•Report by Kamil Opeyemi
The former Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on National Assembly, Senator Ita Enang was on Thursday lost his bid to clinch the governorship ticket of Akwa Ibom state in a suit filed against the current holder of the ticket,Udofia.
Appeal Court, sitting in Abuja,affirmed the candidacy of Akanimo Udofia as the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akwa Ibom in the forthcoming general elections.
A federal High Court in Uyo, had on 14 Nov.14 nullified the nomination of Udofia as the governorship candidate of the APC in Akwa Ibom.
The trial judge Agatha Okeke had ordered the APC to conduct a fresh governorship primary within two weeks but barred Udofia from participating in the new primary.
Enang had prayed the Federal High Court to declare him the validly elected candidate of the party arguing that Udofia was not a member of the party as of the time of the primary.
Dissatisfied, Udofia challenged the judgement of the lower court at the Appeal Court.
In the appeal,Enang was the 1st respondent,the APC as 2nd, and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC),3rd while Akanimo Udofia was the appellant.
Also, in another appeal filed by the APC through its lawyer, J.Y. Musa, SAN, on the same matter, Enang and Udofia were 1st and 2nd respondents respectively, while INEC was 3rd.
Delivering judgement on Thursday,a three-member panel of justices headed by Justice Elfreda Williams Dawodu, find merit in an appeal filed by Udofia, against the judgment of a lower court in Uyo.
Justice Williams – Dawodu, while delivering the judgment held that the lower court erroneously assumed jurisdiction over the matter and therefore its decisions on the matter cannot stand.
The three-man panel of justices granted all the reliefs sought by the Appellants and also held that 1st respondent has no locus standi to sue and therefore affirm the candidacy of Akanimo Udofia.
In unanimous judgement, the court, therefore, held the appeal succeeds as the judgment of the lower court is set aside and the four reliefs sought by the appellant granted.