An Abuja-based lawyer, Festus Oluwasanmi Onifade, has dragged President Muhammad Buhari through a federal high court in Abuja for alleged gross breach of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution.
He sued Buhari alongside the Attorney General of the Federation, AGF, and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, the Federal Character Commission (FCC), Mueeba Farida Dankaka (Chairperson of the commission) and Mohammed Bello Tukur (Secretary of the commission) as 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th respondents respectively.
His grouse about the appointnents was that the President violated some provisions of the 1999 Constitution in the manner he made these political appointments and others.
In the suit marked FHC/ABJ/709/2021 and instituted on his behalf by his counsel, Moses Owuru, plaintiff accused President Buhari of violating sections 7 and 8 of the Constitution in the appointments of Mueeba Farida Dankaka and Mohammed Bello Tukur as Executive Chairman and Executive Secretary of the Federal Character Commission FCC respectively.
The plaintiff who claimed to
be an indigene of Osun State in the South Western geo-political zone of the country, alleged that the two appointments were in clear breach of section 4 of the Federal Character Commission Act, having been made from the Northern part of the country.
He, therefore, prayed the court to issue an order to compel Buhari to immediately dissolve the Board of the commission and to reconstitute it to reflect the principle and letters of the Federal Character Commission as enshrined in the 1999 constitution.
Plaintiff, who claimed to have been aggrieved by the appointments, also sought another order to compel Mueeba Farida Dankaka and Mohammed Bello Tukur to vacate their offices without any delay.
In a 21-paragraph affidavit in support of the suit, plaintiff averred that Buhari on March 18, 2020 appointed Mueeba Farida Dankaka and on June 2, 2020 was confirmed by the Senate as Executive Chairman of the FCC.
He also claimed that Buhari on April 6, 2017 appointed Mohammed Bello Tukur as Executive Secretary of the FCC and that since the expiration of his tenure on April 7, 2021, he has continued to function in office.
Plaintiff averred that since the two appointees were from the North, Buhari had breached sections 7 and 8 of Nigeria’s Constitution.
He, therefore, asked the court to declare the appointments unlawful, unconstitutional, illegal, null and void.
Plaintiff also wanted the court to declare that Buhari and other defendants in the suit were bound to abide by the provisions of the constitution as they related to the principle of proportional sharing of all political offices.
Meanwhile Justice Inyang Eden Ekwo has fixed November 11 for hearing of the suit.
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