Mr. Willy Mayambala, former Presidential candidate in the 2021 elections has written to the Supreme Court of Uganda expressing interest in taking over the petition by the National Unity Platform leader Robert Kyagulanyi challenging President Museveni’s victory.
Hon.Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu has on Wednesday 24th Feb. formally applied to court to allow him withdraw the petition after citing bias of the judges.
However, in a twist of events, Mayambala who came last in the January 14 polls has expressed interest in taking over the petition abandoned by Kyagulanyi.
“I write to object to the withdraw of the presidential petition formely logged in by Hon. Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu against several defendants as outlined in his petition.
I as well write to express interest in taking on the presidential petition and seek to inherit the petition,”Mayambala said in his letter to the Supreme Court.
In his letter, Mayambala wants court to take him through the necessary procedures and the other requirements to enable him take over the petition and whether there is any chance for him to present new evidence in the case.
“I wish to re-affirm that I, presidential candidate Willy Mayambala have great interest in the presidential petition going on and being listened to by the honourable court , please give me the necessary permission to go on.”
In his application, Kyagulanyi says he has been forced to withdraw the petition he filed because he thinks the court has not put in place grounds favourable for his petition to succeed.
“The petitioner’s witnesses are being abducted, tortured, harassed and intimidated by state security operatives at the behest of the first(Museveni) and third respondent(Attorney General)’s agents.
Organs of the state like Uganda Police Force and NIRA are being used by the respondents to investigate and infringe on privacy of the petitioner’s witnesses,”Kyagulanyi says in his application.
The runner-up in the January 14 polls argues that procedural rules governing presidential election petitions have been applied to disadvantage him in such a way that he was denied time to amend his petition and being stopped from filing additional evidence.
“After deeply reflecting upon the foregoing circumstances, I reached a decision that withdrawing the instant petition is the right thing to do since this court is not handling the petition with the independence, impartiality and equality I expected of it.”
The court is set to sit and decide the fate of Kyagulanyi’s application to withdraw the January 14 poll petition.
What the law Says
Section 61 the Presidential Elections Act, 2005 stipulates that a petition shall not be withdrawn except with leave of court and after such notice has been given as the court may direct.
“On the hearing of the application for withdrawal, any candidate who might have been a petitioner in respect of the election to which the petition refers may apply to the court to be substituted as a petitioner for the petitioner who desires to withdraw,” the law says.
In simple terms, the law allows any person who was a candidate in the said election to take over the petition provided the original petitioner loses interest in it.
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