The Port Harcourt Division of the Rivers State High Court has barred the Aaron Chukwuemeka-led executives of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) from parading themselves as the legitimate leadership of the party. Justice Stephen Jumbo delivered this ruling on Monday, granting an interlocutory injunction against the embattled PDP state executives. This legal setback is a direct hit to the faction loyal to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike, intensifying his ongoing political war with Governor Siminalayi Fubara.
What They Are Saying
The lawsuit was filed by two Port Harcourt-based lawyers, Edwin Woko and Love Otuonye, alongside two other PDP members. Their demand? That the court nullify the PDP local government and ward congresses conducted by pro-Wike supporters in all 319 wards and 23 local government areas. These controversial congresses took place on July 27, August 10, and August 31, 2024.
According to the plaintiffs, these congresses blatantly ignored a valid court order issued on July 16, 2024, which explicitly barred the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from conducting any congresses until the court resolved the originating summons already filed. Yet, in typical Nigerian behaviour, the party moved ahead as if the law didn’t matter.
Why It Matters
This ruling is reminiscent of last year’s decision that invalidated the All Progressives Congress (APC) ward, local government, and state executives, which had produced Tony Okocha. Clearly, Rivers State courts is very keen on cutting down political structures built on shaky legal grounds. For Wike, this ruling is a hard pill to swallow. His political grip on Rivers State continues to weaken, especially as Governor Fubara steadily strengthens his hold on the state’s political machinery. Wike’s loyalists might have thought they could bulldoze their way through the PDP congresses, but Justice Jumbo’s ruling says otherwise.
Legal experts believe this ruling will embolden Governor Fubara and his loyalists to reclaim full control of the PDP in Rivers State. On the other hand, Wike’s political relevance in his home state seems to be diminishing, despite his current position in President Tinubu’s cabinet. For a man once feared for his political ruthlessness, this defeat is glaring.
Supporters of Governor Fubara see this as a victory for law and order, while Wike’s camp views it as a temporary obstacle. But is it really temporary? This ruling also puts the PDP in a precarious position ahead of future elections. A divided house cannot stand, and Rivers PDP is as divided as ever.
Bottom Line
As it stands, the PDP in Rivers State is in disagreement. The courts have spoken, and the message is clear, no one is above the law, not even the powerful allies of Nyesom Wike. Governor Fubara just scored a major legal and political victory, and Wike is left to lick his wounds.