Tuesday, June 7, 2026 - The Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the National Welfare Secretary of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Nkemakolam Ukandu, to pay a total of N100 million in damages to the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice John Tsoho, and Justice Peter Lifu over a suit the court struck out for lack of diligent prosecution.
Justice Salim Ibrahim, who delivered the ruling on Monday,
ordered Ukandu to pay N50 million each to Justice Tsoho and Justice Lifu within
14 days.
The order followed an oral application by counsel to the two
judges, Mr J. U. K. Igwe, SAN.
Earlier, Justice Ibrahim struck out Ukandu’s suit, marked
FHC/ABJ/CS/1165/2026, after finding that the plaintiff had failed to diligently
prosecute the matter.
Ukandu had sued the National Judicial Council (NJC), Justice
Tsoho and Justice Lifu over allegations of judicial bias and disobedience to
court orders. He sought an order compelling the NJC to investigate claims of
corruption, abuse of judicial powers, and bias allegedly committed by the two
judges.
However, the plaintiff and his lawyer repeatedly failed to
appear before Justice Ibrahim after the case was assigned to him.
The judge had, on June 30, warned that the suit could be
dismissed if neither Ukandu nor his counsel appeared at subsequent proceedings.
The case arose from the ongoing leadership dispute within
the ADC involving an aggrieved party member, Nafiu-Bala Gombe, whose
substantive suit is pending before Justice Lifu.
Gombe is seeking a court order restraining the leadership of
the party, led by former Senate President David Mark, from presenting
themselves as the legitimate leaders of the ADC.
Ukandu, who is seeking to be joined in that case, accused
Justice Tsoho and Justice Lifu of manifest bias and alleged that they were
acting in the interest of certain individuals against the party.
In his originating suit, Ukandu challenged the decision of
the Chief Judge to reassign the leadership dispute from Justice Emeka Nwite to
Justice Lifu, arguing that the reassignment violated both an earlier order of
Justice Nwite and a decision of the Supreme Court.

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