More details have emerged regarding the petition
written against a judge of the Abuja division of the Court of Appeal, Jummai
Sankey, on the Ondo State Peoples Democratic Party crisis.
Ms. Sankey had earlier on Tuesday recused herself
from presiding over applications brought by Eyitayo Jegede, the candidate of
the Ahmed Makarfi’s PDP faction.
Her decision, which was also taken by the other two
members of the panel, was on the ground that a petition had been written
against them by Biyi Poroye, the state chairman of the party, from the faction
led by former Borno State governor, Modu Sheriff.
The petition dated October 31, read in court, said
that the Ondo State governor Olusegun Mimiko had allegedly boasted of bribing
the presiding judge with a sum of N350 million.
The petitioner, Mr. Poroye, claimed that Mr. Mimiko
made the statement at a public gathering and that he had earlier boasted of
treating Ms. Sankey to a bribe of N100 million.
Mr. Poroye, in the petition, alleged that Ms. Sankey
had been sick for the past five years and had most likely spent her fortune on
treatment, hence the possibility that she would be prone to being compromised
for financial gains. He added that Ms. Sankey was transferred from Yola, where
Mr. Jegede had practiced for over 15 years, and therefore she could have had
strong ties with the applicant.
He also faulted what he termed as ‘the composition of
a special panel to hear a pre-election matter’, adding that there was no reason
for the President of the Court of Appeal, Zainab Bulkachuwa, to have done so
since the appeal was not time bound. Counsel representing both factions had in
court indicated lack of knowledge about the said petition and condemned it.
Ms. Sankey had also condemned the decision of the
petitioner to have used her illness as a basis for the allegations against her.
“Conscience is an open wound, only truth can heal it. It is painful that the
petitioner used my ailment predicament to insult me, to allege that I am a poor
Judge, sick for five years and prone to corruption. “I am ready to carry my
illness on my shoulder, but it is unfair for the petitioner to make my sickness
an issue in his petition,” she had said.
The court had opted to ignore the petition, since
the counsel indicated ignorance, but noted that any case of alleged bias has
the legal requirement for consideration. The panel therefore returned the case
files to the president of the court, till the determination of the issues
contained in the petition.
The appeal court had planned among other things to
decide whether the lower court was right in deciding that the faction of the
party led by Mr. Sheriff was the right camp of the PDP.
That decision was to form the basis of determining
the rightful candidate to be recognised as the flag-bearer of the PDP in the
November 26 election.
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