In a significant ruling on Thursday, the Court of Appeal in Abuja confirmed Hon. Martin Amaewhule as the legitimate Speaker of the Rivers State Assembly.

It was gathered that the decision by a three-member panel of Justices not only solidifies Amaewhule’s position but also validates his faction’s authority within the Assembly.

The court dismissed an appeal filed by Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara, who challenged the legitimacy of Amaewhule’s leadership.

This ruling reinforces an earlier judgment made by the Federal High Court on January 22, which nullified the Rivers State 2024 budget on grounds that it was not presented before a legally recognized Assembly.

This earlier decision highlighted a critical issue: Governor Fubara’s presentation of the budget to a faction of the Assembly that the court did not recognize as legitimate.

The appellate court emphasized that Governor Fubara undermined his own position by withdrawing a counter-affidavit intended to contest the legal action brought by Amaewhule’s faction, who sought judicial acknowledgment of their authority.

By retracting this counter-affidavit, Fubara effectively weakened his own stance, leaving the Amaewhule-led Assembly faction with legal grounds to assert their legitimacy.

A focal point in the court’s ruling was Fubara’s action to present the 2024 Rivers State Appropriation Bill to only four out of the Assembly’s 31 members.

The court found this action in violation of Section 91 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), which mandates inclusive representation within legislative proceedings.

The Rivers State Assembly had been embroiled in division due to strained relations between Governor Fubara and his predecessor, now Federal Capital Territory Minister, Nyesom Wike.

Amid this tension, Governor Fubara disregarded Amaewhule’s faction, which consists of 26 pro-Wike lawmakers, and chose to present the state’s ₦800 billion 2024 budget to a group of only four legislators led by Hon. Edison Ehie, who had declared himself as the factional Speaker.

The Ehie-led faction declared the pro-Wike lawmakers’ seats vacant, claiming that their defection to the All Progressives Congress (APC) from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) warranted their removal.

This faction subsequently approved the budget, which Governor Fubara promptly signed into law.

However, a peace agreement brokered by President Bola Tinubu sought to resolve these conflicts, resulting in both Fubara and Wike agreeing to terms that would reinstate Amaewhule as the Speaker.

Following this accord, Hon. Edison Ehie withdrew all his filings from the court, abandoned his claims to the Assembly’s leadership, and vacated his seat.