The Guardian (Nigeria)

Kogi Guber Election Dispute: Still More Rivers To Cross

• PDP And The Abubakar Idris Challenge

- From Ralph Omololu Agbana, Lokoja

SIX months ago, the Kogi governorsh­ip election was declared won and lost by the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC). However, from the pool of 24 candidates and political parties that contested the November 16, 2019 election, three parties and candidates are locked in postelecti­on legal battles to claim and reclaim the mandate.

The candidates in court are incumbent Governor Yahaya Bello of the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), Engr Musa Wada of the Peoples Democratic ( PDP), Barrister Natasha Akpoti of the Social Democratic Party ( SDP).

At the end of the process on November 17, 2019, according to INEC, Bello polled 406,222 votes to defeat his closest opponent Wada, who scored 189,704 votes. Akpoti came a distant third with 9,482 votes

Wada and Akpoti however contested the result of the election at the Kogi State Governorsh­ip Election Tribunal, which sat in Abuja, both of whom have had their petitions dismissed.

A third of the litigation surroundin­g the conduct of the election, though a pre- election matter, which emanated from Action Peoples Party ( APP), also has been struck out.

The APP, in a pre- election matter had dragged the INEC before the Federal High Court, Abuja, allegedly for excluding its candidates from the ballot.

The party claimed that INEC prevented it from replacing its candidates earlier disqualifi­ed by the electoral umpire.

Besides alleged violence and other electoral malpractic­e, exclusion of the logo of the SDP from the ballot also formed part of the grounds on which Akpoti had gone to the tribunal to contest the authentici­ty of Bello’s victory at the poll. But while delivering judgment in the suit on Monday, May 18, 2020 the three- member tribunal led by Justice Kashim Kaigama held that the petition failed woefully. Mr. Kaigama also held that the testimonie­s given by the petitioner­s’ witnesses amounted to “hearsay, were doubtful, illogical, and of no probative value”.

Consequent­ly, the tribunal dismissed the petition and ordered the petitioner­s ( SDP and Akpoti) to pay N100, 000 to each of the respondent­s. The total cost to be paid by the petitioner­s sums up to N600, 000.

In her reaction, Akpoti vowed to appeal against the judgment immediatel­y.

“I find today’s Kogi guber tribunal’s judgment the funniest thus far.

The icing to its stupidity is that I should do N100, 000 giveaway to APC, INEC... appeal ( court) here we come”.

Like Akpoti, for Wada and PDP, the battle is far from being over. The bone of contention in the PDP camp was that the election was characteri­sed by massive over voting, illegal thumb printing and state sponsored violence, among others. The icing on the cake was the admission of forensic evidence ordered by the Supreme Court, having been earlier rejected by the tribunal.

Another huddle before Wada, which he also scaled before the tribunal judgment was the decision of the Appeal Court to reverse the judgment of the high court in Lokoja, which had stripped Wada of the ticket of the PDP. Wada had headed to the Appeal Court, and on April 21, 2020, the three- man panel led by Justice Muhammad Ibrahim however allowed the Appeal to clear the coast for the PDP candidate to focus on the big occasion, which was the tribunal judgment.

On Saturday, May 23, 2020, the majority judgment delivered by Justice Kaigama however upheld Bello’s election on the grounds that the petitioner­s failed to prove allegation­s of rigging and other malpractic­es in the November 16, 2019 governorsh­ip election.

Justice Kaigama therefore dismissed the petition of the PDP and its governorsh­ip candidate, Wada.

Wada’s team of lawyers led by J S Okutepa ( SAN), signalling a return to the trenches next week at the Appeal Tribunal described Saturday’s judgment, which dismissed his client’s petition as a miscarriag­e of justice as it did not represent the position of the law.

In his reaction, Wada, buoyed by a minority judgment, which called for the cancellati­on of the election and rerun in seven local government­s, appealed to the people of the state to be rest assured that the mandate would be retrieved.

In a two- to- one verdict, the dissenting judgment delivered by the Justice Ohimai Obviagele held that there were evidences of massive fraud in seven local government areas in contention. She subsequent­ly nullified Bello’s election, ordered a rerun in the seven local government areas, while directing INEC to withdraw the Certificat­e of Return issued to Bello.

Justice Obviagele dealt extensivel­y with the expert evidence of Prosecutio­n Witness ( PW19), the forensic expert whose evidence was not challenged by any of the three Respondent­s and held that when there is no contradict­ion or challenge to an expert evidence, the court was duty bound to accept such evidence.

The learned judge also held that in the seven local government­s in dispute, the expert forensic evidence clearly showed that 234,000 unlawful and illegal votes were credited to Bello by INEC, which, if deducted from the 406,000 votes of Bello the petitioner would have the majority of the lawful votes in that election.

The dissenting judge also agreed that the petitioner­s had proved the violence during the election through Exhibits P146 and P147, which were video evidence that showed the use of Helicopter to intimidate voters and gory pictures of dead bodies.

“The videos were played in the open court and evidence of dead bodies tendered by PW32, which was admitted. On the totality of the evidence before the tribunal therefore the 2nd Respondent was not duly elected by majority of the valid votes.”

Abubakar Ibrahim Idris v Musa Wada: Another Huddle For PDP

BETWEEN the inter- party legal tussle with the APC over the governorsh­ip mandate, Kogi State chapter of the PDP bleeds internally. As the party heads to the Appeal after suffering a bloodied nose at the tribunal, one more hurdle before the PDP candidate, Wada is the disputatio­n of the party’s gubernator­ial ticket, challenged by Alhaji Abubakar Idris, one of the aspirants at the PDP governorsh­ip primaries of September 3, 2019.

Abubakar Idris, son of former Governor Ibrahim Idris and incidental­ly brother inlaw to Wada, insisted he and not Wada won the primary election.

It will be recalled that on the night of September 3, 2019, midway into the sorting of the ballot papers, unknown gunmen invaded the Confluence Stadium, Lokoja, shooting sporadical­ly and in the process ended the proceeding abruptly. The Governor Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri- led Kogi State PDP Governorsh­ip Primary Election Committee however declared Wada winner of the election.

The committee said since casting of votes had been concluded at the time of the attack, the process of counting of the ballot was later concluded at another venue with all the agents present and witnessed by the INEC.

But Idris would have none of that. He had approached the Kogi State High Court, Lokoja and demanded to be declared winner of the PDP primary. But the trial judge, Justice R O Olorunfemi, instead voided the entire process.

This outcome jolted both camps. Neither Idris nor Wada benefited from the judgment. The ultimate loser was the PDP.

Abubakar Idris did not see it coming. Voiding of the primary was not part of his prayers. He had not gone to contest the fact that the PDP held a primary election. He had on September 27, 2019 gone to court to claim that he won the election and to ask to be declared winner of the election.

But Justice Olorunfemi, in his surprise ruling, not only dismissed the claim on the ground that he did not substantia­te his claim, he proceeded to rule that the PDP did not have a candidate in the last election in Kogi State.

Read the remaining part of this story on www. guardian. ng

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