A legal practitioner, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa (SAN) says there was probably too much expectation from a section of Nigerians on the expected verdict of the Election Petition Tribunal over the outcome of the 2023 presidential election in Nigeria.
According to him, the eventual position of the tribunal was not totally unexpected because many of the principles of law canvased in the petitions had long been settled by the Supreme Court.
OsunDailyNG recalls the tribunal on Wednesday dismissed the petitions by Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) and Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) challenging the victory of President Bola Tinubu.
Reacting via a post on his Facebook, Adegboruwa said the lesson is to go back and review the electoral process in Nigeria.
He added that it would be difficult for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to produce a credible election currently and called for the urgent unbundling of the electoral body.
His words: โTodayโs verdict should be a reason for sober reflection by all, especially for the parties in court, their lawyers and all lovers of democracy. The petitions could have been decided purely on points of law and within few days of the election.
โThere can be no real victory in the resolution of the legal issues by the court when the fabric of our democratic engagements seem to have been hijacked and compromised. Part of the lesson in this process is for us to go back and review the electoral process and the litigations following it. INEC as it is presently constituted cannot birth any credible election in Nigeria.
โIn all, maybe there was too much expectation that the status quo will be upturned, whereas many of the principles of law canvased had long been settled by the apex court.
โWhile encouraging all parties to continue in towing the paths already defined by law for the ventilation of grievances, we owe Nigeria an urgent duty to dismantle INEC, urgently.โ
He added that, โThe verdict of the Presidential Election Petition Court was not totally unexpected, given the stark realities facing us as a nation and the state of the law.
โThe principles of presumption of regularity of elections and that of substantial conformity make it extremely difficult to prosecute elections successfully.
โIn this particular case, the burden placed upon the petitioners in order to upturn the election was practically insurmountable. To make matters worse, INEC practically fought the petitioners to a standstill, as if it was an interested party in the whole process.
โI honestly donโt think anyone expected a different verdict from what was delivered in Abuja today, particularly the lawyers. The tension was completely unnecessary.โ