It is the irrefutable
position of the leadership of International Society for Civil Liberties
& the Rule of Law that court rulings before and during elections
in Nigeria in recent times do not always stand the test of time. As a result,
many, if not most of court rulings before or during polls particularly those
coming from State and Federal High Courts as well as the Court of
Appeal are generally seen as pollutant viruses capable
of plunging the country’s landscape into chaos of uncontrollable proportions.
Such rulings are grossly influenced by mercantilist and primordial dispositions
at the grand whims and caprices of parochial and politically mercantile
interests of interested individuals and socio-political groups. Very worrisome
it is that tainted men and women operating in the Hallowed Chambers
of Venerable Justice sector in Nigeria always canonize and
institutionalize such infamy to the painful point of making them part of
Nigeria’s case laws.
When a court judgment
strives to hand down a pronouncement ousting a provision or provisions of the
Constitution rather than modifying or defining it (them), it becomes anarchic
if enforced and if un-enforceable, the referenced court ends up making mockery
of herself and her pronouncement. Courts must stay away at all times from making
pronouncements that are dead on arrival such as those licensing malicious and
homicidal citizens to slaughter or maim collective others using polls’ outcome
excuses. It is a global and spotless maxim that where there is no
law there is lawlessness and anarchy and where there is no security there is
Hobbesian state of terror leading to life being brutish, cannibalistic,
cancerous, short and nasty.
It is also a settled
maxim that security and defense of a sovereign territory
particularly the protection of lives and properties during turbulent times like
election times; is a fundamental exception to judicial sledge-hammer. This
means that courts must be extremely careful when handling matters relating to
public security and safety, not minding the smartness, coinage and propaganda
level of interested parties including lawyers, designed to mislead and
misinform the courts. Admitted that courts are created to receive and determine
private, corporate and public interest matters no matter how stupid or idiotic
some, many, most or all of them may appear; it is the fundamental duty of the
same courts while dispensing the matters so brought, to first of all embark on
data mining in addition to having the overall interest of the entire public at
heart.
When such data are
collected, the courts must always purify them so as to separate facts from
fictions, after which facts are further subdivided to find lawful
and unlawful facts leading to meticulous application of lawful
facts to the existing laws resulting in judgment called ratio
decidendi. On the other hand, the unlawful or outlawed
factscan be transformed into orbita dictum/dicta.
Courts may in the course of delivery of their hallowed judgments entertain
their audience with fictions or unlawful facts/outlawed facts, provided
they do not form part of theirratio decidendi or judgment.
The courts’ decisions based on lawful facts are commonly called ratio
decidendiwhile outlawed facts or facts outside the matter are called orbita
dictum/dicta. The courts while delivering judgments must at all
times be at high point of mental, physical and intellectual alertness so as not
to hand downorbita dicta in place of ratio decidendi.
It is on account of the
foregoing that we condemn unreservedly the recent court pronouncements in
Sokoto and Ekiti States barring the Nigerian Military from involving itself in
the organization and conduct of the country’s turbulent elections particularly
the rescheduled 2015 general elections. Having perused and ransacked the
320 sections of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 with
its last amendment, we could not come across in the same Constitution where a
section frowning at the involvement of the military in the securitization of
the elections in Nigeria whether staggered elections, by-elections, run-off or
general elections. The courts, in its entirety, acted ultra vires or outside
their constitutional mandates. The Constitution, which the courts are
fundamentally bound to protect at all times, is gravely injured by the
referenced courts’ pronouncements. This is because if the pronouncements are
enforced on elections’ dates and the Nigerian military is withdrawn and
cocooned in the Barracks, giving killer and malicious citizens with their
political affiliates a field day to unleash terror on collective others; the
country will go up in flames in reprisal killings. If this becomes the case;
then the Constituted of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is murdered.
The referenced courts’
pronouncements also grossly undermine the constitutional duties of Mr.
President as the country’s Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria. For the avoidance of doubt, the Armed Forces
(Army, Navy, Air Force, SSS, NIA, etc) are created by Section 217 of the
Constitution and they have various regulatory and empowerment Acts passed or
deemed to have been passed by the National Assembly of Nigeria ( Section 315 of
the Constitution).
The Armed Forces under
referenced are constitutionally empowered with the following duties: “defending
Nigeria from external aggression”(S. 217 (2) (a), “maintaining Nigeria’s
territorial integrity and securing its borders from violation on land, air or
sea” (S. 217(2)(b), suppressing insurrection and acting in aid of civil
authorities to restore order when called upon to do so by the President,
subject to such conditions as may be prescribed by an Act of the National
Assembly” (S. 217 (2) (c); and “performing such other functions as may be
prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly” (S. 217(2) (d). Section
218 of the same Constitution clearly provides: “The powers of the
President as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federation shall
include power to determine the operational use of the armed forces of the
Federation”.
Supplementary Section
26, under Part 1 of the Third Schedule to the referenced Constitution provides:
“The National Security Council (which includes the Chief of Defense Staff as
the head of the armed forces and the National Security Adviser) shall have
power to advise the President on matters relating to public security
including matters relating to any organization or agency established by law for
ensuring the security of the Federation”. In Supplementary Section
17 of the referenced Part 1 of the Third Schedule, the Constitution provides
that the National Defense Council shall have power to advise the
President on matters relating to the defense of the Sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Nigeria”. In Section 8 (3) of the Armed Forces Act of
the Federation under its Part 3, the operational use of the armed
forces by the President is defined to include “the
operational use of the armed forces in Nigeria for the purpose of maintaining
and securing public safety and public order”.
That is to say that the
armed forces of the country are constitutionally conferred with defense
and security roles in Nigeria internally and externally. In all,
the Armed Forces of Nigeria have never been involved in the duty of conducting
elections in Nigeria’s polling units or electoral wards. They have never been
sighted in any polling unit except where public safety is under threat or
breached. They have never been part of INEC’s ad hoc staff or collection,
collation, declaration and announcement of results of elections. It is also a
truism that Nigeria is in a state of intra State war and gross security threats
requiring military securitization watchdog round the clock. The roles played by
the military in Nigeria during polls are purely in defense and security of
Nigeria’s internal and external protections.
In all these, it is
despicable and condemnable to obtain “compromised and tainted court rulings” to
oust the military from performing its constitutional duties and
responsibilities including safeguarding the lives and properties of individual
and collective Nigerians before and during polls. We, therefore, call on Mr.
President as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Nigeria to ignore
such court rulings. Efforts must also be made by relevant parties including the
office of the Attorney General and Minister for Justice of the Federation to
oust and erase that sort ofbad judgments from the country’s
hallowed case laws by applying for their immediate ousting and erasure at the
superior courts including the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Rule of law is under
severe threats when courts de-constitutionalise fundamental
provisions of the Constitution.
Signed:
For: International Society
for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law
Emeka Umeagbalasi, B.Sc. (Hons.) Criminology & Security
Studies
Board Chairman, International Society for Civil Liberties & the
Rule of Law
+2348174090052(office)
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