The Senator representing Kogi West Senatorial district, Dino Melaye, has gone to the Supreme Court, seeking an order restraining the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from proceeding with his recall from the Senate.
In a notice of appeal today, Thursday, filed by his Counsel, Mike Ozekome, (SAN), Dino Melaye wanted an order of perpetual injunction restraining INEC from commencing or further continuing with his recall or acting on the purported petition.
He also asked the court to set aside the March 16 judgment of the Court of Appeal, delivered by the Court of Appeal on March 16, which gave INEC the go ahead to continue with the recall.
The embattled Senator sought an order declaring the petition purportedly presented to INEC by some purported constituents for his recall as illegal, unlawful, wrongful, unconstitutional, invalid, null and void and of no effect.
Dino Melaye, in addition prayed for a declaration that the recall purportedly initiated against him by INEC and on the basis of the petition was illegal since it commenced on the basis of an invalid petition.
He also asked the court to declare that the 90 days period as provided for under Section 69(b) of the 1999 Constitution as amended had elapsed.
According to him, having elapsed, INEC can no longer proceed on the basis of the purported petition.
He said that the Court of Appeal erred in law when it held that it was not for the court to verify the signature on the petition.
He said that the court held that it was the duty of INEC, by reason of which the court failed to invalidate the petition presented to INEC.
The Court of Appeal, in its judgment delivered by Justice Tunde Awotoye, leading two other justices, dismissed all the grounds of appeal filed by Senator Melaye.
It held that the 90 days stipulated by the constitution within which a recall process would take place had no time limitation as it could be extended.
Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Federal High Court, Abuja, on September 11, 2017 dismissed a suit filed by Dino Melaye, seeking to stop INEC from initiating his recall from the National Assembly.
Dimgba held that the senator’s complaints were hasty, premature and presumptuous and therefore ordered the INEC to go ahead with its planned verification.
Source: NAN.