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Court Declares Young Democratic Party Duly Registered Political Party
 
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Thu, 5 Mar 2015   ||   Nigeria,
 

With about three weeks to the general election, a Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to accord full recognition to the Young Democratic Party, having been deemed registered as a political party.
Young Democratic Party had sued the INEC, Mr. Peter Fayose, Dr Kayode Ayemi, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and All Progressives Congress (APC), as 1st to 6th defendants respectively.

However, the names of the 2nd-6th defendants were struck out by the court, leaving only INEC.
The plaintiff had asked the court to declare that INEC had no reason not to register it as a political party.
Delivering judgment on the suit yesterday, Justice Ahmed Mohammed held that “INEC has not discharged its constitutional obligation of informing the plaintiff why it has not been registered as a political party.
“The effect of INEC’s action as clearly spelt out in Section 78(4) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) is to deem the plaintiff as a duly registered political party.”

The court was of the view that having received the plaintiff’s application to be registered as a political party on March 17, 2014, based on the provision of Section 78(4) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended), INEC had 30 days to act on the plaintiff’s application.
Instead, Justice Mohammed noted that it took INEC more than 120 days to react to series of correspondences from the plaintiff seeking to know why it had not been registered.
The court said the time lag on the side of INEC and its inability to inform the Young Democratic Party of its status meant that the plaintiff’s application had no defect. For more than 120 days outside the 30 days required by law, INEC did not come out to say that the plaintiff had not met the requirements.

The court held that INEC had no reason whatsoever to refuse to issue the plaintiff with its certificate of registration since the plaintiff was deemed registered as a political party by virtue of the provisions of the Electoral Act particularly Section 78(4), and also considering the letter of submission of application dated March 17, 2014.
Justice Mohammed also declared that the 1st defendant had no reason whatsoever to refuse to issue the plaintiff with its certificate of registration being that the plaintiff was deemed registered as a political party by virtue of the provisions of the Electoral Act particularly Section 78(4), and also considering the letter of submission of application dated the August 13 2014 titled “Re: Application for Registration as a political party.”

Earlier, the court had dismissed the preliminary objection of INEC dated January 25, 2015, saying, “From the wording of Section 78(4) of the Electoral Act, the defendant has obligation to register an association as a political party. Consequences of not doing so is to deem the association as deemed registered as a political party.”
The court added that by deeming a political association as a registered party after 30 days, the Electoral Act had given the plaintiff a legal right.

“Plaintiff has legal right; defendant’s preliminary objection dated January 25, 2015, has failed and accordingly dismissed,” the court said.
The plaintiff had posed the following questions before the court:
“Whether by virtue of the Electoral Act 2010, particularly Section 78(4) deeming the plaintiff registered as a political party, and also our extant laws including the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the 1st defendant has any justifiable reason to withhold the certificate of registration of the plaintiff.”
“Whether considering the letter of submission of application dated March 17, 2001 and received by the 1st defendant on 1st August 2014 to be registered as a political party and also considering Section 78(4) of the Electoral Act, the plaintiff was a political party?

Source: THISDAY

 

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