The  Election Petitions Tribunal in Awka on Tuesday struck out the petition  filed by Prof. Dora Akunyili against Chris Ngige’s victory in the  Anambra Central Senatorial poll last year.
Former Minister of Information Akunyili had been  locked in legal battle with former Anambra State Governor Ngige to be  declared the winner of the election.
Akunyili contested the election under the banner of  the All Progressive Grand Alliance while Ngige represented the Action  Congress of Nigeria.
Ruling on an oral application for the striking out of  the petition made by counsel for Ngige, Mr. Emeka Ngige, the Chairman  of the tribunal, Justice Pat Onajite-Kuejubola, held that the tribunal  lacked the jurisdiction to continue to try the petition.
Onajite-Kuejubola said the petition was dismissed  based on the recent Supreme Court’s decision that the 180 days given for  the determination of election petitions at the tribunal level could not  be altered in any way.
She said, “The 180 days cannot be extended, not even  by an order of the Court of Appeal. Accordingly, the tribunal no longer  has jurisdiction to try the petition. Consequently, all the proceedings  of the tribunal from the day the petition was returned from the Court of  Appeal for retrial are now a nullity. The petition is hereby  dismissed.”
Earlier during the proceeding, Ngige’s counsel had  drawn the attention of the tribunal of the Supreme Court’s decision of  February 14 and 17, 2012, barring the tribunal from further hearing in  the petition.
He argued that being a subordinate court to the  Supreme Court, the tribunal had a constitutional duty to abide by the  apex court’s decisions.
He therefore urged the tribunal to strike out the  petition on the basis that the 180 days required by the Constitution had  lasped.
Ngige’s argument was adopted by the lead counsel for INEC, Mr. Ositadinma Nnadi.
Though Dr. Chike Akunyili, the petitioner’s husband,  had congratulated Ngige in court over the judgment, her lead counsel,  Mr. Obiora Obianwu, said her client would appeal against the ruling at  the Court of Appeal because “the Supreme Court’s decision does not apply  in this matter.”
But the lead counsel for Akunyili, Mr. Obiora  Obianwu, argued that the decision of the Supreme Court did not apply to  the petition before the tribunal because the Court of Appeal, which  ruled that the tribunal had the jurisdiction to try the petition with a  fresh 180 days was the final court in election matters concerning  National Assembly and State Assembly petitions.
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