On September 13, 2015 we receive a report from a reliable source revealing that the judge heading the governorship election
tribunal in Rivers State had received a bribe of N200 million from
Governor Nyesom Wike to pervert the course of justice.
Wike Nyesom
That compromised judge, Mu’azu Pindiga, was quietly removed as head
of the election petition tribunal and reassigned to another tribunal as
chairman of the National and state Houses of Assembly Tribunal for Court
2, handling state and national assembly elections petitions in Rivers
State.
Despite his removal from the governorship tribunal and our our expose
that his removal was due to the fact that he took bribe, Justice
Pindiga went ahead to deliver controversial verdicts, validating all the
legislative results called by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) in the state.
“The truth is that Justice Pindiga tainted the image of the judiciary
with his rulings,” said a lawyer who represented one of the candidates
who petitioned the tribunal to overturn a controversial election into
the House of Representatives. “We all know that the PDP [Peoples
Democratic Party] carried out massive rigging throughout Rivers [State].
So when Justice Pindiga’s tribunal upheld all the cases brought before
him, he robbed the people of Rivers the opportunity to redress the
injustice done against them by men and women who fraudulently got into
office using widespread rigging and violence,” said the lawyer.
Justice Mohammed Suleiman Ambrosa, who took over the governorship tribunal, reportedly rebuffed every effort by Mr. Wike and his cohorts to bribe him and members of his tribunal, perhaps for fear of being exposed as his successor, Justice Pindiga, was.
Below is the text of our original reporting on the firing of Justice Pindiga:
Justice Mohammed Suleiman Ambrosa, who took over the governorship tribunal, reportedly rebuffed every effort by Mr. Wike and his cohorts to bribe him and members of his tribunal, perhaps for fear of being exposed as his successor, Justice Pindiga, was.
Below is the text of our original reporting on the firing of Justice Pindiga:
Governor Nyesom Wike’s N200 Million Bribe Behind Firing Of Governorship Election Tribunal Chairman In Rivers State
Justice Mu’azu Pindiga, chairman of the Rivers State governorship
election tribunal, was removed after investigators from the Department
of State Security (DSS) discovered that the judge had accepted a bribe
of N200 million from Governor Nyesom Wike, the major defendant in an
electoral case before the tribunal.
Our sources within the DSS said their agents confronted the judge
as well as the President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Zainab
Bulkachuwa, with evidence of the bribe. Justice Bulkachuwa then decided
to remove the tribunal chairman.
Justice Mohammed Ambrosa was then asked to
replace the compromised Justice Pindiga, as the President of the Court
of Appeal said there was no point swearing in a new judge.
Two lawyers representing clients whose petitions were before the
electoral tribunal told us that they welcomed the firing of
Justice Pindiga. “Apart from the fact that he has been exposed for
being corrupt, he has not demonstrated any knowledge of electoral
matters,” one of the lawyers said. “I can tell you that a number of
lawyers who have appeared before him have found him wanting when it
comes to issues pertaining to the electoral laws of this country,” he
added. Another lawyer echoed the sentiment. “We had protested to the
President of Court of Appeal to replace the judge. He was a poor judge,”
he said. After learning about the replacement of Justice Pindiga, Mr.
Wike’s lawyers launched a feeble protest, criticizing the reconstitution
of the tribunal. However, their protest was silenced when they were
told that the governor’s bribe to the removed judge had been exposed.
Governor Wike had made at least two attempts to see the Chief Justice of Nigeria to seek
the CJN’s help to influence the outcome of the tribunal, but the
nation’s top judge declined to meet with the governor, citing his fear
of President Muhammadu Buhari. SaharaReporters learned that Mr. Wike’s
lawyers facilitated the collection of the N200 million by the ousted
tribunal chairman. Justice Bulkachuwa, who oversees the Court of Appeal,
is mentioned in legal circles as a keen receiver of inducement in past
electoral tribunal cases.
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