Court Bars FG from Releasing Monthly Allocations to Rivers State
By Amos
There seems no end in sight in the ongoing political crisis in Rivers State as the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Wednesday, 30 October 2024, bars the Federal Government from releasing further monthly allocations to the State.
Justice Joyce Abdulmalik, in her judgment, restrained the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) from allowing the state to draw funds from the consolidated revenue account.
The judgment followed a suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/984/24, which was brought before the court by the Hon. Martins Amaewhule-led faction of the Rivers State House of Assembly.
Cited as defendants in the matter included the Central Bank of Nigeria, Zenith Bank Plc, Access Bank Plc, and the Accountant-General of the Federation (AGF).
Others are Governor Siminalayi Fubara, the Accountant-General of Rivers; Rivers Independent Electoral Commission (RSIEC); Chief Judge of Rivers, Hon. Justice S.C. Amadi; Chairman of RSIEC, Hon. Justice Adolphus Enebeli (rtd.) and the Government of Rivers State.
The plaintiffs had approached the court, praying it to withhold all federal monthly allocations meant for Rivers State.
They predicated their case on the ground that Governor Fubara had yet to comply with the court order that directed him to represent the 2024 Appropriation Bill to the Amaewhule-led faction of the Rivers State House of Assembly.
According to the plaintiffs, the high court had, in a judgment that was delivered by Justice James Omotosho, recognized Hon. Amaewhule as the authentic Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly.
They noted that the court invalidated the 2024 budget proposal that was presented before the four-member faction of the Assembly, led by Hon. Victor Oko-Jumbo.
The Hon. Amaewhule-led members of the Rivers State Assembly added that the Court of Appeal upheld the high court decision that was in their favor.
They alleged that Governor Fubara had continued to make unauthorized withdrawals from the consolidated revenues funds of Rivers state, in breach of section 120 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended.
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