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Supreme Court rejects Zamfara APC request to review judgement

By Solomon Fowowe
22 July 2019   |   11:21 am
The Supreme Court, on Monday, rejected the application by the All Progressives Congress (APC), seeking a review of the judgement of the Court on the Zamfara governorship elections. The five-man panel of justices, led by Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour, unanimously ruled that the application was incompetent and lacking in merit. Robert Clarke (SAN), lead counsel for…

The Supreme Court, on Monday, rejected the application by the All Progressives Congress (APC), seeking a review of the judgement of the Court on the Zamfara governorship elections.

The five-man panel of justices, led by Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour, unanimously ruled that the application was incompetent and lacking in merit.

Robert Clarke (SAN), lead counsel for the APC, filed an application for the Supreme Court to review its previous judgement.

The panel said that the application should not have been brought before it in the first place.

The Supreme Court, on May 24, nullified the votes cast for APC in the governorship, National Assembly and state Assembly elections in Zamfara State because the party did not conduct primaries.

The APC Zamfara State chairman, Alhaji Lawali Liman, had said on June 26 that the party had a “window to challenge the action of the Independent National Electoral Commission following the Supreme Court ruling” that nullified all APC election in the state.

“Since the matter taken to the court revolved around irregularities of primaries, we had 13 candidates for the state House of Assembly, three for the Senate and two for the House of Representatives,” Liman said.

“These were those who contested unopposed and the primaries did not affect them.

“INEC was too hasty to declare the party with the second-highest votes because the exact directive of the Supreme Court was that the next party with the ‘requisite spread should be declared and by these, our issues were not taken into consideration,” he said.

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