APC, Obaseki: Court fixes Jan 9 for judgment in alleged forgery scandal

Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the Federal High Court, Abuja will on Saturday January 9, 2021 deliver judgment in the alleged certificate forgery charges level against Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo state.

The judge fixed Saturday for judgment after lawyers to parties adopted their written addresses as their arguments for and against the suit.

The judgment would be coming barely 24 hours to the expiration of the suit filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and one of its chieftains, Mr Williams Edobor.

Blueprint reports that the accelerated hearing given to the case was to beat the stipulated number of days such suit could be heard.

The APC had dragged Obaseki to court for allegedly forging his University of Ibadan (UI) degree certificate he submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in aid of his qualification for the September 19 governorship election in Edo state.

In the suit filed on July 14, 2019, the plaintiffs are asking the court to disqualify Obaseki and his party, from the poll, in the event that Obaseki was found to have forged his university certificate obtained from UI in 1979.

Obaseki had won the election under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), while the APC with its governorship candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu came second.

Sued alongside Obaseki and the PDP is the electoral umpire INEC.

In adopting his written address, Obaseki’s lawyer, Mr Ken Mozia, SAN urged the court to dismiss the case of the plaintiffs on the grounds that they “woefully proved” allegations made against the governor.

Similarly, PDP’s lawyer, Mr Rasaq Isenalumhe, prayed the court to dismiss APC’s suit for being incompetent and unmeritorious.

However, INEC’s lawyer, Mr Mohammed Bawa, informed the court that the electoral umpire did not file any process because of its neutrality in the suit.

The plaintiffs through their lawyer, Chief Akin Olujimi, SAN, however urged the court to deliver judgment in their favour, owing to the strong evidence they were able to establish against Obaseki.

In proving their case the plaintiffs called in a total of six witnesses including two Associate Professors, who tendered their individual certificates obtained from the University of Ibadan in 1978 and 1979 respectively.

But in his defense, Obaseki called three witnesses among whom is the Deputy Registrar, Legal, University of Ibadan, Mr Abayomi Ajayi, who told the court that the mere fact that some parts of the original of Obaseki’s degree certificate from the UI were missing in the photocopy he attached to his form EC9 and 001 to INEC did not amount to forgery.

PDP and INEC however did not call any witness, although the state ruling party had based its refusal to call witnesses based on time constraint while INEC insisted on its neutrality.

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