Full Text of Atiku Abubakar’s Press Conference on Supreme Court Verdict
Former Vice President Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, The Peoples Democratic Party’s presidential candidate in the February 25, 2023 election, addressed a press conference in Abuja on Monday, October 30, 2023 over the Supreme Court’s verdict to dismiss his appeal for lacking in merit and affirmed the victory of President Bola Tinubu.
Below is the
full text of his speech:
Someone
asked me what I would do if I lost my election petition appeal at the Supreme
Court. In response, I said that as long as Nigeria wins, the struggle would
have been worth the while. By that, I meant that the bigger loss would not be
mine but Nigeria’s if the Supreme Court legitimizes illegality, including
forgery, identity theft, and perjury.
If the
Supreme Court, the highest court in the land, implies by its judgment that
crime is good and should be rewarded, then Nigeria has lost and the country is
doomed irrespective of who occupies the Presidential seat. If the Supreme Court
decides that the Electoral umpire, INEC, can tell the public one thing and then
do something else in order to reach a corruptly predetermined outcome, then
there is really no hope for the country’s democracy and electoral politics.
Obviously,
the consequences of those decisions for the country will not end at the
expiration of the current government. They will last for decades. I am
absolutely sure that history will vindicate me. We now know what the Supreme
Court has decided.
At critical
points in my political life, I always ignored the easy but ignoble path and
chosen the difficult but dignified path, the path of truth, of morality, of
democracy and rule of law.
I always
chose freedom over servitude, whatever the personal discomforts my choice
entails. When I joined politics, the critical challenge was easing the military
out of power so that civilian democratic governance could be restored in
Nigeria. It later became a very defining struggle, and, as one of the leaders
of that struggle, I was targeted for elimination.
In one
incident, nine policemen guarding my home in Kaduna were murdered in an attempt
to assassinate me. I was also forced into exile for nine (9) months. In
addition, my interest in a logistics company that I co-owned was confiscated
and given to friends of the military government. As Vice President in the
civilian government that succeeded the military, I, again at great personal
cost, chose to oppose the extension of the tenure of the government beyond the
two four-year terms enshrined in our constitution.
In response
to the official backlash against me, I instituted several cases in the courts,
which led to seven landmark decisions that helped to deepen our democracy and
rule of law. At the current historic moment, the easier option for me would
have been to fold up and retreat after the mandate banditry perpetrated by the
APC and INEC.
But I went
to the Nigerian courts to seek redress. I even went to an American court to
help with unravelling what our state institutions charged with such
responsibilities were unwilling or unable to do, including unravelling the
qualifying academic records of the person sworn in as our President and by
implication, hopefully who he really is.
I offered
that evidence procured with the assistance of the American Court to our Supreme
Court to help it to do justice in this case. I give this background to
underscore that what we are currently dealing with is bigger than one or two
presidential elections and is certainly bigger than Atiku Abubakar. It is not
about me; it is about our country, Nigeria. It is about the kind of society we
want to leave for the next generation and what kind of example we want to set
for our children and their children.
It is about
the reputation of Nigeria and Nigerians in the eyes of the world. We showed
incontrovertible evidence that Bola A. Tinubu was not qualified to contest the
Presidential Election because he forged the qualifying academic certificate,
which he submitted to INEC. In fact, a simple check of Tinubu’s past records in
its possession would have shown INEC that Tinubu broke the law and should not
have been allowed to contest the election.
We showed
irrefutable evidence of gross irregularities, violence, and manipulations
during the elections. We showed incontrovertible evidence that INEC violated
the Electoral Act and deliberately sabotaged its own publicly announced
processes and procedures in order to illegally declare Tinubu elected. The
position of the Supreme Court, even though final, leaves so much unanswered.
Even the
rebuke by retired Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammad is a confirmation from within
the apex court that all is not well with the Supreme Court. The court and
indeed the judiciary must never lend itself to politicization as it is currently
the norm with nearly every institution in Nigeria. By the way, the strong
rebuke of the apex court by the revered Justice, who had meritoriously served
for more than four decades, should not be swept under the carpet.
The alarm raised by Justice Muhammad and recently, former INEC Chairman, Prof
Attahiru Jega, offer Nigerians an explanation into why the electoral and
judicial system have become the lost hope of the common man.
Judges are
no longer appointed based on merit but are products of the interplay of
politics and nepotism. Worse still, the appointment of electoral officials has
also been hijacked by the ruling party as seen in the latest nomination of
Resident Electoral Commissioners where card carrying members of the ruling
party and aides to politicians in the APC are being appointed into INEC. When
two critical institutions like the court and the electoral commission are
trapped in an evil web of political machination, it becomes next to impossible
for democracy to thrive.
As a
stakeholder in the presidential election of February 25, I, along with other
well-meaning Nigerians have done my bit in ensuring that our democratic process
enjoys the privilege of full disclosure of the character deficiencies of the
current political leadership. I also believe that even if the Supreme Court
believes otherwise, the purpose of technology in our electoral system is to
enhance transparency and not merely as a viewing centre. We have to move with
the world and not be stuck in time.
Implications
of PEPC and Supreme Court judgments
I leave
Nigerians and the world to decide what to make of the Supreme Court’s
unfortunate decision. But here’s my take. The judgments of the PEPC and the
Supreme Court have very far-reaching grave implications, including the
following:
One is the
erosion of trust in the electoral system and our democracy. Nigerians witnessed
as the National Assembly changed the electoral law to improve transparency in
the process. Of particular importance was the introduction of modern technology
to help eliminate the recurring incidents of electoral manipulation,
particularly during the collation of results. Nigerians and the world also
witnessed as the leadership of the INEC, especially its Chairman and National
Commissioner for Voter Education reassured Nigerians on national television
multiple times that the use of that technology would be mandatory.
Yet that
same INEC undermined the use of that technology during the elections and
collation process and declared as winner someone who clearly did not win the
Presidential election. They then went further to take sides in the courts in a
dogfight to defend their illegality. Who would convince the millions of
Nigerians to vote in future elections after they suffered endlessly on queues
to register to vote, to collect PVCs and to vote, based on INEC’s assurances
only to see their votes stolen and given to someone they did not vote for?
When people
lose trust and confidence in elections, democracy is practically on life
support. And by affirming and legitimizing the continued lack of transparency
in our electoral system the courts are continuing to usurp the rights of voters
to elect their leaders. The other grave implication is that contestants in
Nigeria’s elections should do whatever is necessary to be declared the winner.
That includes identity theft, impersonation, forging of educational and other
documents, perjury, and violence.
And, as they
do so, they should ignore whatever the law says and whatever assurances from
the leadership of the electoral umpire about what the law says and what they
would do in compliance. And they would do so knowing that our courts would
approve of their behaviour or at best pretend not to take any notice of it. The
third is that if you are robbed of victory, do not bother going to court for
redress because your glaring evidence of the robbery will be ignored in favour
of the mandate bandit.
Also, your
lawyers, however distinguished and accomplished, may be ridiculed by the judges
who may also go out of their way to make even a stronger case for the so-called
“winner” than even their own lawyers were able to do. These are clearly
self-help strategies and actions bereft of the law and constitutionalism. Only
lawlessness and anarchy will result from such, with violence, destruction and
implosion and loss of our country likely to follow.
I believe that we still have a small window to prevent these from happening. I
still believe that we can rescue this country from the strange imposters that
have seized it illegally and are holding it by the jugular. Let me caution that
the leaders of those African countries that have completely collapsed into
chaos never came together one day and agreed to collapse their countries.
Rather their countries collapsed because of the incremental and compounding
individual and collective utterances and actions of those leaders.
Nigerians
know more about the person sitting in office as their President and how he got
there, and the dangers that it portends for them and the country. It is for
them, especially the younger generation whose futures are to be shaped by that
man, to decide what they want to do with the knowledge.
Now, let me
give a historical perspective to the constitutional evolution that gave birth
to the 1999 Constitution. In the build up to the current democratic
dispensation, agitation was rife amongst members of the political class and a
large number of civil society bodies to envision a constitution that would
operate a democracy in a functional order after the nasty military regimes.
These agitations and necessities of the circumstance of that time led to the
convocation of the 1995 Constitutional Conference, which I was privileged to be
a part of, alongside other prominent political actors.
The
Constitutional Conference was expected to create the frameworks upon which a
new constitution would be built in order to make the dreams of a democratic
society. A number of far-reaching reforms and recommendations were made, which
drew from our past experiences and aimed at safeguarding the new constitution
from the mistakes of the past.
One such
headline recommendation was the concept of rotational presidency anchored on
the principle of 6-year single term among the 6 geopolitical blocks. Even the
notional idea of delineating the country along geo-political blocks was a
creation of the 1995 conference. Another thematic recommendation at the
conference was that the Federal Capital Territory should be given the
democratic opportunity to elect for itself a mayor who shall emerge from
popular franchise. These two recommendations were part of the landmark reforms
that were submitted to the military government that convoked the Constitutional
Conference.
However, and
rather disappointingly, the government that midwifed the current democratic
dispensation and enacted what is now known as the 1999 Constitution, expunged
these two recommendations from what eventually became the body of legislation
to govern our fledgling democracy.
As for me
and my party, this phase of our work is done. However, I am not going away. For
as long as I breathe I will continue to struggle, with other Nigerians, to
deepen our democracy and rule of law and for the kind of political and economic
restructuring the country needs to reach its true potential. That struggle
should now be led by the younger generation of Nigerians who have even more at
stake than my generation.
So, let me
make a few proposals that I believe will help. We can urgently make constitutional
amendments that will prevent any court or tribunal from hiding behind
technicalities and legal sophistry to affirm electoral heists and undermine the
will of the people. Our democracy must mean something; it must be substantive.
Above all, it must be expressed through free, fair, and transparent elections
that respect the will of the people.
Firstly, we
must make electronic voting and collation of results mandatory. This is the
21st century and countries less advanced than Nigeria are doing so already. It
is only bold initiatives that transform societies.
Secondly, we must provide that all litigation arising from a disputed election
must be concluded before the inauguration of a winner. This was the case in
1979. The current time frame between elections and the inauguration of winners is
inadequate to dispense with election litigations.
What we have
currently is akin to asking thieves to keep their loot and use the same to
defend themselves while the case of their robbery is being decided. It only
encourages mandate banditry rather than discourages it.
Thirdly, in
order to ensure popular mandate and real representation, we must move to
require a candidate for President to earn 50% +1 of the valid votes cast,
failing which a run-off between the top two candidates will be held. Most
countries that elect their presidents use this Two-Round System (with slight
variations) rather than our current First-Past-the-Post system.
Examples include France, Finland, Austria, Bulgaria, Portugal, Poland, Turkey, Russia, Argentina, Brazil, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone, Namibia, Mozambique,
Madagascar, and even Liberia where a run-off is expected to hold in the coming
days.
Fourthly, in
order to reduce the desperation of incumbents and distractions from governing
and also to promote equity and national unity, we need to move to a single
six-year term for the President to be rotated among the six geo-political zones.
This will prevent the ganging up of two or more geo-political zones to
alternate the presidency among themselves to the exclusion of other zones.
INEC should
be mandated to verify the credentials submitted to it by candidates and their
parties and where it is unable to do so – perhaps because the institutions
involved did not respond in time – it must publicly state so and have it on
record.
A situation
where a candidate submits contradictory credentials to INEC in different
election cycles and the electoral umpire accepts them without question points
to gross negligence, at best, or collusion to break the law by the leadership
of the INEC, at worst. The submission of contradictory qualifying documents by
a candidate as well as those found to be forged or falsified should disqualify
a candidate even if the falsification or forgery is discovered after the person
had been sworn into office.
The burden
of proving that a document submitted to INEC is forged should not be on the
opposing candidates in the election. It is never the responsibility of an
applicant for a job to prove that the person who eventually got the job did so
with forged documents.
In addition
to these proposed constitutional amendments, the Electoral Act should be
amended to provide that, except where they explicitly violate the Constitution
and other laws, the rules and procedures laid down by the electoral umpire and
made public for the benefit of the contestants and the voters will be treated
as sacrosanct by the courts in deciding on election disputes.
A referee
cannot be allowed to set the rules for the game only to change or ignore them
when one side has scored a goal or is about to win the match. We must restore
confidence in our electoral system which the current leadership of INEC has
completely eroded and undermined. Also, we need well-thought out provisions in
the legislation and regulations to reform the judiciary, including the
introduction of an automated case assignment system; transparency in the
appointment of judges; a practice directory that stresses that the goal of
judges in election cases should be to discover and affirm voters’ choice rather
than disregarding voters’ choice for the sake of technicalities.
There should
also be a publicly available annual evaluation of the performance of judges using
agreed criteria. By improving the transparency of the electoral process and
reducing the incentives to cheat, in addition to transparency in the
appointment of judges and other judicial reforms, the number of election
petitions as well as corruption in the judiciary will be significantly reduced.
More importantly, we would have succeeded in taking away the right to elect
leaders from the courts and return it to the voters to whom it truly belongs.
Gentlemen of
the Press, I thank you profoundly for listening. May God bless you, and may God
bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
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