A Federal High Court in Lagos has
ordered the Nigerian Communications Commission and five others to pay
the All Progressives Congress a sum of N500m over unlawful shutting down
of its presidential campaign fund-raising platform.
Apart from NCC, the other judgment
debtors are Etisalat, MTN Nigeria Limited, Globacom Limited, Airtel
Nigeria Limited and Visafone Communications Limited.
The monetary cost was awarded against
the six respondents severally and jointly on Tuesday by Justice Ibrahim
Buba, who held that the shutting down of APC presidential campaign
platform by the respondent was unlawful and constituted an infringement
on the party’s fundamental right.
The party, through its lawyer, Chief
Kola Awodein (SAN), had sued the respondents, claiming N25bn in damages
for banning its presidential campaign fund-raising platform.
APC had accused the NCC of instructing
the 2nd to 6th respondents to discontinue an SMS platform it created for
the purpose of getting donations from willing members of the public for
its presidential campaign.
The party claimed that it initiated the
participatory fund-raising platform as a way of getting members of the
general public to contribute N100 to its presidential campaign fund each
time they sent APC as an SMS to 35350.
It, however, said that NCC, by a letter
dated January 19, 2015, instructed the other respondents to shut down
the platform, warning them “to avoid running political
advertisement/promotions that will portray them as being partisan.”
The commission was also said to have
threatened to sanction any of the telecommunications service providers
which failed to comply with the order. But did not give the same instruction to the other respondents when the
PDP set up the short codes designated to raise funds for the campaign of President Goodluck Jonathan and his
vice, Namadi Sambo, in 2010.
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