Siminayi Fubara May Lose Governorship If Supreme Court Fails To Hear Rivers Case Before September 18   – Emeka Ngige

The Chairman of the Council of Legal Education, CLE, Chief Emeka Ngige, SAN, has raised concerns over the political future of Governor Siminalayi Fubara, if the Supreme Court fails to hear his pending case against suspension by President Bola Tinubu before September 18, 2025.

Sep 8, 2025 - 12:01
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Siminayi Fubara May Lose Governorship If Supreme Court Fails To Hear Rivers Case Before September 18   – Emeka Ngige
The Chairman of the Council of Legal Education, CLE, Chief Emeka Ngige, SAN, has raised concerns over the political future of Governor Siminalayi Fubara, if the Supreme Court fails to hear his pending case against suspension by President Bola Tinubu before September 18, 2025.
Ngige said that the failure by the apex court to dispose of the matter after 
both the governor and the 11 PDP governors who are plaintiffs in the case and President Tinubu and Federal Government, who are the descendants had filed their defence have raised concerns over the culpability of the Supreme Court in jeopardising Fubara's political future and causing avoidable crises in the country.
According to Ngige, Governor Fubara risks losing his governorship if the Supreme Court failed to urgently hear the pending case on the Rivers State political crisis before September 18.
Speaking in a live coverage by Symfoni from 7:37, Ngige stressed that the state of emergency declared in Rivers, which Fubara has challenged in court alongside 11 state governments, could lapse before the matter is heard, leaving the governor exposed to the same fate that befell former Plateau State governor Joshua Dariye during President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration.
His words, "I ventured into the Rivers State state of emergency. And I said the matter is in court, the soft duties. The governor in suspension has challenged it.
"Eleven state governments have challenged it. The Federal Government has filed their defence. So what is stopping the hearing of this case? 
"So my recommendation is that the Supreme Court should, as a matter of urgency whether they are on vacation or not, hear that matter immediately. The state of emergency will expire on 18th of September."
Ngige further cautioned that failure to hear the case would mirror the Plateau experience, where Dariye’s suit against his suspension was dismissed as “academic” exercise after the state of emergency had lapsed. 
According to the Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, “We are not prejudging the outcome. The plaintiffs may lose or they may win. I’m not interested. But I don’t want a situation of what happened in Plateau to recur. 
"In Plateau, by the time the matter was listed, the plaintiffs were met with preliminary objection that the matter had become academic exercise. And then even though the Supreme Court overruled that objection, on other grounds that they didn’t sue the Attorney General of the Federation, the suit was struck out." 

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