Enugu guber: Anxiety,
tension as A’Court fails to sit
By Sun News Publishing
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
The pervading tension in Enugu over the long overdue ruling
on the governorship electoral appeal reached a frightening
dimension on Tuesday, when the judges failed to turn up at
the Enugu Appeal Court, venue of the sittings.
Thousands of people, both of government and opposition sides,
thronged the Enugu Appeal Court premises full of expectations,
but were seen to be highly disappointed, angry and worried
as it dawned on them that the long wait for the final verdict
had taken another turn.
One of the politicians, who spoke, wondered why the absence
of just the chairman of the appeal tribunal can cause others
not to read their judgment, when just two judges were known
to have read the verdicts of Bayelsa and other states.
Corroborating him, Executive Director of Coalition for Consolidation
of Democracy (CCD), Dr. Anthony Nwagu, the man who had on
Monday raised the initial alarm of possible wheeling and dealing
over the appeal ruling, declared that he had been vindicated.
He said “the chairman taking ill was not enough to cause
a shift after judgment notices had been dispatched one week
before today.
He said he was sure that some games were up in the entire
appeal as he speculated a few days ago.
He further said he was afraid the long and hard worn image
of uprightness, activism and courage of the judiciary in the
last one year might be muddled and drowned in “this
sought of back and forth behaviour of the appeal tribunal
in Enugu.”
Another pro-democracy activist, Mr. Obiekwe Nwako, of the
South East Reforms Initiative (SERI), decried the development,
saying he knew that Nigerian establishment had always treated
matters affecting Ndigbo in ways that suggested disdain.
According to him, the Enugu appeal remained the longest and
even after people had waited this long, he found it most displeasing
that it had been shifted again, this time on what he called
“possible attempts at perverting justice and truncating
democracy.”
Some of the politicians who commented wondered why Governor
Sullivan Chime would be so unsettled about a judgment which
anybody who took interest in the whole cases knew would come.
One of the politicians who pleaded anonymity, argued that
the governor knew that he had performed in at least the urban
centres in the last one year and should not be afraid of the
election which he knew was coming and for which he had boasted
he would win convincingly.
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