Credit: NAN
Suspended Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan appeared before the Federal High Court in Abuja on Tuesday as legal proceedings resumed in her suit challenging the Senate’s decision to suspend her over alleged misconduct.
The court session, now before Justice Binta Nyako after Justice Obiorah Egwuatu recused himself, addressed a series of motions from both the plaintiff and the defence, including allegations of contempt of court and violation of free speech rights.
Following the proceeding, the court slated June 27 to deliver judgement on the suit the lawmaker representing Kogi Central, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, filed to quash the six-month suspension the Senate slapped on her.
Justice Binta Nyako okayed the matter for judgement, after all the parties adopted their final briefs of argument.
Cited as defendants in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/384/2025, are the Clerk of the National Assembly, the Senate, the Senate President, Mr. Godswill Akpabio, as well as the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges, and Public Petitions, Senator Nedamwen Imasuen.
While the embattled lawmaker, through her team of lawyers led by Mr. Jubril Okutekpa, SAN, urged the court to invalidate her suspension, which she said was done in disobedience to a valid court order, the defendants challenged the court’s jurisdiction to meddle in what they termed an internal affair of the Senate.
More so, the defendants accused the plaintiff of breaching the court’s order on April 4, which gagged the parties from public utterances on the pending matter.
The Senate President, Akpabio, through his lawyer, Mr. Kehinde Ogunwumiju, SAN, specifically drew the court’s attention to what he described as “a satirical apology” the plaintiff tendered to him on her Facebook page.
Akpabio insisted that the apology was a mockery of the court’s order
Meanwhile, before she adjourned the matter for judgement, Justice Nyako said she would first consider the issue of contempt raised by the parties before deciding all the preliminary objections.
The trial judge stressed that Natasha’s suit raised “recondite issues of law” that would require judicial interpretation.
It will be recalled that Justice Nyako took over the matter following the recusal of the previous judge, Obiora Egwuatu. In a ruling on March 25, he returned the case file after the Senate President accused him of bias.
Justice Egwuatu issued an interim order on March 4 that stopped the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions from proceeding with the disciplinary proceeding initiated against Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan over an allegation that she flouted legislative house rules.
He held that the disciplinary process should be suspended pending the determination of the suit brought before him by the embattled female lawmaker.
More so, Justice Egwuatu gave defendants in the matter, 72 hours to show cause why it should not issue an order of interlocutory injunction to stop them from probing the plaintiff for alleged misconduct, without affording her the privileges stipulated in the 1999 Constitution, as amended, the Senate Standing Order 2023, and the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act.
The interim orders followed an ex parte application and an affidavit of urgency that the lawmaker brought before the court.
However, despite the court’s orders, the Senate Committee held its meeting and suspended the plaintiff for six months.
In a subsequent ruling, Justice Egwuatu amended the interim order he issued in favour of the plaintiff by vacating the aspect that barred the Senate from undertaking any activity during the suit’s pendency.
Not long after the orders were made, the Senate President filed a motion to query the court’s powers to interfere in the Senate’s affairs.
The Kogi state federal lawmaker approached the court after she was summoned to appear before the disciplinary committee following a faceoff with the Senate President during plenary on February 20.
While protesting the alleged arbitrary change of her seating arrangement, the lawmaker repeatedly raised a point of order to be allowed to speak, even though the Senate President had overruled her.
Irked by her conduct, the Senate President referred her case to the Ethics Committee.
In a television interview she granted on February 28, Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan alleged that her troubles in the Senate began after she rejected unwanted advances from the Senate President, Akpabio.
In an ex parte application she brought before the court, the lawmaker sought an order declaring any action the committee would take within the pendency of her suit “null, void, and of no effect.”
Specifically, the court, in the interim orders it made on Tuesday, held: “It is hereby ordered as follows: An order of this Honourbale Court is made granting leave to the Plaintiff/Applicant to serve the 2nd — 4th Defendants/Respondents with the Originating Summons and all other accompanying processes in this suit by substituted means, to wit: by serving same through the 1st Defendant (Clerk of the National Assembly) or pasting same on the premises of the National Assembly and publishing same in two national dailies.
“An Order of Interim Injuction of this Honourable Court is made restraining the 2nd Defendant/Defendant’s Committee on Ethics, Privileges, and Code of Conduct, headed by the 4th Defendant, from proceeding with the purported investigation against the Plaintiff/Applicant for alleged misconduct, sequel to the events that occurred at the plenary of the 2nd Defendant on February 20 2025, under the referral by the 2nd Defendant on February 25 2025, pending the hearing and determination of the Motion on Notice for interlocutory injunction.
As well as, “An order of this Honourable Court is made directing the 1st — 4th Defendants to show cause within 72 hours upon the service of this order on them, why an order of interlocutory injunction should not be granted against them, restraining them from proceeding with the purported investigation against the Plaintiff for alleged misconduct without affording her privileges as stipulated in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (As Amended), the Senate Standing Order 2023, and the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act.”
Disclaimer
Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of Vanguard newspapers or any employee thereof.