Pastor Adeboye, Redeemers School, British Council sued over certificate [FULL INFO HERE]
A legal practitioner, Moses Oddiri, has
dragged the principal of Redeemers International Secondary School, Mrs.
Feyisara Osinupebi, Pastor Ben Akabueze, General Overseer of Redeemed Christian
Church of God (RCCG), Enoch Adeboye, the British Council and Cambridge IGCSE
before a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja.
He is
challenging the refusal of the defendants to release the certificates of his
son, Andre Oddiri.
In an
originating summons, Oddiri said the decision to withhold his son’s 2016
Cambridge I.G.C.S.E result, the updated transcript from Junior Secondary School
1 to Senior Secondary School 3, his testimonial/statement and the 2017 WAEC
result over alleged non-payment of third term school fees, was dubious.
On July 12
2017, Justice Oke-Lawal, ordered that the documents in the custody of the 1st
and 2nd respondents be deposited with the chief registrar of the court for
preservation pending the outcome and determination of the motion on notice for
the enforcement of the fundamental rights of the applicants. Thisday reports.
However, the
respondents are yet to comply with the order following which the applicants
sought the court’s permission to begin contempt proceedings against them with
the issuance of forms 48 and 49.
The
respondents through their lawyer, Emeka Etiaba (SAN), challenged the
jurisdiction of the court to hear the suit.
In a motion
challenging the competence of the action, Etiaba contended that the suit was
not properly constituted, the reliefs sought went beyond the realms of
fundamental rights enforcements.
On
Wednesday, the court took arguments on which application should take precedence
in a fundamental rights suit between a contempt proceeding and one challenging
the jurisdiction of the court to hear the fundamental rights application.
Odiri,
appearing in person, contended that the suit, initiated by motion on notice and
not originating summons, was properly constituted.
He also said
the reliefs sought, which he said bordered on the release of the confiscated
school documents breaches Article 17, of the African Charter on Human and
Peoples Rights, the Child Rights Law of Lagos State and sections 36 and 34 of
the 1999 Constitution.
He also
argued that the General Overseer, Adeboye is a necessary party and has
submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court with an affidavit deposed to
on his behalf and consent aligning himself with the confiscation of the
documents.
The vacation
judge, Justice Ganiyu Safari who heard the case, adjourned the matter to 25th
of August 2017 to rule on which application should be heard first, between
committing the respondents to prison for contempt or the application
challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter.
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