TRENDING
Burugo Primary School Wins Inaugural National Dettol Hygiene Quest Festival • Former Second Deputy Prime Minister Gen. Moses Ali Dies at 87 • PROFILE: Facts you didn’t know about the late Gen. Moses Ali • President Museveni Confirms Death of Gen. Moses Ali, Pays Tribute to Veteran Statesman • Onuesoke Faults Thanksgiving Ceremonies By Newly-elected Politicians • Court Dismisses Suit by Bayelsa Traditional Ruler Challenging Shell’s Divestment, Pollution • Nwobodo, Wife Move to Halt Suit in N235m Disputed Land Deal, Challenges Court’s Jurisdiction, Originating Processes • I’m alive and healthy, Nollywood actor Owolabi Ajasa debunks death rumour • Nigeria needs leaders with capacity for effective leadership — Cleric • Hit the ground running, Gombe gov tells 23 new commissioners • Palestinian teen footballer dies after attack by Israeli settlers • Highlife Legends Get Lifeline as World Icon Unveils 2026 Concert, Awards in Rivers • Ukrainian Strikes On Russian Warehouses Kill Eight, Shroud Skies In Smoke • Palestinian teen footballer dies after shot during settler attack • Williams Will Be Ideal Backup For Shaw –Pallister Tells Man United • Mary Habila: Police spokesperson urges public to avoid unverified claims, calls for thorough investigation • Kwara: When healthcare stops being a promise, By Hassan Olayinka • M-CODE Upper East launches one-week accountability drive to track MMDCEs on sanitation KPI • Upper East: Residents demand answers for missing out on feeder roads project • Shackle Rodri the metronome and Argentina’s passion play can floor Spain | Jonathan Wilson • Burugo Primary School Wins Inaugural National Dettol Hygiene Quest Festival • Former Second Deputy Prime Minister Gen. Moses Ali Dies at 87 • PROFILE: Facts you didn’t know about the late Gen. Moses Ali • President Museveni Confirms Death of Gen. Moses Ali, Pays Tribute to Veteran Statesman • Onuesoke Faults Thanksgiving Ceremonies By Newly-elected Politicians • Court Dismisses Suit by Bayelsa Traditional Ruler Challenging Shell’s Divestment, Pollution • Nwobodo, Wife Move to Halt Suit in N235m Disputed Land Deal, Challenges Court’s Jurisdiction, Originating Processes • I’m alive and healthy, Nollywood actor Owolabi Ajasa debunks death rumour • Nigeria needs leaders with capacity for effective leadership — Cleric • Hit the ground running, Gombe gov tells 23 new commissioners • Palestinian teen footballer dies after attack by Israeli settlers • Highlife Legends Get Lifeline as World Icon Unveils 2026 Concert, Awards in Rivers • Ukrainian Strikes On Russian Warehouses Kill Eight, Shroud Skies In Smoke • Palestinian teen footballer dies after shot during settler attack • Williams Will Be Ideal Backup For Shaw –Pallister Tells Man United • Mary Habila: Police spokesperson urges public to avoid unverified claims, calls for thorough investigation • Kwara: When healthcare stops being a promise, By Hassan Olayinka • M-CODE Upper East launches one-week accountability drive to track MMDCEs on sanitation KPI • Upper East: Residents demand answers for missing out on feeder roads project • Shackle Rodri the metronome and Argentina’s passion play can floor Spain | Jonathan Wilson
Zamfara ADC insists Federal High Court judgment remains binding
Back to Home

Zamfara ADC insists Federal High Court judgment remains binding

Daily Post about 3 hours 2 mins read

The Zamfara State chapter of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) has insisted that a Federal High Court judgment delivered on April 29, 2026, remains valid and must be obeyed until a higher court decides otherwise.

In a statement issued in Gusau by the party’s Publicity Secretary, Abdulkareem Umar, the ADC dismissed claims questioning the ruling and the party’s leadership in the state.

The party said Senator David Mark had appealed the judgment and also applied for a stay of execution. However, it said the application for a stay was not granted, while the Court of Appeal had already fixed a date to hear the appeal.

Quoting the statement, the party said: “The Federal High Court judgment remains valid, subsisting and binding on all parties unless and until it is set aside by a competent appellate court. No individual, group or political interest can lawfully vacate, nullify or disregard the judgment except through the legally recognised appeal process. Court orders must be obeyed while they remain in force.”

The ADC explained that, under Nigerian law, filing an appeal is different from applying for a stay of execution. It also warned that filing multiple appeals over the same judgment could amount to an abuse of court process.

On the leadership dispute, the party said a valid state congress was held in line with its constitution, leading to the election of Alhaji Kabiru Garba Gusau and other members of the State Executive Committee.

It said the current executive would serve until April 12, 2031.

The statement added that the executive’s authority came from a properly conducted congress and not from a caretaker committee.

Zamfara ADC insists Federal High Court judgment remains binding

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

House of Representatives

View All

Democracy

View All
AD
AD

House Of Assembly

View All
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.