The Federal High Court in Yenagoa on Tuesday dismissed a motion
for stay of proceedings brought before it by Messrs Aso Tambo and Stephen
Ebisintei
The two
ex-militants had sought to be joined in the suit sometime last year, but
Justice Awogboro Abimbola dismissed their motion to be joined.
The
applicants approached the court with another application for a stay of
proceeding pending determination of their appeal.
Abimbola ruled on the application for stay of proceeding based
on a pending appeal to her earlier ruling.
She dismissed their application to be joined, noting that what
was before her was not a valid appeal but merely a proposed notice of appeal.
“The grounds for granting stay of proceedings are exhaustive but
must include conflicting right to justice by the parties and the existence of a
valid appeal.
“What the applicants filed is merely a proposed notice and there
is no record of the appeal processes.
“The concept is that a stay of proceeding must be predicated on
a valid appeal. You cannot put something on nothing and expect it to stand.
“It must collapse, the answer to the question if the applicants
meet the requirements to be granted a stay is in the negative,” Abimbola said.
Counsel to the Plaintiffs, Richard Turner urged the court to
compel the officials of the Amnesty Office, who had earlier been summoned to
appear before the court on the next adjourned date.
Turner said the office had written to the court to be excused
from appearing in the last hearing.
Responding, Counsel to the Amnesty Office, Mr S.P. Johnny
assured the court that his client was still interested in finalising the out of
court settlement terms earlier signed by the parties.
Johnny asked the judge for an adjournment to report on
settlement terms.
She adjourned the case till Feb. 25 for report of settlement
terms or continuation of the hearing.
Abimbola had summoned the Coordinator of the Presidential
Amnesty Programme, Prof. Charles Dokubo, and two others over an alleged
diversion of stipends for 75 ex-Niger Delta militants.
Dokubo, also the Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari
on Niger Delta Matters, however, wrote to the court explaining his inability to
appear and answer to allegations on Jan 14.
He said that he was attending a retreat with his management team
in Dubai.
The claimants in the suit are 75 ex-militants under the Benuwolo
Camp in the second phase of the programme who accepted the Presidential Amnesty
in 2010.
They are demanding payment of outstanding N492m for the 75
members of the camp from January 2011 to May 2019 when they instituted the
suit. (
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