Anambra State governorship election ended in an anti-climax Monday morning as the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declared it inconclusive.
At exactly 6:10am, the Returning Officer, Prof James Epoke, who is also Vice-Chancellor, University of Calabar (UNICAL), declared that a supplementary election would be conducted at a date to be fixed by the electoral umpire.
The main reason for declaring the election inconclusive, according to Prof Epoke, is that, for a candidate to emerge as the winner, he must have scored not only the highest number of votes cast, but should also ganner 25 per cent in two-third of the local government areas in the state.
Apparently because of the large number of cancelled votes, which stood at 113,113, no candidate scored the required percentage.
Therefore, the commission had to examine the votes of the winner and the runner-up to determine if the difference is less than the cancelled figure.
Whereas, the candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) Chief Willie Obiano polled 174,710 votes to come first, the first runner-up, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate Comrade Tony Nwoye polled 94,956 votes to place second.
Because the difference in the figures between the first two candidates, which is 79,754 is less than the cancelled votes, which 113,113, the commission could not declare anybody the winner.
A total of 1,763,751 voters were registered for the election, while 451,826 were accredited.
Total valid votes was 413,005, while total number of rejected votes was 16,544. Total votes cast was 429,549.
Out of the cancelled votes, 89,997 were from Idemili North Local Government Area alone, and additional 636 from two units in Idemili South.
According to figures released by INEC, APGA came first with 174,710 votes.
It was followed by PDP which scored 94,956 votes.
The All Progressives Congress (APC) came third with 92,300 votes, while Labour Party (LP) polled 37,446 votes.
A total of 23 candidates stood for the election.
The APGA won in 16 of the 21 local government areas; APC won in two, PDP won in two, while LP won one.
The announcement began at about 12.40am.
All the local government collation officers were professors or senior staff of UNICAL.
A date for the supplementary election will be fixed after the commission must have met, it was announced.
“The commission will arrange a supplementary election in those areas where election was cancelled,” the Prof Epoke said.
He added that all the parties that participated in last Saturday’s election will participate in the supplementary election.
In Aguata, APC scored 5,275 votes, APGA polled 10,180, PDP got 4,275 votes, while LP polled 1,129.
There were 24,883 accredited voters in Aguata, 23,452 votes were valid.
In Ayamelum, APC polled 1,827; APGA scored 9,121; PDP got 5,681 and LP (624). Total valid votes was 17,449.
In Anambra East, APC 1,418; APGA (15,300), PDP (5,579) and LP (511). Total valid votes cast was 23,315.
In Anambra West, APC scored 2,478; APGA (5,128), PDP (3966) and LP (321).
In Anaocha, APC polled 3,174, APGA (14,563), PDP (2,948) and LP (733). A ballot box was snatched at Unit 016, Obiamaka Primary School, it was reported.
In Awka North, APC scored 1,712 votes, APGA (5,385), PDP (3,943) and LP 474.
In Awka South, APC polled 6,596, APGA (9,206), PDP (5,689) and LP (1,648).
The PDP scored the highest number of votes in Dunukofia, followed by APGA (3,670), APC (3,522) and LP (1,236).
The APGA polled the highest number of votes in Ekwusigo (6,815), followed by PDP (4,426), APC (2,958) and LP (1,692).
In Idemilli North, APC scored the highest number of votes (7,135), followed by APGA (2,795), PDP (1,462) and LP (643).
The APC also led in Idemili North, where is scored 9,539 votes. APGA polled 2,899; PDP scored 3,786 while LP got 1,021.
In Ihiala, APC scored 4,069; APGA (10,067), PDP (5,517) and LP (1,854).
The APGA scored 10,753 votes in Njikoka. APC polled 4,585, PDP got 5,630 and LP scored 754.
In Nnewi North, LP led with 18,014 votes, followed by APGA (4,846), APC (3,076) and PDP (1,942).
In Nnewi South, APGA led with 8,145, followed by PDP (3,031), APC (2,676) and LP (2,214).
In Ogbaru, APGA polled 11,716. Others are: APC (7,687), PDP (6,114) and LP (95).
The APGA scored 10,842 votes in Onitsha North. Other results are: APC (7,616), PDP (4,947) and LP (776).
In Onitsha South, APGA led with 9,786 votes. Other results are: APC (7,094), PDP (3,520) and LP (716).
The APGA led in Orumba North, polling 9,161 votes, followed by PDP (4,567) and APC (3,343).
In Orumba South, APC scored 3,147. Other results are: APGA (6,338), PDP (4,003) and LP (1,265). In Oyi, PDP led with 9,123 votes, followed by APGA (6,994), APC (3,373) and LP (206).
Tag: Anambra
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Anambra election inconclusive – INEC
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Anambra poll: Bungled by INEC
Political leaders, candidates and voters in the Anambra State governorship elections have tales of woe to tell about the conduct of the exercise by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The admission of failure by its Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, has also fuelled the fear that the umpire may repeat the mistakes in future elections, reports Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU and JOSEPH JIBUEZE.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had one year to prepare for the Anambra State governorship election. Following the Ondo State governorship poll, its Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, said that the agency would focus on the next electoral challenge and ensure that the mistakes of the past are not repeated. However, not only were the mistakes repeated, the INEC emerged last weekend as the greatest obstacle to free and fair elections in the country.
The failure of the commission to hold a hitch-free poll has heightened the fear that future elections may also be jeopardised by the unpatriotic elements in the agency.
In many polling units, the ballot box was assaulted. The late arrival of polling materials, shortage of electoral manpower, absence of polling officers and disputed voters’ registers marred the poll. Where there were voting sheets, the result sheets were absent.
On Saturday, the election was inconclusive. Many polling areas had been excluded by the electoral officers without explanation In Obosi, Idemili Council, Onitsha, Nnewi and Awka, the state capital.. Many people returned home without exercising their franchise. Those who waited behind to protest the absence of their names on the register still forfeited their right to vote.
Alarmed at the glaring incompetence of the electoral officers, Jega admitted that a failed election was conducted by his men. He immediately handed over the Polling Officer in charge of Idemili Council to the police for interrogation.
The candidates and leaders of the political parties were embarrassed. Little did they think that the decision of the umpire to “clean up” the voter’s register will result into the massive disenfranchisement of voters.
“INEC has moved a step forward and several steps backward”, complained the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Dr. Chris Ngige. “We have reasons to believe that polling materials were not supplied deliberately to places considered as my areas of strength. In Alor, Nnewi and Obosi, the preparation was poor. Voting did not take place in many places”, added the senator, who accused INEC of partiality and incompetence.
His Progressives Peoples Alliance (PPA) counterpart, Chief Godwin Ezeemo, frowned at the late arrival of materials in some parts of the state. He said the materials did not get to Umuchu, Aguta Council, in time, although many people had been accredited around 11 am. Also, Chief Ifeanyi Ubah of Labour Party (LP) warned that the people may lose faith in the commission, judging by the flawed exercise.
To for Tony Nwoye, the PDP candidate, it was a different ball game. He had complained to reporters in the morning about the late arrival of materials, but when the register was opened, he got the shock of his life. His name was not found. Nwoye alleged that the delay was a ploy by the opposition to disenfranchise voters in his area.
“My finding is that it is a desperate move by my opposition to win the election. I gathered that materials arrived other polling booths as early as 6.30 a.m., but as you can see, no material has arrived my polling booth for inexplicable reasons. I have called the federal commissioner in charge of the Southeast to make my complaints known to him and he expressed shock. For materials that moved since last night to local government areas not to have reached polling booths by this time, is an attempt to provoke the youth and disenfranchise them,” he said.
However, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) candidate, Chief Willie Obiano, was not perturbed. He gave INEC a pass mark, saying :”So far, INEC is doing well.”
Midway into the exercise, the APC leadershipit would not accept the results of the election, unless there is voting in all local governments areas, especially in Idemili North, Idemili South and Akwa South. Its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Layiwola Mohammed, chided INEC for “apparently-contrived logistics nightmare”. The party called for the removal of the Resident Electoral Commissioner for Anambra, Prof. Chukwuemeka Onukogu.
In Idemili Local Government, there are 180,000 voters. But the materials meant for the area was allegedly hijacked by unidentified persons. Mohammed complained that the materials meant for the strongholds of APGA and PDP were protected. The APC also expressed dismay at the fact that the voter registers for Idemili South, where Ngige comes from, did not contain the names of voters in the local government, despite the assurances of the INEC Chairman.
‘’Before the election, political parties were given voter’s registers that largely contained the names of most voters. However, about four days to the election, Jega said at an interactive stakeholder’s forum that there were problems with the registers, which would be rectified before the election. However, when the supposedly-corrected registers were brought back, most of the authentic names in them have disappeared without explanation,’’ Mohammed fumed.
In the opinion of the APC lead-
ers, Onukogu was very partial
and incompetent. The commission under him also exhibited unprofessional conduct in the 2011 elections, the party said.
‘’In 2011, when Prof. Onukogu conducted the general elections in the state, he was very partial. During the House of Assembly polls in Onitsha South 11 and Idemili South 11, he declared the results of both inconclusive, only for him to announce the results at 12 midnight.
“After we challenged the results in court and a rerun was ordered, we won both constituencies. We subsequently petitioned INEC and the Commission assured us that the same person will not be allowed to conduct subsequent election. Alas, he was left in place to do another damage to INEC as an institution through his glaring incompetence and partiality, which have seriously affected the credibility of this governorship election,’’ Mohammed added.
Former Minister of Information Prof. Dora Akunyili said in Agulu, where she was accredited that there were few INEC officials. She called for the review of the electoral timeframe. “I have been accredited and I am waiting for the 12.30pm time to be counted and vote. But I must say that the timeframe is not very helpful as many voters may not be able to make it back by then. We must not disenfranchise anybody. If you look at this place now, this is past 12 noon and only one INEC official is here. Look at the long queue. When will they all be accredited and when will they vote?” she queried.
At about 4.30 p.m, there were signs that the poll had failed. The INEC Office, Awka, which was the final collation centre, was devoid of activities. No result had come from any local government. Instead, stakeholders inundated the office with various complaints. Some people stormed the office, complaining that election had not started in three polling centres in Ogidi – Ilo Ngwodo Ward 1, Central School Akpakaogwe, and Eke Ngweje Ward 1. Also, prospective voters allegedly attacked INEC Electoral Officers for failing to present the result sheet to them before beginning accreditation. At Afor Agulu Square, Awka South, reputed to be the largest ward in Anambra, the exercise became rowdy during the counting of votes. Voters were anxious and eager to know the result.
At Central School 1, Akpakaogwe, in Ogidi, Idemili North, an election officer said she was beaten up by the youths at the polling station. “They requested for the result sheet and I told them we don’t have it yet. They insisted they must see it and began to hit me. They were dragging me, took the ballot paper, and squeezed the register,” said the NYSC member.
In some areas, policemen pre-
tended as if nothing was happen-
ing when some Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftains stormed polling units to give money to prospective voters in Akaboukwu Ward 2, Uruagu Nnewi, and Edoji, Uruagu Nnewi.
In the afternoon, there was uproar in Awka among the election observers. Many of them had been rounded up by the poloce and detained. But four hours later, INEC’s Director of Monitoring, Bala Ibrahim Shittu, said that they had been released.
A voter, Chigbundu Ositadinma, complained that INEC did not prepare for the challenge beyond the rhetoric on the pages of news papers. “We registered to vote and now, we cannot vote. Why is our name not on the register? This is not an election,” he said.
According to observers, less than 50 per cent of the registered voters voted. Asked if they tried to confirm their names when the register was published before the election, some of the affected would-be voters said they did not know when the list was published. Others said that the list was not pasted.
It was rowdy across the state. Voices were raised. “They won’t tell us anything. We are stranded here,” said another would-be voter Felix Udoji. “I have been here since 9 a.m,” he said. The time was about 2 p.m.
“We were told that INEC officials were are bringing another list containing more names, and that our names would be there, but up till now nothing has happened.
“People have even started going home due to tiredness,” Udigi added.
As at 1.30pm when this reporter left the polling unit, voting was yet to begin.
There were similar tales in several other poling units. A voter, Uchenna Nwaneri, told our reporter: “In my unit, only names from ‘A’ to ‘N’ were found in the list. But ‘O’ to ‘Z’ didn’t come in the register. We made enquiries and complained, and there was no response.
“It’s really quite worrisome because they have disenfranchised many people actually. It looks like something that is intentional, because we used the same register to vote in the 2011 presidential election in the same polling booth.
“The names were placed before the election, but have all been torn ou,” Nwaneri said.
There were early signs that there would be hitches. Accreditation did not begin at various polling units on time because voting materials arrived late. The exercise, which ought to begin by 8am, did not begin in several places as at 11am.
At a voting unit in Ogbankwa, Awka South Local Government Area, accreditation began at about 10.am. There was confusion over a voting centre in Nziko in Oyi Local Government Area as two major polling units were urgently relocated for security reasons.
Voters were said to have come out for accreditation but did not meet any official in the units said to be located in a forest. It was learnt that the centre was eventually moved near a school.
Presiding Officers were forced to extend the time allotted for accreditation of voters.
In most voting units in Aguata Local Government, voters complained of similar challenges. In a voting centre at the Civic Centre in Umuchu Ward 1, accreditation was said to have started a few minutes to 11am. Ezeemo said the presiding officer in Civic Centre Unit 001 asked him to return by 2.30pm when voting will start.
“INEC officials told me voting will start by 2.30pm because materials arrived late. The Presiding Officer said there were delays. Reports I have received from other places also show that materials arrived late in various centres,” he said.
In Ihiala Local Government Area, electoral officers encountered logistics problems caused by the reposting of some ad-hoc staff, caused by the withdrawal of some of the staff over allowance issues.
The candidate of the PDP, Mr. Tony Nwoye, could not vote at the Offia Nta Nsugbe Ward 1 unit 008 because his name was not on the voter register.
“We couldn’t even find the names of my father, my mother, my uncle and wife on the register. When I first came at 10am this morning, the INEC officials told me they would trace the anomaly and rectify it,” he said.
Nwoye returned to the polling unit at 3:30pm, yet his name was found. Out of the 500 people who registered in the unit, only 50 found theirs.
Electoral materials were not enough in most of the polling units in the stronghold of the All Progressive Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Ngige.
Where there were materials, they were incomplete. In some places, result sheets were not included among materials distributed.
Ngige lamented that the attempt was aimed at reducing the votes in his stronghold, and said he felt betrayed by INEC, which had promised during the stakeholders meeting to deliver a credible election.
There were no result sheets
in most of the polling units
visited in Alor and Uke in Idemili South.
National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members who were used as presiding officers in Idemili North LGA, which is Ngige’s strong base, were said to have embarked on strike in the early hours of the day because they allegedly were not paid their allowances.
At Igbo-Ukwu in Aguata Local Government Area, a former governor of Anambra State, Dr. Chukwumeka Ezeife, prayed that future elections in the state would be better.
“With the proposed national dialogue, I am very confident that things would work for the better and the next election in Anambra State would be devoid of these irregularities,’ he said.
Following the hiccups, INEC rescheduled election in Obosi, Idemili North Local Government area. But few people turned out to vote yesterday. It was unlike Saturday when polling units were filled with people. Several units had few people voting.
Ngige was at the INEC headquarters yesterday to submit a protest letter, in which the APC demanded fresh elections in four local government areas and rejected the rescheduled election.
He told reporters, who kept vigil at the INEC office for early collated results to come in, that there was a calculated attempt to alter the people’s will.
“As a political party and as a candidate, the idea of conducting election on a Sunday is against the principles and beliefs of members of our party. Sunday is a holy day, a day of rest for Christians, and we don’t want to impinge on the sensibilities of our supporters.
“A lot of them called us since that announcement was made on radio, so we came to intimate the commission that even members of the clergy who would have even assisted us with announcing the rescheduling have stoutly refused to do so, and told us that that their masses and church services start from 6-7 a.m and that the last ones end about 2-2.30 p.m. That’s about the time you do accreditation and do the voting,” Ngige said.
INEC Chairman Prof Attahiru Jega, speaking on AIT, said the Electoral Act did not say that election cannot hold on a Sunday.
“The law did not stop the holding of an election on any particular day. Where the exigencies require, and when you get the consent of the community, then it can be done,” Jega said.
The INEC Chairman attributed the challenges encountered in Idemili to an act of sabotage by its official, who he said had been handed over to the police. He said further investigation would be conducted.
On the missing names in the registers, Jega said they were those who did not update their data during the last verification exercise.
The missing names were those on ‘addendum lists’ which the commission is trying to do away with, Jega said.
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‘It’s a failed exercise’
In this interim report, the Coalition of Democrats for Electoral Reforms (CODER), which monitored the Anambra State governorship election, highlights the irregularities in the poll and what the electoral commission can do to avert the mistakes in the future.
Anambra State governorship election was greeted with much anticipation and hope because both INEC and citizens see it as a litmus test for 2015 general elections. While we must commend the people of Anambra for having conducted themselves in a peaceful manner so far, reports from our observers deployed across the state shows critical areas the election has fallen short of people’s expectations. Some of the irregularities observed in some local governments include ballot snatching, massive thump printing, lateness of materials to polling units, absence of INEC officials and materials at some polling units, inadequate logistic provision for security officers deployed from other states, hostile polling officers to observers, complicity of the security agents in electoral fraud, display of campaign posters and a host of other irregularities were observed in some (sensitive) local governments in the state.
CODER observed that election materials did not arrive on time in many polling units specifically in Idemili North, South and Ihiala local government. In Nnokwa Ward, Idemili South LGA, names starting with O-Z were missing from voters register. As at 1pm, no INEC officials or materials were seen in Nkpor 4, Idemili North LGA. As a result of late arrivals of voting materials, accreditation could not start on time in Idemili South, Idemili North and Ogbaru LGAs. Although accreditation and voting periods were extended in some of these polling units, INEC needs to do more to enhance people’s confidence in the polls.
Furthermore, CODER observers report that many polling officers in Awka south were hostile and seem not to possess the knowledge of the role of observers in an election. Information that would help observers fill their checklists were denied them and security officials were used to intimidate and harass duly accredited observers. We therefore seize this opportunity to call on INEC to provide adequate training for its polling officers on the complimentary role observers plays in an election before deploying them to the field.
From the foregoing, to increase the credibility of the polls in this election in fairness to all candidates, it is important that INEC conducts a rerun election in four local governments where massive irregularities and electoral fraud were recorded as against the three wards in Idemili North comprising only 65 polling units. The rationale for this call is to address the palpable notion that there was a deliberate attempt to subvert people’s choice and ensure a particular candidate whose supporters and strong base are in these LGAs does not win in these areas. The second reason is that with the combined voting population of these LGAs at over 300,000, it becomes imperative for INEC to show the election itself as an unbiased umpire by adhering to the wishes of the people to have rerun in these three LGAs.
Some of the specific electoral malpractices and fraud observed in these local governments are:
· Most fraud committed in the election happened in Idemili North and South local government which happens to be the support base of one of the candidates. There appears to be a deliberate attempt to subvert people’s mandate in these areas
· Some wards did not see any INEC officials nor voting materials two hours after voting ought to have commenced
· At Ogidi Ward 2, polling unit 007/008, Idemili North, people refused to vote due to absence of result booklet. At PU 007, one Obiora Okonkwo came in company of policemen with vehicle number PF 2317 SPY. He asked one Bassey Effiong (Force No. 375774) to force people to vote but they were resisted
· It was alleged that APGA and PDP were offering 10,000 naira to each polling officers and non credible observers to allow them operate freely in Nteje ward, PU 004, Ama Okpo and Orikabi
· No election materials and no result sheets at Nbakwu
· Election materials diverted at Ethel Obiakor Estate, Awka South
· Insufficient polling officers noticed in Nnewi LGA, Assistant Polling officers were introduced to fill the shortfall without prior training.
· No result booklet brought to Ogidi ward 2, polling units 007/008, Idemili North LGA.
· Police made vulnerable to electoral fraud due to lack of logistics for their accommodation and feeding.
We therefore join our voices with other Nigerians to call on INEC not to declare any results relating to the election until a rerun election is conducted in the local governments where many citizens were disenfranchised from exercising their constitutional rights rather than the few polling units it plans to repeat the exercise. CODER also appeals to INEC and security agencies not to only document but put to use lessons gleaned from this election to improve the conduct of future ones’.
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Anambra: PDP, APC, LP reject election, call for cancellation
The candidates of the three leading opposition parties in Anambra State on Sunday rejected the Saturday governorship election, calling it a monumental charade.
The candidates are those of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr Chris Ngige, the candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Comrade Tony Nwoye and the candidate of the Labour Party ( LP) Dr Ifeanyi Ubah.
They called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to as a matter of urgency cancelled the election and arrange the conduct of a fresh one in the state before the March, 2014 hand over date by Governor Peter Obi.
Speaking on behalf of the candidates, Ngige said the call became necessary because the election was characterized by irregularities and fraudulent practices for which they can not but reject the election.
” We are here to tell the whole world that the as a result of the high scale irregularities and fraudulent practices which characterized the faulty election, we call for the cancellation of the election which held yesterday in Anambra State and we hereby use this opportunity to call on the INEC to do that and arrange a new governorship election in the state at which the people will elect a governor of their choice in a free and fair manner”, Ngige said.
Explaining their decision, Ngige listed five grounds which necessitated their line of action including fraudulent voters register, the manipulation of results sheets, security harassment, and large scale financial inducement of voters at polling units by the ruling party.
” So, when we reviewed all this things, we have come to the inevitable conclusion that this Commission is determined to go back to the old ways of doing things, and we will not accept that. The gains of the 2011 elections have been lost through this singular election in Anambra State. We therefore, without equivocations call for the cancellation of the election and a new one conducted”, he said.
He also warned that they had requested that no result should be announced as the election cannot be validly said to be conclusive yet.He pleaded with INEC not to provoke the people of Anambra State. The two other candidates took turn to support the call by Ngige.
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INEC performed creditably, says APGA Chairman
All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) National Chairman Chief Victor Umeh, has dismissed allegations that the Saturday governorship election in Anambra State was marred by irregularities.
On the contrary, he hailed the efforts of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and security agencies, which he said, forestalled the plan by the opposition parties in the state to rig the election.
Umeh said the security agencies stopped the opposition parties in their tracks and that accounted for the allegations.
He said the election was free, fair, and violence free.
Umeh denied that his party was helped to rig the governorship election in Anambra.
He said INEC lived up to its promise to conduct free, fair and peaceful governorship poll.
“Other political parties were crying foul because their plot to rig this election was frustrated by the vigilance of the security agents.”“People who in their usual characteristics would want to rig the election could not this time, rather they started disparaging INEC and security agencies in order to discredit the poll.
“The performance of APGA in the election was not unusual as they have campaign in the past two months.
“I am surprised that some candidates who did not campaign were making spirited efforts to discredit the election even when they know that there was no way they could have won the election,” he added.
He alleged that the Interim Deputy National Secretary of the APC, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai attempted to rig the Anambra State governorship election.The APGA national chairman also said that the former minister of the Federal Capital Territory deserved the in-house detention he got from men of the State Security Service.
The SSS officials had prevented him from leaving the hotel where he lodged on election day.
“If he (El-Rufai) hadn’t any ulterior motive on that election day, why then would he want to monitor an election in which he had no accreditation,” said Umeh.
He said, “Yesterday (Saturday) was election, it wasn’t campaign time, so what had he come to do in Anambra State if not to perfect his rigging plans and then implement them.
“He came all the way from Katsina State to constitute a nuisance here and he was confined to his room, the way all other criminals who came for the same purpose were confined to their room.”
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Jega’s image at stake, says Ubah
Labour Party candidate, Dr Ifeany Ubah on Saturday said the integrity of INEC Chairman, Prof Attahiru Jega was at stake for the shoddy election he presided over in Anambra State.
Ubah said the election should have been a model and a shinning example of what to expect in 2015.
Addressing newsmen on the outcome of the election in Awka Ubah said Jega should toe the part of honour by canceling the total election in the state.He said he was ready to surrender his victory which he said he secured in Nnewi.The election in Nnewi, which he said met all the standards required of good election, should be used as a yardstick to judge the election and on the basis of that, be declared the winner since election in other parts of the state fell short of expectations.“Nnewi election would have been used as the yardstick for other elections in the state. The integrity of Jega is at stake now. It is either he toes the part of honour and cancel all the election or he should declare me the winner of the election.“I believe that Labour won landslide but n other areas, they disenfranchised people and removed the names of even a party candidate from the voters register”.Ubah hinted that the three candidates of the All Progressives Congress ( APC), the People’s Democratic Party(PDP) and the LP will soon address a joint press conference condemning and calling for the cancellation of the whole election as a result of the irregularities associated with it. -

Anambra: APC calls for cancellation of election
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has demanded for a total cancellation of Saturday’s governorship election in Anambra State
The call according to the party is based on ” the massive disenfranchisement of people across the state, caused by the blatant incompetent and/or deliberate sabotage by the electoral commission itself. ”
In a statement issued in Lagos on Sunday by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed,the party said the call for total cancellation supersedes its early call for a rerun in four local government areas,and is based on the report it received from its agents as well as from local and foreign observers during the poll.It said that INEC, which was saddled with organizing the election, inexplicably used a voters’ register that is totally different from what it gave to political parties ahead of the election, with the result that the new register did not contain the names of most of the registered voters in the state.Worse still, APC said, delivery of materials to the strongholds of the APC candidate, Senator Chris Ngige, was either done very late or not at all, a development that further robbed over 300,000 of his supporters in three key local governments of Idemili North, Idemili South and Awka South of their franchise.”After consultations with our agents as well as with local and foreign observers, we have discovered that what we earlier complained about was a child’s play, compared to the widespread disenfranchisement that was orchestrated by the same body given the responsibility of ensuring a free, fair and creditable election on Saturday.”We discovered that INEC has set up a multi-layer arrangement to ensure that most voters in the state were disenfranchised, apparently acting out a script to manipulate the result of the election in favour of a certain candidate. Where voting materials were supplied, the commission provided wrong voters’ register.”Coming after the charade in Delta, this is a serious development that raises questions about the ability of INEC to conduct a free, fair and transparent elections anywhere in Nigeria. It is particularly serious because if people who registered to vote are not able to do so, and even the votes of those who managed to cast them do not count, then anarchy is looming,” the APC said.It called for a probe of INEC to determine why it has taken it upon itself to sabotage its own elections, even when people are determined to endure the orchestrated inconveniences and shun all acts of violence, as was witnessed in Anambra on Saturday when people waited patiently and peacefully, only to go home in total disappointment.”This is a new low for INEC, and unless something is done urgently, the electoral commission may plunge Nigeria into a crisis from which it may not recover,” APC warned.
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Disenfranchisement: Women protest in Awka
Hundreds of women Sunday marched on the streets of Awka, Anambra State capital, protesting alleged disenfranchisement by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the governorship election.
The women, most of who are from Idemili North Local Government Area, said they were denied the right to choose their leader due to late arrival of materials at the polling units on Saturday and the rescheduling.
The women said rescheduling the election to Sunday morning when most of them were in church was “a wicked act” by INEC.
They sang songs depicting their anger, saying: “We no go gree oo, we no go gree, anyi aturo vote (we did not vote), we no go gree.”
As they attempted the march on INEC headquarters in Awka, police officers stationed at the junction leading to the commission’s office stopped them.
The women dared the police to shoot them, singing in Igbo: “Iwe na ewe anyi, ehh, iwe na ewe anyi, anyi aturo nu vote oo, iwe (we are angry because we didn’t not cast our votes).”
One of the women said: “It’s our right to choose our leader. Jega promised us free and fair election, yet he failed us.
“Election didn’t hold in many local government areas yet they are preparing to announce results. Which results do they want to announce? Where did they get the results? It is a rigged result.”
Meanwhile, final collated results are still being awaited at INEC headquarters. -

Anambra : PDP candidate calls for election cancellation
The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the Saturday’s Anambra State governorship election, Comrade Tony Nwoye has called for the total cancellation of the exercise.
He described the election as a “monumental fraud and an embarrassment”.
“What happened in Anambra State yesterday was a monumental fraud. It was a big embarrassment. It shows that we are not in anyway better than what we were in the days of Prof. Maurice Iwu. I have never seen an election like this in all my life.
” It was an election whereby soldiers assisted in harassing and chasing away voters. It was scientific. It was well planned and aptly executed. Whatever the outcome of the election today or any day they choose to announce the result, it is not acceptable to us.
” We thought it was going to be the freest and fairest with the presence of soldiers. But the opposite was the case. I hereby call for the total cancellation of the election. Jega should come here and conduct the election himself”, he said.
Nwoye, who held INEC Chairman Professor Attahiru Jega responsible for the irregularities the characterized the election, alleged that Jega knew what was wrong but refused to fix it.
“Jega knew what went wrong. He simply refused to fix it. The Resident Electoral Commissioner ( REC) in Anambra State, Prof. Chukwuemeka Onukaogu laid the foundation . But the full blame must go to Jega”, Nwoye said.
The PDP equally refused to participate in the rerun election in the 65 units in Obosi, saying it was an affront on the faith of the people and a disrespect to God.
“We are not participating in the so-called rerun which they have fixed for today, Sunday. Sunday is the day our people worship. It is an affront on their faith and a disrespect towards God. If the decision was approved by Jega, would he approve a rerun in Kano to be fixed for Friday? “, he queried.
Nwoye narrated how he got wind of his disenfranchisement to newsmen. ” On the eve of the election, an INEC official called me to inform me that they have removed my name from the voters list. My ward had over 500 registered voters, but they removed most of the names including those of my parents. They used the military in rigging the election. This is the worst election I haves observed. I have been involved in election matters as a student leader since 1993. I was involved in Abiola’s election as a party officer. Unfortunately, Jega is not accessible. He made it difficult for us to reach him. As for legal option , I will consult before I take any decision”, he said.