NIG COURT 1 - SARAKI 0
The Federal High Court in Lagos on 
Friday dismissed a fresh application by Senate President, Bukola Saraki,
 to stop his trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT).
Justice Ibrahim Buba held that he lacked jurisdiction to entertain the suit.
He said it ought to have been filed in Abuja where the cause of action took place.
The judge said Saraki could not prove that his rights were about to be violated in Lagos.
“He has to proffer the reason for the court to hold that his right is
 about to be violated in Lagos State. The key word is ‘state’,” said the
 judge.
The Attorney-General of the Federation, Economic and Financial Crimes
 Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and 
Inspector-General of Police were the respondents.
Others were – the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), the CCT, its chairman
 Justice Danladi Umar, and members Mr. Ataedze Adza, Mr. Sam Saba, 
Mohammed Diri and Mr. M.S. Hassan.
Saraki, through his lawyer Ajibola Oluyede, had sought a declaration 
that his trial at the CCT falls short of the requirements of Article 3 
of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights and Section 36 of the
 1999 Constitution.
He said there was “clear appearance of bias” against him, as well as 
an “apparent pursuit of a pre-determined agenda for the humiliation and 
conviction of the applicant.”
The Senate President sought an order nullifying the charges at the 
CCT, and an order restraining the tribunal from continuing with his 
trial.
The applicant prayed the court to restrain the AGF, EFCC, Saba, Diri 
and Hassan from continuing with the trial at CCT or any other judicial 
forum.
He further sought a declaration that the “obvious subjugation and use
 of the respondents against the applicant for the political objectives 
of the ruling political party at the federal level, the All Progressives
 Congress, amounts to an exercise of executive power for ulterior 
motives and not for the public good.”
According to Oluyede, the respondents are humiliating and prosecuting
 Saraki on trumped up charges “with the intention of securing his 
removal, impeachment and or resignation from office as Senate 
President.”
He said the respondents’ actions constituted an infringement of the 
applicant’s fundamental rights to be presumed innocent until proven 
guilty and to be given a fair hearing by an impartial tribunal.
 
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