Onaiyekan Okays Live Broadcast, Says Election Tribunal Not ‘Secret Meeting’
BY EDMOND ODOK – With the legal fireworks now taking centre stage at the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal (PEPT), the Catholic Bishop Emeritus of Abuja Archdiocese, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, insists a live broadcast of its proceedings will give Nigerians a breath of fresh air.
This is as he maintained that the Tribunal proceedings should not be ‘like a secret meeting,’ given that many voters are interested in following up on how their votes would be defended at the court.
Addressing journalists after Mass to mark the end of this year’s 57th World Communication Week on Sunday, the outspoken Catholic Priest cautioned against the dangers of electoral malpractices, noting it is the masses who are always at the receiving end of the adverse effects of rigged electoral processes.
He said it is important for the PEPT members to dispense justice fairly by allowing its proceedings to be transparent so that Nigerians can rekindle their hope in the Judiciary, adding; “As journalists, you do your job, cover everything, but try and listen to everybody and relay to the public what is happening because they want to see.
“Isn’t it why it is important the petition before the tribunal, the possibility that the tribunal should be available to all of us to be able to follow what is happening? For me, this is very important; one thing that Nigerians don’t seem to realize is that when elections are rigged, it is not the contestants or the politicians who are the worst hit.”
According to the revered clergy; “It is in the interest of the judiciary to allow this thing to be done. All these issues that there are witnesses, whose witnesses are not meant to be made public, for goodness sake, what are they hiding? If you have anything that people shouldn’t know, you shouldn’t be saying it.
“I am praying that the Honourable Justices will find a way even though they have not been doing it before. But they should be ready to do it now. It has reached a stage in Nigeria where we have to be doing things we have not been doing before; … because if we have been doing things the way we have been doing them before, then it means we want things to continue the way it has been happening, and we see it has not been helping us, we must boldly take new steps and accept new things.”
Cardinal Onaiyekan further stated that; “Those who are most impacted by elections results are me and you. But as it stands, we don’t even have locus standi in court. We are the ones who should be complaining in court that my votes have been bastardized, but they tell me I cannot go to court because I did not contest the election.
“If we cannot go and make our case, at least let us see what is happening inside there. We believe that our honourable judges will do their best to make judgements that are correct, they do what is right.
“Everybody will see it and it will help to calm nerves, we will know that the right thing has been done, but if they do all these somehow like a secret meeting, even if they did the right thing, we will say who knows what they said.”
On the World Communication Week celebration, Onaiyekan, who urged the media to give a voice to all groups as they cover activities for the May 29th inauguration of a new administration, said Jesus Christ could only report to the Father the success of his mission of showing the Father to the world because he was effective in his communication style.
“It is not enough to communicate, it is also as important that we communicate effectively. Pope Paul VI was aware of this great need. Thus in 1967, he established the World Communication Day Celebration as an annual event during;
“… which Catholics all over the world reflect on a theme which focuses on media and communication. Since then, 57 years now, successive Popes have maintained the tradition”, the respected Clergy said