A
legal practitioner, Mr. Chukwunweike Okafor, on Monday, approached the
Federal High Court in Abuja with an application seeking a declaration
that the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress,
Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), lacked the educational qualification
to stand for the February 14 presidential election.
The
originating summons marked FHC/ABJ/CS/01/2015 has Buhari, APC and the
Independent National Electoral Commission as the first, second and third
defendants respectively.
The suit was filed
pursuant to Section 131 of the Constitution, which prescribes a minimum
qualification for nomination to participate in the presidential election
and Section 31 of the Electoral Act that requires all presidential
candidates to depose to an affidavit that they have satisfied and
complied with the constitutional requirements to be President of
Nigeria.
Okafor, in the suit filed through his counsel, Chief
Ugo Ugunnadi, is contending that Buhari’s form CF001 with the INEC,
wherein he stated that he obtained the minimum educational qualification
of West African Senior School Certificate could not be valid as the
said certificate was allegedly false or not genuine.
The
plaintiff, among other things, is asking the court to declare that “the
information contained in Buhari’s affidavit dated November 24, 2014,
stating that the Secretary of the Military Board was in custody of his
WASSC was false and thereby disqualified him from contesting the 2015
general elections.”
The lawyer is therefore seeking an order of
the court “compelling INEC to withdraw, remove and/or delete the names
of the 1st and 2nd defendants from the list of persons or political
parties eligible to contest for the Office of the President of Nigeria
in the 2015 general elections.”
The courts reopened today after being shut down for three weeks by the striking judicial workers in the country.
No date has yet been fixed to hear Okafor’s originating summons.
Credit: Ramon Oladimeji
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