Court restrains El-Rufai from demolishing Kasuwar Barchi market
A Kaduna High Court, presided over by Justice Mohammed Bello, has issued a restraining order on Governor Nasir El-Rufa’i not to demolish the Kasuwar Barchi Market in Kaduna until the determination of the case before the court.
According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Justice Bello ordered that all respondents to the case should stop “entering into and demolishing Kasuwar Barchi, pending the hearing and determination of the case.”
The case was instituted by 16 persons, on behalf of stall owners and traders in Kasuwar Barchi, seeking to stop the governor from demolishing the market.
Joined in the suit are the attorney general of the state and Kaduna Investment Promotion Agency as second and third respondents.The plaintiffs include Auwalu Hussain, Kabiru Usman, Aminu Ahmed, Bawa Ahmed, Josiah Sunday, Ndubueze Egbo-Ogu, Augustine Sunday, Ali Abdulhamid, Maryam Abubakar, Rabiatu Musa, Latifah Yusuf, Amina Abdulrauf, Aishatu Ibrahim, Hafsat Uba, Sa’adiya Ahmed and Wasilat Ahmed.
Counsel to the plaintiffs, Mr. Elisha Kurah (SAN), had prayed the court to restrain the defendants from going ahead with the demolishing of the market and to determine whether the establishment, maintenance and regulations of markets is vested on the governor.
The Counsel hinged his prayer on Section 7(1) and (5) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), together with item 1(e) of the 4th Schedule to the Constitution and cited Section 20(a) and 21(2) of the Local Government Administration Law of Kaduna State 2012 as amended.
Kurah said the court should determine whether the governor has power to issue notice to legal occupants of a market in the state for the purpose of establishment, maintenance, regulation or conversion of the said market.
He said that if the above questions are resolved in their favour, the court should declare that the state government lacked the legal right to make any law to derogate from the function of local governments as specified by law.
The plaintiffs also want the court to make a declaration that the state government has no constitutional power to take over the market from Kaduna South Council and hand it over to private developer.
They also prayed the court to declare that the establishment, maintenance and regulation of markets is a function constitutionally conferred on local governments, as such the state government has no legal right to hand over such functions to private developer.
The traders said the court should declare that the threat by the defendants to demolish the market, including shops of the plaintiffs, is invalid, improper, blatant display of raw executive power, illegal, unconstitutional and null and void.The case has been adjourned till June 5 for hearing.
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