Tag: 2019 Election

  • PDP members negotiated with Buhari to win 2019 election – Wike alleges

    PDP members negotiated with Buhari to win 2019 election – Wike alleges

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike has accused some members of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, of negotiating with President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019 election

    He disclosed this during the commissioning of the Rivers State University campus in Etche, Rivers State, on Tuesday.

    Wike did not reveal the names of the members but he was approached during the negotiation.

    According to Wike, “When they were going to negotiate with President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019, they came to me and I said no; no negotiation; PDP must win. I said no.

    “That was why Buhari won the election. Those of them who made sure PDP never survived since 2015, that destroyed PDP, I see them today opening their mouths.

    “Those of them who left this party are today calling us boys. The boys that stayed back and kept the party while those of them that founded the party left.

    “Since you are a Rivers man, you don’t need to be intimidated by anybody. Some people told me be careful, they will kill you. Who told you that you would not die first before you come for me.”

  • PRESIDENTIAL SEAT: President Buhari to know fate on May 27

    PRESIDENTIAL SEAT: President Buhari to know fate on May 27

    President Muhammadu Buhari will on May 27, 2022, know his fate in a suit at a Federal High Court in Abuja, seeking to upturn the 2019 election that brought him to power and to declare his presidential seat vacant.

    Former presidential candidate, Chief Ambrose Albert Owuru instituted the court action challenging the return of President Buhari for a second term of office.

    The suit is marked FHC/ABJ/CS/480/21 with the title” Chief Ambrose Albert Owuru and HDP Versus President Muhammadu Buhari and two others”.

    The two others on the originating summons are the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC and the Attorney General of the Federation AGF and Minister of Justice as co-defendants.

    When the matter came up for mention before Justice Inyang Eden Ekwo, President Buhari was not in court and was also not represented by any legal practitioner.

    The Judge found that Buhari as the 1st defendant in the suit was not served with the hearing notice as required by law.

    Consequently, the court fixed another date of May 27 to enable hearing notice to be served on Buhari for hearing of the suit.

    Owuru’s move is coming more than two years after he contested for Presidency against Buhari during the 2019 presidential election.

    Owuru, a British-trained constitutional lawyer, called to the Nigerian Bar in 1982 wants the court to declare Buhari as an unlawful President, illegally occupying the presidential seat at the Aso Rock Villa.

    The plaintiff who stood for the 2019 presidential poll on the platform of the Hope Democratic Party (HDP) is asking the court to declare him (Owuru) as the authentic winner of the poll.

    Among other reliefs, he is seeking an order of the court directing his immediate inauguration to take over from Buhari.

    In the suit, instituted on June 16, 2021, against Buhari and two others, Owuru claimed he won the February 16. 2019 Presidential poll and that his suit against Buhari at the Supreme Court was inconclusive due to some errors on the adjourned date.

    He wants the Federal High Court to declare that he is entitled to serve out a tenure of four years after his formal inauguration.

    The HDP presidential candidate also wants Buhari removed from office immediately and be compelled to refund all salaries, allowances and emoluments he collected while being in office as the President unlawfully.

    Owuru pleaded with the court to give an order that salaries, allowances and emoluments be paid to him from May 29, 2019, till date when he ought to have been sworn in.

    The plaintiff further applied for an order of perpetual injunction restraining Buhari, Attorney-General of the Federation AGF, Abubakar Malami (SAN), and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from further organising and conducting any Presidential election in 2023 to enable him complete his four-years term when inaugurated.

  • BREAKING: Court jails Professor for manipulating 2019 election results

    BREAKING: Court jails Professor for manipulating 2019 election results

    Professor Peter Ogban, a returning officer in the 2019 general elections in Akwa Ibom North-West Senatorial District has been jailed for election fraud.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Ogban, who is a Professor of Soil Science at the University of Calabar (UNICAL) was jailed by a High Court in Akwa Ibom State on Thursday.

    He was found guilty of fraudulent manipulation of election results, and of publishing and announcing false results.

    He was, therefore, sentenced to three years in jail for the offences.

    He was charged for manipulating the election results of two local government areas of Akwa Ibom – Oruk Anam and Etim Ekpo.

    In a previous court session, Mr Ogban had told the court how results of the election were falsified to give the All Progressives Congress (APC) an unfair advantage over its main rival, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Godswill Akpabio, the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs was the APC candidate in the election. He was seeking a return to the Senate after he defected from the PDP.

    The PDP candidate, Chris Ekpenyong, a former Deputy Governor in Akwa Ibom State, defeated Mr Akpabio in the election which was gripped by pockets of violence.

    Mr Ogban was prosecuted by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the landmark case.

    The university lecturer was in the dock, pleading for mercy from the judge, Augustine Odokwo, as of the time of filing this report.

  • Nigeria will not survive 2019 election – Femi Aribisala

    By Femi Aribisala

    For those of us who had hoped against hope, the 2019 presidential election has proved to be the last straw. We are now convinced that Nigeria is a hopeless case. This country is not just a major disappointment; it is decidedly firmly on the trajectory of a future break up.

    Today, the silence in the Nigerian political space is deafening. Just look back to 2015 and before, when there was vibrant debate about almost everything under the sun. But now it is “siddon look.” We just had an election that was no election and more like selection. It was even more a mini civil-war, characterized by killings, voter-suppression and intimidation, ballot-snatching and falsification of results.

    There was even a case where the electoral umpire claimed he was made to declare a false result at gunpoint. But in spite of the bogus outcome of the elections, nobody is fighting anymore. Nobody is burning tyres today or demonstrating in the streets. Instead, people are watching and waiting to see what will happen. Surely, this cannot be the end of the matter.

    Phyrric victory

    The so-called victors are jubilant, reading the eerie silence as mission accomplished. However, the omen is bleak and dire. It is always better when people express their feelings freely. That way, you know exactly where they stand. But when everything is bottled up as it is now, then you know we are in for trouble. Sooner, rather than later, the dam will burst.

    There is definitely a cold war currently going on in Nigeria today, and it is a lull before the storm.

    Only those who have been bought, or political sycophants looking for scraps of the stolen pie, are talking. They are giving back-slaps and high-fives to the phyrric victors. Meanwhile, wisdom and reason have concluded that Nigeria is a lost cause. No point waiting for another farce in 2023. Now is the time for all good people to leave the country; either physically or psychologically.

    It is now clear that those who believe they have a future have no part in this failed and discredited state called Nigeria. To your tents, O Israel!

    Those who make peaceful change impossible, make forcible change inevitable. But that is not to suggest military intervention is the answer. We have already done that and got the t-shirt. All the military did, in all their years in power, was to drag Nigeria through the mud. There is no point putting any hope in them again, after all, it is the same military men who hijacked the democratic system simply by taking off their uniforms and putting on agbadas.

    Things fall apart

    Seeing the template established in this fraudulent 2019 election, the inevitable conclusion, at least to me, is that this Nigeria cannot survive. The message of the 2019 election is that Nigeria is doomed to disintegration. Things have fallen apart and the center cannot hold.

    The message is that the powers-that-be are determined that we must be satisfied willy-nilly with incompetence. They say we must put up with economic failure. They insist our new status as the poverty capital of the world is to be commended. They tell us returning Nigeria to major debt status is next-level achievement. They tell us to celebrate abject failure as glorious success.

    If you were to believe the lie, our leaders have resuscitated the naira. They have nullified power blackouts. They have removed the petroleum subsidy. They have reduced the pump price of petrol. They have created millions and millions of new jobs. Our hospitals are no longer consulting clinics. Life and property is now secure in Nigeria. Our agricultural sector has been suitably revamped.

    Our leaders have achieved self-sufficiency in food production in Nigeria. They have killed corruption in the land. They have rebuilt our roads and bridges. They have defeated Boko Haram and rescued the Chibok girls. They have restored the reputation of Nigeria in the comity of nations. As a result of these glorious achievements, the current government not only won re-election, it did so with a resoundingly bigger majority than before.

    Dashed hopes

    All this makes 2019 a major watershed in Nigerian political history. For some reason, hopes were rekindled during the campaigns; only to be dashed ruthlessly. The times are so bad, our situation so worrisome, that many presidential hopefuls came out of the woodwork. It was time to rescue Nigeria. It was time to change the dismal trajectory of the nation’s history.

    Surely, even the blind can see that we cannot go on like this. Surely, these crop of current Nigerian leadership will be thrown out by a despondent electorate. It was time for a new page; a new departure. What we needed was our very own Mercutio proclaiming a plague on both the houses of our delinquent political establishment of the APC and the PDP.

    So out came a new panoply of ambitious political mavericks, talking up public policy, debating the issues, offering new ideas for the renewal of the national mandate. Among these were Kingsley Moghalu, Oby Ezekwesili, Tope Fasua, Fela Durotoye and Omoyele Sowore. I shared their delusion in thinking the Nigerian political system was amenable change. I believed with them that we are all fed up with the status quo.

    So they formed new parties, toured the country, pumped flesh, marshalled new agendas; only to meet their Waterloo at the discredited polls. They obtained, or were awarded, an insignificant fraction of the millions of fabricated votes. So completely were they crushed that there is even talk now of making it difficult, if not impossible, for other parties to contest in future elections apart from the tweedledee and tweedledum of the APC and the PDP.

    Failed Nigeria

    The message of our Caesars in Abuja is without ambiguity: there is no room for change in the politics of Nigeria. Under no legal circumstances will those who have ceased power by deception and subterfuge willingly relinquish it for the sake of some nebulous construct called democracy. To hell with power to the people, they insist in one accord. Power belongs to the professional politicians in Nigeria, and forever so shall it be.

    The Nigerian electorate itself is no better inclined. God says in the scriptures about the Israel of old: “The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests rule by their own power; and my people love to have it so.” (Jeremiah 5:31).

    The 2019 elections show that a substantial number of Nigerians, especially in the North, are convinced this failed country called Nigeria is the best that Nigeria can be. Indeed, if the verdict of the doctored polls were to be believed, then most Nigerians are very much in love with this malignant Nigeria.

    They love a Nigeria that is poverty-stricken, where our leaders are thieves, armed-robbers and pen-robbers, where beggars and vagabonds roam the streets, where the illiterate and the uneducated are the champions of public policy, where human life is worthless and people are massacred in numbers every day. Nigerians, according to INEC, adore a Nigeria where truth has fallen in the streets and justice is an orphan.

    Death-knell of democracy

    Never again. If there is anything to be learnt from the experience of the failed new idealists who ran for president in mushrooming parties this time around and lost their shirts; it is that Nigerian politics is a complete waste of time. The electorate has apparently never believed in the polls. They know their votes will not count. They know the only time politicians have any regard for them is during election campaigns.

    So, if they can get a small bag of rice or garri from the charlatans running for office, or maybe even just 1,000 naira for their thumbprint, that will do just fine. If you can give them even more so they can attack polling booths in opposition strongholds and make away with the ballot boxes, they are ready. If you can give them lunch so they can incite a riot so an election being lost is declared inconclusive, they will do it. Thereby, the victor becomes the vanquished.

    As a result, we will not see the idealism of 2019 come 2023, should this misnomer we call Nigeria still exist by then. The newcomers are once bitten, twice shy. Even now, by the time we came to the gubernatorial elections, after the farce of the presidential, Nigerians had lost all interest in democracy. Most people did not even bother to come out to vote again.

    Of course, this did not prevent states like Kaduna from recording more fabricated votes in the gubernatorial election than even Kano did fictitiously in the presidential. In short, what we witnessed in the recently concluded election was the death knell of democracy in Nigeria.

    So what is the answer?

    Goodbye Nigeria

    More and more people are going to vote with their feet. The industrious and the enterprising are going to seek greener pastures elsewhere, having concluded Nigeria is a lost cause. They will go to Canada, to Australia, to those countries where merit is rewarded and excellence is the watchword. The smart ones who stay behind will start insisting on the dismemberment of this bogus contraption called Nigeria.

    What the 2019 election tells me, in no uncertain terms, is that the future of Nigeria lies in the breakup of Nigeria. It is not what I want. It is not what I desire. But it is there in the cards.

    I have written severally that Nigeria should remain united. I said again and again that Nigeria cannot do without the Igbo. I have shouted in the wilderness that Nigeria cannot do without the North. But I have now reached the conclusion that, under the present circumstances, the breakup of Nigeria is inevitable. It is just a matter of time.

    This is not a prediction: it is a warning. It is a call to arms. It comes from the realization that the Nigerian political system has now been programmed so that every election will now be decided by those whose votes can be bought with 30 pieces of silver.

    The system has been rigged so that every election in Nigeria will now be determined by those who have filled the voting register with underage voters. So doing, your chances of being elected to high office are excellent if you are incompetent, a crook, or a thief to boot. Otherwise, you don’t stand a chance.

    I congratulate all those who won infamous victories in the just concluded elections. But “send not to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.”

  • The 2019 election was woeful-Ruggedman

    Sensational Nigerian rapper, Ruggedman says “Nigeria is becoming really shameless” , adding that the 2019 elections was woeful.

    The songwriter made this statement in an interview on HipTV’s StreetHop while discussing the outcome of the 2019 election.

    In his words:”Nigeria is becoming really shameless. You don’t come on national TV asking election officials if they need torchlight, unfolding 20 acres of paper just to show election results when the world and bloggers are now working with phones,” Ruggedman stated

    “We”re still using thumbprint, the ‘press-ya-hand’ system and checking polling units when we have BVN accepted everywhere. This is 2019, these things are supposed to be computerized by now but we’re still doing archaic things.”

    The rapper further noted that “the 2019 election was woeful. The postponement gave political parties room to improve. What they were improving on is what I don’t know, but the end justifies the means.”

    “Results were obviously manipulated, figures stated in the polling stations were different from what INEC announced on TV. Also, the disruptions, the killings, I’ve never heard of them this much. And check, did you hear any government press release on the killings— not even Rivers State!,” he said.

    “Nigerians need to do something. Until we have a way of holding people in power accountable and until they understand that they are accountable to us, we will not move forward.”

  • 2019 Election; A Triumph Of The Common Man And A Great Blessing For Nigeria, By Obong Victor Attah

    A submission by Arc. (Obong) Victor Attah at a press briefing on

    Tuesday, 19th March 2019 in Lagos.

    Let me start by asking the question, “who is the common man; who is the average Nigerian Family”? It reminds me of an incident in 1974 when I participated in the design of an office building in Lagos. When I was trying to calculate the required number of car parking spaces, a member of the team reminded me then that “ the average Nigerian family owns two cars”. Stupefied, I asked “the average Nigerian family”?

    As elites, we can become so cocooned in our comfort zone that we foolishly think of ourselves as the average Nigerian, or the common man. President Buhari knows better and his iconoclastic disposition towards the elites is what endeared him to the common man. He is their hero. So Buhari won the just concluded presidential election not as an elite and certainly not because he was the APC candidate but because he is Buhari. Without a doubt it is a personal victory. But what effect will that have on his party the APC.

    Throughout his first tenure, nobody can say that he was truly a party man in the conventional sense. Because of this there were rumblings within his party. Some very big wigs were said to be considering leaving the party. Infact some even thought that by the time we get to the elections, the party would suffer an implosion. As it happened that was averted.

    In his second coming, it is my conviction that he is going to pay even less attention to the party. With some serving governors being suspended from the party by the NWC for anti-party activities; with the earlier schisms that had gone to spawn new parties or swell the ranks of the PDP; with the evident shift in the support calculus, it is clear to me that, in the no distant future, we will be singing its dirge. APC is going to be scattered – dead.

    If Atiku had won, it is possible that he would have atikulated this country to the next level – to borrow from the slogan of both parties. But I also had the fear that if Atiku wins and the PDP gets back in the saddle, this country would be plunged into an orgy of intolerable excesses. Besides, if we remember that the relationship between Obasanjo as President and Atiku as Vice-President was bad and so had many unsavoury consequences for the country, let us consider what would happen with Atiku as President and Obasanjo as his self-styled, letter-writing godfather. I shudder to think. With what has happened now, it is obvious that the fortunes of the PDP is also most likely going to change.

    Goodluck Jonathan on leaving office as the President on that party’s platform could not establish himself as the rallying point for the party even after Makarfi had so ably wrestled it out of Sherriff’s clutches. It took Atiku Abubakar, as its presidential candidate to provide that focus. Given his age and history of past attempts, this surely was for him a last ditch. With him off the scene, PDP is completely rudderless and with no anchor. It is safe to say therefore that PDP too, which had also splintered in the past will soon be scattered – dead.

    There was yet a third group – the Military Block. They did not hide their support for Atiku and the PDP. They openly showed their hand and have been spanked. Their influence therefore is bound to wane. It is my prediction that from now on we are going to witness less and less of those pilgrimages to Abeokuta and Minna. With this loss of influence, it is also safe to say that the military oligarchy is dead.

    These were the three power blocks that constantly exerted their manipulative wiles on the country. If they did not approve of you, be as wise as Solomon, as brave as David, as strong as Sampson, you will not get anywhere and that is what has kept Nigeria down. The system has never allowed us to put forward our most capable.

    Buhari’s victory is the death knell to these power blocks. It has started the process of dismembering these menacing Behemoths, pulling out their fangs, blunting their claws and neutralising their sting. Buhari’s victory has returned power to the common man. Positions negotiated in Abuja and Lagos over the heads of the people can no longer be guaranteed. His victory has therefore given Nigeria a long- delayed but much needed opportunity for a new life; an opportunity to chart a new course. That is why for me his victory represents not only the triumph of the common man, but indeed also a great blessing for Nigeria.

    An opportunity has now been created for fresh hands, an opportunity for a new leadership, to take over. Nigeria can now look forward to a new birth. The phoenix can now rise out of the ashes and attain its destined glory.

    Now that Buhari has won, what should be the Agenda for his government. I have my suggestions:

    1. First and foremost, Buhari must put a stop to all and every agitation to split up this country and there is only one way to achieve this. He must see to it that we re-enact and reinstate the terms and conditions of the agreement that caused all the various peoples of this country, at independence, to agree to come together and form one country – Federalism. Anything short of this is to court a disaster of unimaginable magnitude. The popular word today that describes this is RESTRUCTURING. My prediction is that unless this is done, by the end of his tenure in the next four years, there may not be a country called Nigeria as we know it today.

    Every time restructuring is discussed, every part of this country insists it can survive on its own without the other. Indeed that is what will have to happen in the event of a break up. What I am advocating is that we put that into practice; as federating units we learn to survive each on its own while staying together as a country. That is what federalism is all about and that is what restructuring means.

    1. The second item on my agenda for the Buhari government is POWER. We must work relentlessly to see that in the shortest possible time every hamlet, every corner of this country enjoys twenty four hours constant supply of electric power. In today’s world, it is not a luxury but an absolute necessity.
    1. Third on my agenda is the fight against CORRUPTION. The fact still remains that if we do not kill corruption, corruption will kill us. This time the fight must be total and unsparing.
    1. Next, President Buhari must put a stop to all the KILLINGS whether by Fulani herdsmen, or Libyan mercenaries, marauders, cattle rustlers or whoever. Already human life has been degraded enough and if the killings continue and farmers stop going to their farms, all the gains made so far towards food security by this administration will come to naught and we will again be faced with a major disastrous phenomenon.
    1. The final item on my agenda is the release of LEAH SHARIBU and the total annihilation of BOKO HARAM. My granddaughter of about the same age is called Leah but that is only a coincidence. That innocent little girl must not be allowed to continue to suffer any longer amongst a hoard who can only be described as beasts. Similarly no citizen of this country should be forced off their land into an IDP camp. Boko Haram, even if we must resort to a scorch earth policy must be smoked out and destroyed. It is time to say enough is enough firmly and with determination.

    Not a few will wonder why I have not included in my agenda such vexed issues as the broken economy, falling standard of education, poor health care, decaying infrastructure and even such matters as nepotism. For me, these are mere symptoms of a major debilitating ailment. The underlying problem being the dysfunctional federal system that we have been operating with a heavy overlay of unitarialism. Once we restructure, so that the federating units become coordinate with, rather than subordinate to, the centre, all these associated ills will begin a process of auto-correction.

    Have we forgotten how the Sarduana rather sent Sir Tafawa Balewa to the centre as Prime Minister while he remained to take charge, as the Premier, of his federating unit- the Northern Region. The truth is that in a proper federal system the central government is largely immaterial to the common man. What touches his life most and matters most to him are the state and local governments. I sometimes forget that there is now a large population of young Nigerians who must have difficulty understanding what I am talking about because they have not known any other than military or present system of governance. But those of us who are old enough cannot have forgotten how the harmonious relationship and the healthy rivalry that were engendered by our practice of true federalism spurred every part of this country to an unprecedented height of development. All that is needed is for all of us to accept the imperative to go back to something that had served us well in the past; to accept that RESTRUCTURING is now an idea whose time has come and cannot therefore be resisted or delayed.

    Given where we are now, there is a need for us to define the way forward. For me the way forward lies in a new beginning with a complete change of ethos and orientation. To achieve this I suggest the immediate formation of two NATIONAL MOVEMENTS.

    1. The just concluded elections have done a lot to return power to the people and they have demonstrated that Nigerians want power to be held by people with integrity to which we should also add capability. Nigerians are completely fed up with people who seek power and positions just for the tyranny of controlling the treasury for themselves, their masters their investors and contractors rather than for the development of the real stakeholders, – the people.

    I have no doubt that there abounds within our population of nearly two hundred million people, a sufficient number of quality people to whom the leadership of this nation can be trusted. So, the first movement, which I have suggested must be nationwide and not under the aegis of any political party, must be to search out the Moghalus of this nation. There must be quite a few of them. We must search for them, find them, groom them, assess them so that in less than the four years of this tenure, there will be no doubt in anybody’s mind as to who the people would want to be their next president. I should caution that this exercise, imperative as it is, would amount to an indulgence in extreme futility unless we also firmly re-establish the country.

    1. The next movement which must also be nationwide and not sponsored by any political party must therefore be the movement to restructure this country in a painless, equitably manner. I have already said a lot about restructuring in this presentation so I will say no more on it.

    Conclusion

    As one who has already celebrated his eightieth birthday, I can only continue to counsel and pray that God will continue to show me mercy and grant me enough days to see my country attain the lofty aims of our founding fathers.

    Long live a fresh Federal Republic of Nigeria under a fresh leadership run by fresh hands

    Signed

    (Obong) Victor B. Attah

  • Election of Abdullahi Sule, means increased infrastructure for Nasarawa—Speaker

    The Speaker, Nasarawa State House of Assembly, Alhaji Ibrahim Balarabe-Abdullahi says election of Mr Abdullahi Sule as governor-elect of the state indicates people’s yearning for more infrastructure and industrialisation in the state.

    Balarabe-Abdullahi stated this on Monday while speaking with newsmen in Umaisha, Toto Local Government Area of the state.

    He expressed hope that Sule would take the state to the next level when finally in office.

    The speaker also expressed appreciation to the people of the state for having confidence in the APC, not only in the state, but also at the federal level.

    The speaker, who congratulated the governor-elect on his victory, described the victory as well deserved, considering Sule’s track record of achievements in the private sector.

    Balarabe-Abdullahi also attributed the election of Sule to the developmental strides of APC-led government at all levels.

    He commended the electorate for electing APC candidates and assured them that they would not regret the mandate given to the party.

    “We have hope and confidence in President Muhammadu Buhari and Sule, the governor-elect.

    “By God’s grace, Buhari and our governor-elect will deliver good governance and other elected representatives will deliver the much needed dividends of democracy to Nigerians,” he said.

    The state number three citizen enjoined candidates and political parties that could not make it to accept the outcome of the elections in good faith.

    INEC on Monday declared that Sule polled 327,229 votes to defeat other opponents in the election.

    Mr David Ombugadu of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) scored 184,281 votes while Mr Labaran Maku of the All Progressives Grand Alliance polled 132,784 votes.

  • Kano guber election: Declare our candidate winner to avoid violence, PDP tells INEC

    Kano guber election: Declare our candidate winner to avoid violence, PDP tells INEC

    Rabiu Bichi Chairman, Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) in Kano State, has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to declare the party’s gubernatorial candidate, Alhaji Abba Kabir winner to avoid eruption of violence.
    The PDP chairman made the warning on Monday while briefing newsmen on the suspension of the governorship election result collation by the INEC.
    According to Bichi, “the election has been won by our candidate therefore the INEC should declare our candidate as the winner because we have scored the highest votes.
    “We have no problems with the recalling of the Nassarawa results, but we should be declared winners with the already results at hand.
    “If you declare us winner, and later you don’t get the results for Nassarawa you can go for supplementary elections, but you should just declare us winners final.’’
    Bichi said the INEC had set a bad precedence adding that it should give the party its mandate to avoid problems.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the electoral body had suspended the collation of the results at the early hours of Monday due to security challenges at the Nasarawa Local Government collation centre.
    NAN also recalled that the INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), in Kano announced that some hoodlums attacked the centre, disrupted the collation and tore the result sheet.
    According to him, the commission will re-generate the results from its primary and secondary data base and verify its authenticity with the party agents.
    Arabi-Shehu had emphasised his assurances of bringing out the final results from Nassarawa Local Government to declare the winner of the elections.
    The INEC commissioner assured the political parties and people of the state that nobody would temper with the original results stored in its database.
    “Our Primary and Secondary Sources entered in 10 wards of the Nassarawa local government results.
    “Therefore, I assure you that the results are intact and we are going to recall them and in the presence of party agents announce them,” he assured.

  • Gov. Tambuwal urges INEC to declare him winner of Sokoto guber poll

    Gov. Aminu Tambuwa, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate in Sokoto State has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to declare him winner of the Saturday election.

    Tambuwal made the call in a special broadcast on Monday in Sokoto, noting that Section 179(2) of the Constitutional and INEC guidelines were explicit on governorship elections.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that INEC on Sunday declared the March 9 governorship election in Sokoto state inconclusive.

    The State Returning Officer said the decision was because the 75, 403 cancelled votes in 136 polling units was higher than the 3, 413 margin difference between Tambuwal’s score and that of the APC candidate.

    Prof. Fatima Muktar, Vice Chancellor, Federal University Dutse (FUD), Jigawa, had declared that Tambuwal polled 489, 558 votes while his closest rival, Alhaji Ahmad Aliyu of the APC scored 486, 145 votes.

    But Tambuwal said that at present, INEC had not communicated the reasons for cancellation of votes in the 136 polling units.

    According to the governor, the question of margin difference is alien to the Nigerian constitution as the law requires majority of votes and 25 per cent of votes cast in two-third majority of states of the federation.

    “This technical reason of margin differences has not been applied in Osun and Ekiti elections,” Tambuwal said.

    He said he obtained a higher number of votes at the concluded election and averred to test the margin principle legally when the “needful had not been done.”

    “We are ready to participate in the proposed re-run election and also challenge the decision at the court if the needful is not done.

    “We expect INEC to come out boldly and do the needful by declaring the winner.

    “I believe that we won the election. INEC and its officials have names to protect by doing the right thing at the right time,” the governor added.

    Tambuwal however commended security agencies and other participating organs at the election for their commitment that ensured successful and peaceful conduct of the election.

    He also commended PDP supporters in Sokoto state for coming out en mass to vote for him and urged them to repeat same when the re-run came up.

  • Court nullifies Kano PDP gov primary, orders fresh election

    Barely five days to the governorship election, a Federal High Court in Kano State on Monday nullified the governorship primary election conducted by the Peoples Democratic Party, which produced Abba Kabir-Yusuf as the party’s candidate in the state.

    The cancellation of the primary election followed the suit filed before the court, by one of the party governorship aspirants, Alhaji Ibrahim Ali-Amin, who challenged the legitimacy of the process which produced Kabir-Yusuf as a candidate.

    Al-Amin alleged that the PDP during the primary election “sidelined and booted him out” of the race.

    Delivering a ruling, Justice Lewis Alagua, nullified the election on the premise that the party had no incontrovertible reason to stop the plaintiff from participating in the primary election because he formally brought his expression and nomination form.

    Alagua also held that denying the plaintiff the right to participate in the primary election, contravened the provision of the Electoral Act.

    He ordered for a valid fresh primary election before the forthcoming governorship election on March 9 in the country.

    Earlier, the plaintiff, Ali-Amin, prayed the court to nullify the election on the ground that it was grossly flawed, given the manner he had been sidelined with no justifiable reasons to legitimize such an act.

    He said he was blatantly denied participation in the primary election, in spite of the fact that he had bought his expression and nomination form.

    It was, however, the contention of the plaintiff that there was also the need for the court to interpret whether the party could go ahead to field a candidate for the election in Kano State without conducting the primary election or not.

    In his submission, counsel to the plaintiff, Barrister Kabir Usman said the judgement effected had become legally expedient, since his client had been denied the right to contest the election.

    He said with the cancellation of the primary election, the governorship slot is now vacant, pending when a fresh and valid primary election is held.

    In his remarks, counsel to PDP, Bashir Yusuf said the verdict did not affect Abba Kabir-Yusuf as a candidate but PDP as a party pointing out they would appeal against the judgement.