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Goodluck Jonathan

Former President Goodluck Jonathan has laid the blame for the ongoing crisis in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) squarely on the judiciary.

He contended that recent judicial rulings have contradicted the natural course of events, creating turmoil that endangers the country’s democracy.

Referring specifically to a party ruling regarding the suspension and expulsion of a PDP National Chairman, Jonathan called on the Supreme Court to reexamine the judgment.

He urged lawyers and judges to exercise caution in their professional conduct, mindful of the broader implications for the nation and its democratic integrity.

Jonathan made these remarks in Abuja on Thursday during a gathering that included former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), former Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi, and other distinguished Nigerians at the launch of 50 books by Mike Ozekhome (SAN) in celebration of his 67th birthday.

Jonathan said: “The way things are going in this country, especially listening to the judgments being given regarding political cases, we are beginning to see that democracy in Nigeria is like a cone that is being turned upside down.

“And if a cone is turned upside down it cannot be stable and at the slightest perturbation, it will fall.

“When I listened to some senior lawyers like Olisa Agbakoba making comments on some Supreme Court’s judgments, I felt very sad that the country has got to that level.

“If our democracy will endure, people, both at the Bar and the Bench should not be carried away by political influence. That is the only way we can stabilise the political process.

“I know the lawyers enjoy because after elections there is always avalanche of litigation, because it is like Christmas for lawyers.

“But in most other countries, people don’t go to court, but in Nigeria, pre-election matters and post-election matters fill all the courts and it does not give a good sign for democracy.

“Comparing Nigeria to other African countries and those outside Africa, because I have been able to get involved in their electoral processes, it worries me.

“There is a particular judgment that has been haunting me and I need to mention that, luckily I am not a lawyer, I am saying that from a layman view, it (the judgment) simply turned the cone upside down and if the courts don’t look back into this case, it will create so much instability in the political system that it would affect all of us.

“Those who would have succeeded, their victory song will not last long, because we will all be victims.

“Where the court says a Ward Chairman can expel a National Chairman of a political party. This is not in line with natural justice.

“The law is to control human behaviour and human behaviour must follow how God created systems.

“And, you cannot tell me that the Head of Department in a university, for example, can expel the Vice Chancellor. So, how can the Nigerian law tell me that a Ward Chairman can expel a national officer of a political party.

“And, since that judgment has been given, as at today, it has created all kinds of instability in the party. PDP is in crisis because of that judgment. APC, at a time was also into crisis because of that judgment.

“I am not looking at it from a legal perspective, because I don’t know anything about the law. But when I look at how nature works,

I have never seen a system where its sub-unit can discipline the top.

“For the PDP exactly, in the constitution of the PDP, if you are a national officer, even your state cannot discipline you, not to talk about a Ward officer, who is not a member of the NEC, the National Executive Council.

“And, we are saying that a Ward Chairman of a party can suspend and expel the National Chairman of a political party.

“I am appealing with the Supreme Court to revisit that their judgment, because that judgment has turned the cone upside down and the political process, the democracy is wobbling.”

When asked by Jonathan to comment on the political situation in the country, Obasanjo said: “I wouldn’t say anything, because there is much to say, but there is not yet time for it.”

Like other speakers, Obasanjo eulogised Ozekhome, describing him as an extra ordinary man.

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