Being text of a press briefing addressed by PDP National Secretary, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, today in Abuja
The PDP and my humble self appealed that judgement. Surprisingly, the
PDP, which was vicariously liable for my actions as National Secretary
almost immediately, and without any reason or justification, withdrew
its appeal. I was requested to pursue my appeal and report back if my
petition lodged at the Court of Appeal succeeded. From then on, I
patiently and diligently pursued my case at the Appeal Court which, a
few days ago, upturned the Federal High Court verdict and re-validated
my mandate as the validly elected PDP National Secretary. I expected the
party to abide by that judgement.
It was therefore, shocking and unbelievable when I got to know
through the media that I had been suspended from the party as a
consequence of my winning a court case. The history of the PDP is one of
resistance to dictatorship and impunity. It is also a solid story of
robust opposition to all forms of negation of constitutionalism and the
rule of law. The PDP is a product of the rule of law and that
realisation informed my shock at this blatant assault on our courts,
this unfortunate affront against the judiciary, good conscience and
morality.
I want to say that assuming the Tukur leadership of the PDP felt
dissatisfied with the court decision, what should it have done?
Shouldn’t it have asked the plaintiffs to appeal the verdict instead of
declaring this needless war against the judiciary?
Even then, I need to stress the unconstitutionality of this act of
suspension of Oyinlola, a member of the National Executive Committee of
the PDP. In saying this, I wish to invite the attention of Nigerians to
the provisions of section 57 of the PDP constitution which states in
detail, the procedure for disciplining members of the party.
Specifically, section 57 (4) states that “where an allegation is made
against a member of the party, the Disciplinary Committee shall inform
the member in writing of the allegations made against him or her.”
Nobody has till date informed me of any wrong doing against my party.
Again, Section 57 (6) is even more apposite here. It gives the
consequences of not giving a member a fair hearing before a disciplinary
action is taken against him or her. It states: “Any decision taken
against a member who has not been informed of the charges against him or
her, or, has not been given any opportunity of defending himself or
herself shall be null and void.”
As to Tukur’s NWC suspending me so as to preclude me from enjoying
the relief granted me by the Court of Appeal, I wish to shock them by
informing them of the futility of their action. They should have been
diligent enough to read section 57 (7) of our party’s constitution. It
states: “Notwithstanding any other provision relating to discipline, no
Executive Committee at any level, except the National Executive
Committee, shall entertain any question of discipline as may relate or
concern a member of the National Executive Committee, Deputy Governors
or members of the National Assembly…” That is what our constitution
says. I am a member of the NEC and so Tukur’s NWC can only submit a
complaint to NEC concerning me or any other member of the party listed
above.
For the records, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, as a loyal and committed PDP
member, who has over the years been a lover of peace and amity, has
demonstrated his preference for methodical and urbane conduct in office,
by spear-heading several peace initiatives and amicable resolution of
disputes. Accordingly, I have, in line with my stance on harmonious
relationships and strict adherence to orderliness and respect for truth
taken several steps in the past ten months since I was illegally removed
from office by a contrived court ruling. Let me state with humility,
that as a human being with feelings, I am bound to be hurt and aggrieved
at the inhuman and unjust treatment meted to me in the course of the
performance of my duties as national secretary. I, therefore, subscribed
to several peace plans in line with the constitution of the PDP, as
engineered by several organs, interests and individuals that have stakes
in the affairs of the PDP. That itself is in conformity with the
relevant sections of the PDP constitution on seeking redress by
aggrieved party members.
Among others, we met and discussed my plight a couple of times with
the national leader of the PDP, His Excellency, Mr. President, Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan, GCFR. I also made representations to the Governor
Ibrahim Shema Committee set up by PDP Governors to examine the political
crises in the South-west zone of the PDP through a memorandum presented
to the body. Furthermore, I submitted a memorandum to the Committee
headed by the esteemed Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the PDP,
Chief Tony Anenih, and the Prof. Jerry Gana panel on the last PDP
special national convention, among many other moves to resolve the
impasse amicably. It could be safely stated that I took adequate steps
to register my displeasure at the manner I was shabbily treated by the
NWC of the PDP, which went to the extent of withdrawing the appeals
filed on my behalf at the Federal High Court, Abuja; and the Lagos
Division of the Court of Appeal, with an apparent intention of pushing
me out of the PDP at all costs. My persecutors owe me an explanation on
why I am being unjustly persecuted, and vilified unduly; especially
considering the fact that no pronouncement has been made on the
representations I have made to various authorities of the party in the
past 10 months, aside from my illegal removal from office. The causes
and effects of the political crises must have been examined by the
various bodies that investigated the conducts of all the aggrieved PDP
members in relation to the handling of the crises by party leaders. To
have resorted to an anomalous decision to suspend an accused without
allowing for a fair hearing makes the NWC appear to be a body at the
crossroad. That decision, which is designed to serve the self-interest
of a clique, destroys the very basis of internal democracy in PDP and
makes nonsense out of the principles and values which all right-thinking
members of the society cherish.
It is more than a huge joke and travesty of justice that in the
process of attempting to illegally terminate Oyinlola’s membership of
the PDP, the PDP NWC violated the party’s constitution by refusing to
give me – the accused top official and member of the National Executive
Committee of the ruling party a fair hearing, before my purported
suspension from the party. It is tragic that all these do not portray
the actors as being free from destructive bias and an irrational fear of
Oyinlola’s penchant for due process. What could be a better proof of
their feverish struggle to prevent Oyinlola from operating at the
national secretariat than the PDP counsel’s vow to the press last
January that “Oyinlola will never be allowed to return to office as PDP
scribe?”
I also understand that Tukur’s NWC spoke about referring my case to
the Disciplinary Committee. I do not know the disciplinary committee
they are talking about because, the one set up by the Tukur leadership
has not been approved by the NEC as stipulated by the constitution of
the party and so cannot exist talkless of trying anyone.
I do not want to believe that there is no one in Tukur’s NWC
knowledgeable in the provisions of the party’s constitution and in the
operation of the rule of law. I would rather hold on to the belief that
the rush to subvert the rule of law and mock our judicial system simply
blinded the hawks in that NWC to what the law says.
I am reminding Tukur’s NWC that the import of the court of Appeal
judgement and having been empowered by the constitution of our party, I
remain the undisputed National Secretary of the PDP. If they are so
determined to discipline me for whatever wrong they perceive, they
should report me to the National Executive Committee of the party. There
is no short-cut to it as long as the party’s acts and conducts are
governed by its own constitution and the constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, which is the grundnorm.
I also invite their attention to section 36(a-e) of the PDP
constitution which spells out the powers and duties of the National
Secretary. I hope they have adverted their minds to the consequences of
having illegal persons performing those functions and exercising such
powers in clear breach of the law. The only person who can legitimately
exercise those functions today and unless the Supreme Court says
otherwise is Olagunsoye Oyinlola. I hope and pray they know.
Nigerians should ask Alhaji Tukur and his cohorts what offence
Oyinlola has committed against them to warrant the undisguised
persecution and harassment? I have not offended them in anyway.
Instead, I spent my days in Wadata Plaza, pursuing the peace,
orderliness, progress and cohesion of the party at all levels, while not
losing sight of the dictates of the law. Even Alhaji Tukur is a
witness to my efforts in this regard. Why and how things got this bad in
the party is what I cannot fathom. I, however, advise that in
executing whatever plan they may have against Oyinlola, they should
spare the judiciary of the ridicule such as the ambush of last Monday,
which they clearly designed to short-shrift the decision of the Court of
Appeal. I am a law-abiding citizen and will always submit to the law.
That was why I appealed Justice Kafarati’s verdict. I urge my traducers
to also endeavour to have faith in the law and in the judiciary. If they
are not satisfied with what the Court of Appeal said on Oyinlola, they
have the Supreme Court to approach.
Certainly, to live in terrible hate and perpetual fear is a terrible
end to design and I will never allow my conscience to be imprisoned,
while contributing my quota to the development of the PDP or any
organization for that matter. Leadership must not allow itself to be
part of a problem it is attempting to solve, as the result of this would
definitely be loss of both credibility and efficacy to effect positive
changes. Opinions must certainly differ on issues and developments,
since we cannot all see through the same side of the prism in like
manner. I am of the conviction that we could do better, as the ruling
political party to restore and respect the rule of law, enshrine an
ethic of accountability, fair play, responsibility in leadership and
institutionalize the principles of equality, justice and respect for
objectivity and truth. Doing otherwise exposes us to the ridicule of the
advanced world as the political arena assumes higher levels of
activity.
I am happy to stress that by the combined effects of the judgement of
the Court of Appeal and the provisions of the constitution of our party
(particularly section 57), I, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola remain the
National Secretary of the PDP – except and until the Supreme Court says
otherwise, any other contraption from Tukur’s NWC is illegal, null and
void. Simply put, disobedience of the ruling of a properly constituted
Law court leaves a sour taste in the mouth. Gentlemen of the press, no
condition is permanent. That is why we all must fear the Creator, in our
dealings with fellow human beings. And like I have always maintained,
the path of truth may be long, arrival at its destination is, however,
definite.
On
Monday night, I heard through the media, my purported suspension from
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) by the Alhaji Bamanga Tukur led
National Working Committee (NWC). I have since gone through the press
statement containing my purported suspension and have come to the
conclusion that I should make a formal reaction to this latest act of
impunity by a section of the party, that is clearly out to ridicule the
judiciary, denigrate the rule of law and destroy the very basic
foundation of constitutionalism in our country.
You will recall that on January 11, this year, Justice Abdul Kafarati
of the Federal High Court, Abuja, ordered my removal from office as the
National Secretary of the PDP in his judgement, in a suit instituted by
a faction of the Ogun state chapter of the party. Although I
immediately appealed that court verdict, the Bamanga Tukur led PDP
swiftly swore in my deputy as acting National Secretary, declaring that
the judgement was declaratory, hence its implementation could not be
delayed.
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