The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has opened a fierce new legal front, filing contempt proceedings against former National Secretary Senator Samuel Anyanwu and INEC Chairman Prof. Joash Amupitan for allegedly defying a binding court judgment.
The move, which signals an increasingly aggressive posture by the Ambassador Iliya Umar Damagun-led National Working Committee, raises the very real prospect of a former principal officer of Nigeria’s largest opposition party being committed to prison, a development that would be unprecedented in the country’s turbulent political history.
At the heart of the matter is a judgment delivered on January 12, 2026, by Justice Yusuf Halilu of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, in which the court struck out a suit filed by Senator Anyanwu challenging his expulsion from the PDP.
The court was unambiguous in its findings, dismissing the case on grounds of both jurisdiction and merit, effectively closing the door on Anyanwu’s legal bid to reverse his ouster.
Yet, despite the court’s ruling, the PDP and seven other judgment creditors allege that neither Anyanwu nor INEC Chairman Amupitan has complied with the implications of that judgment, prompting the filing of Form 48, a formal notice of the consequences of disobeying court orders on April 20, 2026, by their counsel, Johnathan Musa.
The notice leaves no room for ambiguity, warning both respondents in stark terms: “Unless you stop further disobedience and comply forthwith…you will be guilty of contempt, and you will be liable to be committed to prison.”
The inclusion of the INEC chairman in the contempt proceedings is particularly significant, raising pointed questions about whether the electoral commission has continued to recognize Anyanwu in any official party capacity despite the court’s ruling, a move the PDP’s legal team evidently considers a direct affront to judicial authority.
To understand the gravity of the current standoff, one must trace the roots of this crisis back to the internal disciplinary machinery of the PDP.
On March 10, 2025, a seven-member National Disciplinary Committee chaired by veteran party elder Chief Tom Ikimi concluded its investigation into petitions filed against Senator Anyanwu, recommending his outright expulsion from the party for what was described as anti-party activities.
The committee’s findings were damning, and notably, Anyanwu was found to have declined invitations to appear before the panel, a decision that would later prove costly to his legal arguments.
Refusing to go quietly, Anyanwu took the battle to court, dragging the National Disciplinary Committee and the party’s National Working Committee before the FCT High Court in suit number CV/1050/2025. He sought an order setting aside the committee’s findings, arguing that the panel lacked the competence to determine the allegations leveled against him and that its proceedings constituted a fundamental breach of his constitutional right to a fair hearing.
Justice Halilu’s judgment was a sweeping repudiation of Anyanwu’s position on every conceivable ground.
First, the court upheld preliminary objections filed by the defendants, finding that Anyanwu’s claims constituted non-justiciable intra-party disputes, that he had bypassed mandatory internal dispute resolution mechanisms before approaching the court, and that no reasonable cause of action had been disclosed against the defendants.
But Justice Halilu went further still. Even assuming purely for argument’s sake that the court had jurisdiction, the judge proceeded to examine the claims on their merits and found them equally wanting.
“A careful examination of the originating summons, the affidavit in support thereof, and the documentary exhibits relied upon by the plaintiff shows that the plaintiff failed to establish any basis upon which this court can interfere with the disciplinary proceedings of the PDP,” the judge held.
The court noted that Anyanwu had been duly invited to appear before the disciplinary committee but chose not to avail himself of that opportunity, a finding that effectively neutralized his fair hearing argument.
As the judge pointedly observed, settled law dictates that a party who deliberately refuses to utilize an opportunity to be heard cannot subsequently complain of being denied a fair hearing.
Anyanwu has since filed an appeal against the judgment, a move that his legal team may argue provides justification for maintaining the status quo. However, the PDP and its co-plaintiffs appear determined to press ahead, insisting that the existing judgment remains binding and must be obeyed unless and until a higher court orders otherwise.
The involvement of the INEC Chairman in these proceedings adds a sensitive inter-institutional dimension to what is already a legally and politically complex dispute. How Prof. Amupitan and the electoral commission respond to the contempt notice is likely to shape the next chapter of this unfolding drama considerably.
For the PDP, a party still navigating the turbulence of post-2023 election recriminations and internal power struggles, the outcome of these proceedings carries implications that extend far beyond Senator Anyanwu himself.
A successful contempt application would send an unambiguous message about the current leadership’s resolve to enforce party discipline through every legal instrument at its disposal.
The next hearing date is expected to reveal whether the court will proceed to issue a committal order or whether a last-minute resolution can be brokered before Nigeria’s opposition politics are plunged into yet another constitutional crisis.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The PDP’s contempt proceedings against Senator Samuel Anyanwu and INEC Chairman Prof. Joash Amupitan represent a critical flashpoint in Nigeria’s opposition politics. At its core, this is a story about the consequences of defying both party authority and judicial pronouncements.
Anyanwu’s expulsion from the PDP has been upheld by a court of competent jurisdiction, and his continued resistance alongside INEC’s alleged non-compliance has now pushed the matter to the brink of a committal order.
The court was unequivocal that Anyanwu undermined his own case by refusing to engage the party’s internal disciplinary process, making his fair hearing argument legally untenable.
PDP is sending a clear and deliberate message: no individual, regardless of their political standing, is above the rule of internal party discipline or the authority of the courts. How this concludes will set a significant precedent for how intra-party disputes are handled across Nigeria’s political landscape going forward.


















