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Punish electoral forgeries and perjuries

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By AloyEjimakor

 

In Nigeria, forgery and perjury, by whatsoever other names they are called in our different statutes, are serious offences under both the Criminal Code and the Penal Code.

The law of evidence and other subsidiary legislations also contain clear provisions on them.

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Yet, even as we have, in recent times, witnessed a litany of forgeries and perjuries before electoral tribunals, very little attention is paid to prosecuting offenders, even as we are in constant pursuit of a path to a credible electoral regime.

Evidence is the hallmark of all legal proceedings. It is thus of great importance for its sanctity to be protected.

A tribunal before which the electoral contest is fought is not connected with the material facts that propelled the dispute.

Thus, the capacity of such tribunal to resolve the electoral dispute based on the facts/truth presented by disputants depends, to a large extent, on the veracity of the evidence adduced by the parties.

Weighing the probative value of the evidence of disputants and their witnesses (documentary or oral) depends on the limited forensic skills of the tribunal in observing the demeanour of those witnesses and gauging the truth or falsity of the documents they purvey.

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So, the basis for prescribing punishment for forgers and perjurers is underscored by the inherent danger in validating a candidate who succeeded in adducing false evidence – a monumental fraud on the electorate.

Now to the black-letter law.

Section 465 of the Criminal Code says: “A person who makes a false document or writing knowing it to be false, and with intent that it may in any way be used or acted upon as genuine, whether in the state or otherwise, to the prejudice of any person, or with intent that any person may, in the belief that it is genuine, be induced to do or refrain from doing any act, whether in the state or elsewhere, is said to forge the document in writing.”

The word “document” includes any book and any paper, parchment, or other material whatsoever, used for writing or printing, marked with any letters of marks denoting words, or with any other signs capable of conveying a definite meaning to persons conversant with them.

All electoral materials, written as they are, including the results sheets of such elections, unambiguously fall under the purview of the forgoing definitions.

There have been many reported instances of candidates and their witnesses seeking to introduce documents before tribunals that were later determined to be false or forged.

Such documents have often come in the form of forged false results, purported to have emanated from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). Worst hit are the election tribunal proceedings ongoing in Rivers State.

Each and every incident of such is prosecutable because the elements of the offence are met once

  1. The document is false;
  2. Knowledge that the false document or writing is false;
  3. Intention that same be used or acted upon as genuine; and
  4. To the prejudice of any person or with intent that any person may, in the belief that it is genuine, be induced to do or refrain from doing any act.

The offence is vested and completed by the ultimate intention that the subornation or tendering of such forged document is to sway the tribunal’s gavel to fall in favour of the proposition the document is purporting to prove.

Under Section 467 of the Code, the offender is liable to three years’ imprisonment.

But in the case of forgery of electoral materials, the punishment might be as severe as seven years’ imprisonment, or even more, as further provisions in the Code appear to indicate.

If implemented, even in fits and bounds, these punishment milestones are deterrence enough and thus will go far in strengthening the judicial phase of our electoral process.

In addition to facing charges for forgery simpliciter, prosecution can also proceed, even concurrently, for the offence of perjury under Section 117 of the Criminal Code.

The above Section states, inter alia, that “Any person who, in any judicial proceeding, or for the purpose of instituting any judicial proceeding, knowingly gives false testimony touching any matter which is material to any question then depending in that proceeding, or intended to be raised in that proceeding, is guilty of an offence, which is called perjury.

“It is immaterial whether the testimony is given on oath or under any other sanction authorised by law. It is immaterial whether the false testimony is given orally or in writing.

“It is immaterial whether the person who gives the testimony is a competent witness or not, or whether the testimony is admissible in the proceeding or not.”

From the forgoing, it is clear that a ‘proceeding’ before an election ‘tribunal’ qualifies because Section 113 of the same Criminal Code states that “In this chapter, the term ‘judicial proceeding’ includes any proceeding had or taken in or before any court, tribunal, commission of inquiry, or person, in which evidence may or may not be taken on oath.”

Further provisions in the Criminal/Penal Code, especially as regards forgery specifically make references to government or public documents/records, to which electoral materials belong.

All the relevant provisions are copious, unambiguous and grave. Thus, the near-absence of prosecuting offenders is not for a lack of the legal mandate. There is a lack of prosecutorial will.

Therefore, going forward, all instances of acts of forgery and perjury before any election tribunal should be taken up and prosecuted to the hilt.

  • Ejimakor, a lawyer

alloylaw@yahoo.com

 

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