The Labour and Civil Society Front has urged the judiciary to restore Nigerians’ trust ahead of the start of Tribunal hearings on the presidential and other elections.
The group made the announcement at a press conference held on Sunday at the Labour House in Abuja.
Nkoyo Toyo, a former Nigerian Ambassador to Ethiopia, read the briefing, which was signed by Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), former President of the Nigerian Bar Association; Shehu Sanni, former Senator representing Kaduna Central; and other members including Udenta Udenta, Salisu Mohammed, and Olawale Okunniyi.
Also, speaking in solidarity with the group, the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero said the phrase “Go to court” now means a lack of hope in the judiciary.
The group noted that the 2023 general elections dashed the hopes of Nigerians for credible elections and denied citizens the emergence of qualitative political leadership across Nigeria.
The group said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in cahoots with some members of the political class have driven a death nail into the democratic experience of most Nigerians, thus leaving the electorate despondent to resort to self-help in their effort to salvage whatever is left of their vibrant political engagement with the 2023 elections.
The group said as Vanguards of Nigeria’s democratic heritage, it is calling for a return to a rule-based democracy in which Nigerians can remain hopeful that their sacrifices of participating in elections will ultimately count.
According to the group, as affected individuals and parties resort to the court as the main conflict-resolution mechanism, it hoped the judiciary, as the final Arbiter, will ensure that the malfeasances of those it described as powerful individuals will not be rewarded but rather, they will be discredited and punished.