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Peter Mbah. |
My attention has been drawn to an article entitled 'Enugu Tribunal: Understanding Why Edeoga's Forgery Allegation Failed' authored by one Charles Okereke and published in BusinessDay (online) newspaper of Sunday, 1st October 2023. As a legal practitioner born and bred in Enugu metropolis, though of Imo State origin, I developed interest in the forgery allegation against the Enugu State governor Mr. Peter Mbah not only because of the television interview granted by the Director General of the NYSC Brigadier General Ahmed Dogara, sometime in May this year or the disclaimers the institution published against Peter Mbah, both of which generated national concern, but also because of the frantic efforts made by the governor, using his legal team to stop the NYSC from coming to Enugu to testify against him at the Governorship Election Tribunal.
Many Nigerians including my humble self were alarmed at
the governor's desperation in attempting to use the law courts to suppress
evidence against him , something generally seen as immoral, unethical and
against public policy. Like millions of others, I became curious and began to
suspect that Governor Peter Mbah really had a great deal to hide. Come on!
Isn't it often said that clear conscience fears no accusation?
Interestingly, that audacious move by the governor was
aborted by the Court of Appeal when it ordered the NYSC to appear before the
Enugu election tribunal to give evidence concerning forgery of its certificate,
being the only institution competent to do so.
From then on, the curiosity never left me as I attended
all the tribunal sittings from start to finish, sometimes sacrificing weekends
just to follow up the proceedings and get to the root of the matter. I remember
a particular Sunday, the very last day of the tribunal's hearing, when an
INEC's witness PW30 admitted that the certified true copies of results
generated from the BVAS as tendered by Hon. Chijioke Edeoga and the Labour
Party, were the same as the content of the BVAS, while asking the court to rely
on their evidence as tendered, since they the INEC, could not produce the right
BVAS machines for inspection before the court. It was a memorable court outing
. I was also in court on 16th August 2023 when the parties adopted their final
written addresses.
It therefore follows that I had a bird's eye view of what
transpired at the tribunal unlike the author of the article I'm responding to,
who with all due respect, does not seem to be a legal practitioner who passed
through the crucibles , let alone witnessing any of the proceedings of the
tribunal. If he were and not just a journalist, he may have skipped the
Criminal Law course in the university. My conclusion stemmed from the author's
adoption of the definition of forgery by the ignorant and corrupt Kudirat
Akano-led tribunal which no criminal law student, will agree with. I will not
go into more details since this is not a lecture room.
Nonetheless, I really do not blame the writer for jumping
at a rare opportunity to make it big as presented by Peter Mbah's forgery case.
Two professionals are currently cashing out big in the coal city; Lawyers and
journalists. Are you a bright lawyer capable of putting up a strong argument on
radio or television or able to write legal articles in support of the governor
and which is publishable in any national daily? You are missing out if you're
not already in Enugu to see the governor face to face for a plump deal.
Similarly, are you a journalist whose articles feature on major national
dailies or has the skill to report legal issues convincingly? Your place is
also in Enugu and nowhere else.
Major national broadcast stations in the country,
including radio and television, have since joined in the rat race to outstrip
each other and make the most out of the desperate situation in Enugu before the
forgery trial terminates at the Supreme Court. Enugu is really being milked
dry.
I took quite sometime to state the above facts in order
to show why it can't be surprising to find many more Charles Okerekes placing
both law and logic upside down within the next couple of months, just to
justify their booties and blandishments, as Peter Mbah enters a crucial stage
in his survival battle.
Those of us who have chosen to stand to be counted in the
noble mission to rescue our country from the morass of official corruption and
institutional decay, will continue to stand by the truth while rejecting
whatever largesse dangled by enemies of the people to distort both facts and
the law to serve a predetermined purpose. If the current trend in which corrupt
judicial officers continue to make the list of election tribunal members every
four years is not checked, our democracy could be completely doomed while those
denied justice would be justified to resort to self-help to express their
indignation. This is certainly not the democracy the citizens bargained for.
For the benefit of those who are not involved to the
extent I I've become in the Enugu tribunal matter and thus hoodwinked by all
kinds of savage disinformation, sponsored by Mr Peter Mbah to decieve the
gullible, I have decided for the very first time, to respond to some of the
junks put out by his shameless minions parading as legal analysts.
First and foremost, I do not know whether Mr Charles
Okereke the author of the article under reference, if a legal practitioner, is
aware that Peter Mbah's own legal team lost faith in his matter much earlier
than anyone imagined. That happened soon after they failed to use the court of
law to suppress evidence against Peter Mbah at the tribunal. If Mr Okereke
knew, he could have saved his ink as the lawyers' performance at the tribunal
was nothing to write home about.
Peter Mbah's counsel's lukewarmness was first noticed on
7th July, 2023 when PW1 ( officer from the NYSC) gave evidence before the
tribunal. After his evidence, everyone was dumbfounded to find out that no
defence lawyer was willing to cross-examine him. Even after the court
intervened by asking the defence team to cross-examine the witness , nothing
changed and following which the witness was released to go.
What really happened?
Such a high-profile witness left without being
cross-examined?
If Mr Okereke were in court that day, he would have
sensed like I did that something had possibly gone awry. Two reasons could have
been advanced. One was that the defence lawyers might have reasoned that from
the way PW1 was sounding in the witness box, he knew too much about his job and
could spill more beans about Peter Mbah if any question was attempted . The
second reason could be that the panel members having been captured right from
the day they met former Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, there was no need bothering
the witness as the result of the entire proceedings had already been
predetermined.
In any event, the law is that if a party given an
opportunity, failed to cross-examine a witness, it cannot by way of address
raise or discuss issues he had opportunity to clarify through the witness,
thereby making his evidence unchallenged. Can someone drum into the skull of Mr
Okereke that Mbah's lawyers' failure to cross-examine PW1 whose evidence held
the key to their doom or survival, marked the beginning of the end of Peter
Mbah in the Lion Building? Does Mr Okereke know that all the puerile arguments
he canvassed in his article are issues of cross examination which Peter Mbah's
lawyers abandoned when it mattered most?
Before coming out with his insipid essay, was Mr Charles
Okereke also aware that when the governor opened his defence, it was one Dr
Festus Uzo, a former Chief of Staff , who stood in for him as witness to give
evidence on his behalf? That was the very last opportunity the governor had to
state his own side of the story but decided to bungle it on the altar of pride
and egoism, not wanting to be humiliated by a stubborn counsel as a sitting
governor. I'm sure Mbah's lawyers must have warned him on the grave
consequences of sending someone else to give evidence on his behalf. Since DW1
who gave evidence on Peter Mbah's behalf had no personal knowledge of what he came
to do, not being the one who absconded from the national youth service or
forged his certificate, his evidence was at best, hearsay and which was only
good for the dustbin. Not having personal knowledge, also meant that the
witness could not be cross-examined and thus discharged to go.
Peter Mbah's only remaining witness one Victor Udeh, his
current Chief of Staff with whom he spent ten months in EFCC custody for
official corruption and who allegedly owned the law chambers in which Mbah
purportedly did his youth service in Lagos, made a dog's breakfast of his
evidence. Mr Ude tendered some documents to show that Peter Mbah did his youth
service in his chambers till completion but admitted under cross examination
that none of the letters he wrote was received by the NYSC as none bore any
official stamp or signature of any member of the organization. When shown an
appointment letter indicating that Mbah at the time his service was supposed to
be running, was serving as Chief of Staff to former Governor Chimaroke Nnamani,
DW1 replied that he had no knowledge of the matter.
Then came the almighty evidence of DW3 who claimed to
have come from the DSS. It's not entirely surprising that the tribunal in its
judgement did not accord any probative value to the evidence of that witness
being patently incoherent and unreliable. Going through Mr Okereke's labourous
efforts to prove that the NYSC was implicated by the DSS report, as having not
done due diligence by keeping accurate records to show that Mbah completed his
youth service, I could not help but sympathize with him. I ask myself whether
the author is aware that the tribunal judgement he referred to , made no
reference to the so-called DSS report having been found to be totally
worthless.
Aside from the fact that the report contained a different
name from the one the witness answered, it bore no signature, letterhead or any
thing else to show that the DSS as an organization authorized the
investigation. In fact when asked, the fidgety witness admitted that the organization
did not authorize him to embark on the investigation. The much hyped DSS report
by Mr Okereke was thus a worthless pile of papers with no evidential value.
If Peter Mbah's case was that he completed his service
year but was not issued with a discharge certificate, as in the case of Hannatu
Musawa; the current Minister of Culture, an investigation report from the
Police, not the DSS, could have been relevant but in the instant case, the
tribunal was dealing with a case of forgery. Did the purported DSS report in
any of the pages show that Peter Mbah did not forge his NYSC discharge
certificate with serial number A808297? It didn't as all what it tried to show
was that Peter Mbah began and concluded his service year.
A plethora of Supreme Court authorities have shown that
only the institution which issued or issues a certificate is competent to
confirm whether or not it's fake. That principle has not changed.
If the Director of Corps certification NYSC as PW1 was
not cross-examined after giving evidence, Peter Mbah who alone had personal
knowledge of what transpired between him and the NYSC, did not appear to give
evidence while the evidence of the so-called DSS , heavily relied upon and
expected to counter that of the NYSC was not accorded any weight in the
judgment, how then was Mbah's victory possible?
A heavily compromised panel realizing this obvious fact,
knew that the only way to collapse the case of the Labour Party was to reject
the crucial evidence of PW1. In order to do so, it rejected evidence of all the
subpoenaed witnesses , just to give the impression that PW1 was not the target.
In striking out PW1's evidence, the tribunal cited rules of court as contained
in the Electoral Act 2022 and which according to it, required evidence of all witnesses
including those subpoenaed to be front-loaded .
The shameless tribunal believing that it had found the
technical loophole it badly needed to stop Hon. Chijioke Edeoga and the Labour
Party, hung on to the issue of front-loading. To rationalize its controversial
position , the tribunal went ahead to cite the case of Oke & Anor v MIMIKO
(2016) as well as Peter Obi v INEC( 2023) to show that evidence of all
witnesses appearing before the panel must be front -loaded.
A corrupt judge is by far worse than a corrupt medical
practitioner who operated on a woman who didn't have any need for a caesarian
section, just to rip off her wealthy husband. In the case of a corrupt judge,
his decision has the capacity to make or mar the destiny of hundreds of thousands
of people.
Providentially, Justice Kudirat Akano-led tribunal ended
up shooting itself in the foot as a careful perusal of the authorities cited ,
show a glaring incongruity and contradiction with the case in hand. Whereas the
case of Oke & Anor v MIMIKO(2016) had nothing to do with front-loading and
everything to do with an application for extension of time to file a motion,
the case of Peter Obi v INEC(2023) is patently inapplicable.
In Peter Obi v INEC recently decided by the Court of
Appeal, the court clearly made a distinction between an ordinary subpoenaed
witness and an official or adversarial witness. The Court of Appeal in that
case contended that some of the witnesses subpoenaed by the Labour Party's
Presidential candidate, were witnesses available to him at the time of filing
his petition and who ought not have been brought to court by means of a
subpoena. Whether the court's position is right or wrong, the distinction made
in that case is that an official witness is one not within the control of the
party intending to call him and thus unavailable to it at the time of filing
petition.
The question Okereke and his sponsors need to answer is,
can an NYSC witness for all intents and purposes be described as Chijioke
Edeoga or Labour Party's witness and one available to them at the time of
filing their petition? Not at all, hence an order of court was needed to bring
him to court as an official witness whose evidence on oath was inaccessible
before a court order commanding his appearance and after processes had been
exchanged and issues joined. Interestingly, Mr Okereke in quoting paragraph 4
(5) (b) of schedule 1 of the Electoral Act 2022, admitted that a witness
requiring front-loading is one available to a party at the time of filing
petition.
The pertinent question is, where did the corrupt panel
derive the authority to reject the evidence of PWI being an official witness,
if the cases it cited did not support its decision?
Mr Okereke in his absurdity also dabbled into the issue
of the NYSC discharge certificate not being a mandatory qualification for the
office of governor of a state under section 177 of the constitution. Thank God
the hireling admitted, as the tribunal did, that the alleged fake discharge
certificate was presented to the Independent National Electoral Commission
INEC. His fellow jobbers who have been gallivanting on radio of late, seem to
have prepared a different judgement from the one delivered by justice Akano by
claiming that Mbah's NYSC discharge certificate was not presented to the INEC.
Bribery and corruption have a way of disorienting their victims.
Furthermore, even though Mr Okereke admitted like the
panel , that Peter Mbah's NYSC discharge certificate was presented to the
Independent National Electoral Commission, he also argues that it was not done
in aid of his qualification, having already qualified with or without the NYSC
discharge certificate. Following in the tribunal's footsteps, the mischievous
writer also cited cases that are unrelated to the issue in order to be seen to
be working hard by those who commissioned him.
At this juncture can someone educate Mr Charles Okereke
in the best language that sections 177 and 182(1)(j) of the Constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 are not mutually exclusive but must be
separately satisfied by any gubernatorial aspirant before becoming governor in
Nigeria? Should he also be lectured to know that section 182(1)(j) is clear and
unambiguous and thus not subject to any other rule of interpretation outside
the literal rule? Under what authority is the tribunal and Mr Okereke
distinguishing between presenting a forged certificate to the Independent
National Electoral Commission and presenting one in aid of qualification?
With all due respect, the case of Agi v PDP (2016) and
Ogundehin v Olubowale (2016) cited by Mr Okereke are totally inapplicable as no
such principle was propounded.
Again, where in section 182(1)(j) of the Constitution of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria is form EC9 or affidavit mentioned? Beating
about the bush remains a wild goose chase which is incapable of introducing
into any statute what is therein not contained.
The truth is that the judgment as delivered by justice
Kudirat Akano is laden with too many pitfalls which Peter Mbah's camp are
surely not comfortable with. A dependable source indicates that the governor's
camp blames the shameless cash -and- carry panel for not doing a neat job after
being handsomely rewarded. A wise corrupt judge distances himself from cases
where the law, facts and evidence are so religiously intertwined that bending
in favour anyone is inherently dangerous. That aspect, justice Akano was not
taught in her bribery jurisprudence.
Finally, the author in one of the paragraphs also argued
that the fake certificate presented by Peter Mbah having been certified by the
NYSC is a conclusive proof that the organization made the document. That is
absolutely infantile . When did certification of a public document become proof
of authorship ? The argument falls flat on its face as section 102 of the
Evidence Act 2011 as amended is clear and unambiguous.
Under that section, by reason of the fact that public
records kept of private documents are also public documents among other kinds, they
cannot be said to have been made by the institution or institutions which
issued them. Such interpretation runs contrary to the section which deals on
all aspects of public documents. For example, if someone petitioned the police
and returns later for a certified true copy of his petition being a public
document, could it be right to say that the police, by certifying the document,
made it? That amounts to absurdity as certification of a public document
connotes more of custody than authorship.
Like I noted earlier, I really do not blame Peter Mbah
and his co-travellers for clutching at straws and trying by any means possible
to bend the law in their survival battle, as they are really in deep trouble.
Nonetheless, the honourable thing Mr Okereke needs to do is to advise his
certificate-forging boss to resign honourably and apologize to Ndi Enugu as
well as the Labour Party for continuing to waste everybody's time. Whether he
heeds the advice or not, what is not certain is the very day and time the law breaker
will be chased out of the Lion Building and not if he will be chased out. He
knows he's living on borrowed time.
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