The tribunals had dismissed the petition filed by Sylva and upheld the election of Dickson.
According to the petition filed by the lead counsel to Governor Seriake Dickson, Tayo Oyetibo, the cross appeal contended that by virtue of section 182(1)b of the 1999 Constitution, Sylva having been elected governor of Bayelsa State on two previous occasions is neither qualified to contest election into that office again or present any petition challenging Dickson’s victory at the polls.
Governor Dickson, who expressed dissatisfaction with the tribunal for refusing to bar Sylva from contesting governorship election having taken governorship oath of office twice, has cross appealed the judgment of the tribunal in which he won.
Sylva, it will be recalled contested the governorship election in the state on 14th April, 2007, won and was sworn in on May 29, 2007. Luck ran out of him on April 15, 2008 when the Court of Appeal nullified his election on grounds that it was fraught with irregularities and directed him to hand over to the speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly.
Consequent upon the annulment, a new election was conducted by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on May 24, 2008 in which Sylva was returned as elected. Consequently, Sylva took another oath of allegiance and oath of office on May 29, 2008 and exercised the powers of a governor until February 14, 2012 when Dickson was sworn in.
While quoting copiously from decided Supreme Court cases such as Brig. Gen. Muhammed Buba Marwa versus ADM. Murtala Nyako, Dickson affirmed that Sylva was not qualified to challenge his re-election at the tribunal and urged the Appeal Court to strike out the petition and formally disqualify Sylva from ever running for governorship having been sworn in twice as governor.
Commenting on the development, the special adviser to Dickson on media relations, Mr. Francis Agbo said having woefully lost the election in seven out of eight local government areas in the state in spite of the manipulation and intimidation of voters by the federal agencies, Sylva should have congratulated Dickson and joined hands with the governor to restore the lost glory of the state and not to write a petition that is at best ‘‘watery, bare in content and was as usual, dead on arrival.’’
While stressing that Sylva has a bad case having been totally rejected by the people, a decision which the tribunal has upheld, his appeal was an unnecessary distraction but the governor will never be distracted from serving his people because according to him, his boss has his hands on the plough and the Bible says a man who has his hands on the plough will never look back.
Agbo accused Sylva and his APC friends in high places of terrorising the Nigerian Judiciary to make Sylva governor through the backdoor. While advising Sylva to stop dragging the judiciary in the mud, the governor’s image maker urges the Judiciary not to be blackmailed or intimidated.
Culled from Leadership
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