from office.
The
statement said, “For the avoidance of doubt, we want to say unequivocally that
there is no personal rift between Alhaji Tukur and Prince Oyinlola.
“In
any event, reports have indicated that Prince Oyinlola has appealed
against the court judgment and the NWC wants to say that as soon as the appeal
is decided, the party will, in the same way as it did in the case of the
Federal High Court ruling, obey the appeal decision.”
In
Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, the South-West PDP said it had nothing
against the replacement of Oyinlola as the national secretary of
the party.
The
National Vice- Chairman of the PDP in the zone, Mr. Segun Oni, said on Tuesday
that the replacement of Oyinlola with Onwe, was in accordance with last
Friday court judgment.
Oni,
who spoke with one of our correspondents through his media aide,
Mr. Lere Olayinka, said that the PDP in the South- West would only kick if Onwe
was made a substantive national secretary of the party.
He
said, “His (Oyinlola) replacement is in accordance with the court judgment
which is declaratory. You can’t bring someone who is not a member of the NWC to
replace him that is why his deputy was announced to replace him. When the
secretary can’t reform, his deputy takes over; this is not about ethnicity.
Gadzama’s
memo to Tukur on Oyinlola
“Having
carefully gone through the Order in the judgment (of the FHC) in the above suit
(against Oyinlola), though we are yet to see a copy of the judgment itself, it
is our considered opinion that:
*the
judgment is a valid decision of a court of competent jurisdiction. *the
judgment is binding on all the parties to it most especially the defendants who
are bound to comply with same.
*Being
a valid judgment, it is subsisting and enforceable against the parties thereto
until it is set aside (if any) on appeal;
“All
the defendants were duly represented in the suit by counsel before the Court
arrived as its decision.
“Essentially,
the judgment is declaratory and a declaratory judgment cannot be stayed in the
sense that if there is an appeal against the judgment or an application to set
it aside, such an appeal or an application cannot be a reason to stay the
effects of the judgment.
“On
the fact, of this case, it is plain that this is a case which a stay of
execution may not be granted in the judgment which is enforceable against the
appellant/applicant.
“In
other words, there being no judgment to execute the relief claimed
in the present motion cannot be one which this court can grant, the
application, if I may say with respect, therefore seems to me misconceived.”
“Consequent
upon the above circumstances, it is our considered legal opinion that: (a) The
1st defendant (Prince Oyinlola) shall vacate his office as the National
Secretary of the PDP forthwith in compliance with the order of court.
“The
2nd defendant (the PDP) shall ensure that the defendant vacates his office as
the national secretary of the PDP forthwith and should not do anything that
runs contrary to the order of the honourable court removing him as the national
secretary of the PDP or parades himself as such.
“The
only part of the judgment of the court which may constitute enough grounds for
stay of execution are contained in 4th and 5th Orders of the Court.
“In
that case, there may be an order to stay execution of the order of court in
respect of the replacement of the national secretary, of the party until the
determination of any suit or application before the trial court or the Court of
Appeal (and the Supreme Court as the case may be). It is only in such a
situation that an order of stay of execution is permissible in law.”
*Only
a declaratory order cannot be stayed -Oyinlola’s lawyer
“We
have since filed an appeal for stay of execution at the court.
“I
had been asked so many questions about whether the judgment was declaratory and
whether it could be stayed. It is only a declaratory order that cannot be
stayed. Even the order removing him is not declaratory. It is a positive order
of court.
“The
plaintiffs in that case asked for five orders. The first one is a declaration
that the candidacy of the first defendant as a nominee of South-West zonal
chapter is null.
“The
second one is a declaration that his candidacy and the subsequent election to
the position of the National Secretary is null and void.
“The
third one is also a declaration that the candidacy of the first defender to the
position of National Secretary and his subsequent election to that position is
invalid. Number four is an order removing the first defendant from office as
the national secretary. This is not declaratory. The other one is an order of
the court directing the Independent National Electoral Commission to rectify
the record.”
Kalejaye
explained that orders four and five were not declaratory and,
hence, could be stayed.
“We
have filed our motion in this regard, “ he added.
Source:
Punch
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