The Independent National Electoral Commission has set aside over N1.9bn on legal fees and related matters as aggrieved candidates challenge the outcomes of various elections in court.
Atiku, Godswill Akpabio, and others have already begun making moves to challenge the result of the elections in court.
The information is contained in INEC’s 2019 Election Project Plan which was obtained by The PUNCH.
The document reads in part, “N1, 796, 547, 500.00. Professional fees and expenses for external solicitors to be engaged by the commission to represent it at the tribunals and appeals; honorarium for legal officers that represent the commission at election petitions and appeals.
“Analysis of fees: Governorship petition at N4.5m X 20; senatorial petition at N3m X 45; House of Reps atN2.7m X105; state House of Assembly N1.350m X 244. Honorarium to in-house lawyers is seven percent of fees payable to external solicitors.” Of the sum, N6m was spent on pre-election cases which are disputes that arose from the conduct of party primaries.
The commission will also spend a separate N26.5m on monitoring the hearing of election petitions and appeals across the 36 states and the FCT.
The sum will cover duty tour allowance and transport costs for the monitors at the hearing of election petitions and appeals as well as the compilation and printing of reports of petitions and appeals.
The electoral umpire also budgeted a separate N99.5m for the compilation and production of the updated electoral legal framework including the code of conduct for external lawyers and code of conduct for staff.
A separate N25m will be spent on the prosecution of electoral offenders.
Yakubu had revealed in January that the commission battled 1, 134 legal cases arising from election disputes in 2015, 2016 and 2017.