
Nigeria's Supreme Court is scheduled to hear separate appeals on Tuesday concerning leadership disputes within two opposition parties, the African Democratic Congress ADC and the Peoples Democratic Party PDP. The appeal from David Mark, the embattled ADC National Chairman and former Senate President, seeks to stay the execution of a March 12 appellate court judgment affecting the party's leadership. Mark, through his lawyer Realwan Okpanachi, is asking the court to restrain the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC from recognizing anyone other than him and the current national officers, and to prevent INEC from tampering with the party's leadership structure. The ADC spokesperson, Bolaji Abdullahi, confirmed that both the Supreme Court matter and a related case before the Federal High Court are slated for the same day. INEC had previously removed Mark and Rauf Aregbesola from its official portal as national chairman and national secretary of the ADC, respectively, following the appellate court judgment. The dispute originated from a suit filed by Nafiu-Bala Gombe, a former Deputy National Chairman, who challenged the legitimacy of Mark and Aregbesola's emergence as party leaders. Meanwhile, the PDP crisis involves a faction led by Tanimu Turaki, which is challenging an appellate court decision that nullified its national convention and leadership structure.
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This summary was AI-generated from a story originally published by Punch Nigeria.