Politics1 hr ago

Anywanwu Camp Bars Media Faction Labels, Cites Supreme Court Ruling

PDP spokesman warns journalists against labeling factions and threatens lawsuits following the Supreme Court's clear decision on the party's leadership crisis.

Nadia Okafor/3 min/NG

Political Correspondent

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PDP secretary: Wike camp writes Supreme Court ahead of BoT meeting

PDP secretary: Wike camp writes Supreme Court ahead of BoT meeting

Source: LegitOriginal source

– The PDP’s Anyanwu faction says the Supreme Court decision is clear, bans media from calling the party “factional” and threatens legal action for non‑compliance.

Context

On Thursday night, Channels TV’s *Politics Today* hosted a heated exchange over the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Peoples Democratic Party’s leadership dispute. Jungudo Haruna Mohammed, spokesperson for Senator Samuel Anyanwu’s camp, asserted that the apex court left no room for interpretation, while rival camp members offered a contrary reading of the same judgment.

Key Facts

Jungudo stated the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the decisions of both the appellate court and the Federal High Court, emphasizing that the judgment “is very, very clear.” He noted that the courts never considered any suspension issue, arguing that such matters were never before a judge. The spokesman dismissed rumors that the court transferred party control to the Board of Trustees, calling the claim “laughable” and “ridiculous.”

He also highlighted the shifting narrative from his opponents, who previously claimed Senator Anyanwu was expelled and now speak of suspension, questioning the consistency of their arguments. Jungudo warned the press to stop assigning faction labels to the PDP, stating the camp will pursue judicial action if media outlets continue to do so.

What It Means

The Anyanwu camp’s stance signals a strategic shift from courtroom battles to controlling the party’s public narrative. By branding any factional description as defamatory, the camp aims to force a unified image of the PDP, despite internal divisions that persist after the court’s decision. The threat of lawsuits may deter some journalists, but it also raises concerns about press freedom and the ability to report on intra‑party disputes.

Future monitoring should focus on whether media outlets comply with the warning, how rival PDP factions respond, and if any legal challenges materialize, potentially reshaping the party’s internal power dynamics.

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