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The Federal Government has described as false, reports by the Lagos State Government that the Ikoyi Marriage Registry has been shut down and stopped from conducting marriages.
Punch reports that the Ministry of Interior said the court presided over by Justice Chuka Obiozor simply upheld the judgement of a Federal High Court delivered in 2002 which was not appealed.
It explained that the case, Suit No: FHC/L/CS/1760/16-Egor Local Government Area of Edo State & three others Vs. Ministry of Interior & others, cited by the Lagos State government was actually struck out by Justice Obiozor in his judgment delivered on April 30, 2018.
The Director of Legal, Ministry of Interior, Bola Odugbesan, made the clarification in a statement in Abuja on Friday, in reaction to a press statement on Thursday by the Director, Public Affairs, Lagos State Ministry of Local Government and Community Affairs, Bisi Olufuwa.
Mr Olufuwa had claimed that the Lagos State had secured a court injunction restraining the Ikoyi registry from conducting marriages.
READ: Court stops Ikoyi registry from conducting marriages
Dismissing the claims, Ms Odugbesan presented a copy of the judgement by Justice Obiozor who described the case as an abuse of court process and struck it out.
Odugbesan clarified what transpired in the suit.
She said: “In the case, the court was invited to interpret the provisions of the Constitution conferring on local governments, the powers to register marriages.
“The Minister of Interior, through his Counsel, Bola Odugbesan, argued that under item 61 of the Exclusive List, matters connected with marriage under the Marriage Act, issuing of marriage certificate and its registration are outside the purview of state and/or local governments.”
Ms Odugbesan further explained, “The Federal High Court in its judgment dated April 30, 2018, struck out the case of the Plaintiffs, ie, Egor LGA & Ors.
“The court held that the case is an abuse of the court process in view of the earlier judgment of the court in 2002, which upheld the sanctity of the rights of the Minister to issue licences to places of worship to conduct marriages, and the Registrar under the Marriage Act to register marriages. It is instructive to note that Lagos State was not a party in the case.”
According to Odugbesan, the Federal High Court never ordered the closure of Ikoyi Marriage Registry as claimed.