Tag: Ikpeazu

  • Orji: I don’t interfere in Ikpeazu’s govt

    Orji: I don’t interfere in Ikpeazu’s govt

    A former Abia State governor and the senator representing Abia Central in the National Assembly, Theodore Orji, has said he never interfered in the administration of his successor, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu, since he handed power to him.

    But the senator said Ikpeazu sometimes sought his opinions on issues that seemed difficult.

    The former governor said he used his experience to advise and guide his successor, whenever necessary.

    Orji spoke at the weekend with our reporter in Umuahia, the state capital.

    The senator recalled that when he was leaving office, he swore that his successor would not go through the experience he went through in the hands of his predecessor.

    Orji said he hasd no need to interfere in the affairs of the state because he was no longer the governor.

    According to him, trying to influence Ikpeazu would mean that there were two governors in the state.

  • Ikpeazu assures residents of adequate security

    Ikpeazu assures residents of adequate security

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has vowed to  checkmate criminals in the state.

    Speaking in Umuahia, the state capital, when he received a delegation of the Aba Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ACCIMA) at the Government House, Ikpeazu said there was no cause for alarm and urged the people to be vigilant.

    Ikpeazu recalled that the state had a peaceful yuletide while kidnapping and violent crime started by mid January. He noted that crime as a social problem could not be entirely wiped out.

    The governor attributed the increase in crime to the protests by the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), which he said is usually infiltrated by hoodlums who hide under the protest to perpetrate crime.

    He assured the delegation that something was being done to check multiple taxation and that his administration will soon embark on de-silting of drains in Aba, in readiness for the rainy season.

    ACCIMA’s President Sir Emmanuel Nwagbadolo complained of the disorder that has characterised Aba, including ritual murder, kidnapping and incessant touting, noting that three individuals died from ritual killing in the last three weeks.

    Nwagbadolo called on the government to nip the problems in the bud as they tend to discredit his government, recommending that all forms of touting, multiple taxation and kidnapping be checked by the government.

  • Abia bans touting, embarks on grassroots sports

    Abia bans touting, embarks on grassroots sports

    The Abia government has banned all forms of touting in all parts of the state as it has been projecting the state in a very bad light and will do all within its power to ensure that the ban stands.

    Speaking with newsmen in Umuahia on the outcome of the state Executive Council (EXCO) meeting, the commissioner for information, Bonnie Iwuoha said that security agencies have been directed to arrest anyone found touting in the state.

    Iwuoha said that the state government frowns at the high level of touting in all parts of the state and since the present administration has zero tolerance to such illegality, that it has no other choice than to ban it in all forms.

    He said that in the alternative that the EXCO has directed the state commissioner for sports to bring out a master plan that would enable them embark on massive sports development that will keep the youths busy.

    The information commissioner said that his counterpart in the sports ministry is expected to go to the grassroots and fish out the talented youths whose energy could be harnessed for their benefit and that of the state.

    Iwuoha said that it is expected that when the grassroots sports program commences, “It will make it possible for our youths to channel their enormous energy towards something more meaningful for both themselves and the state”.

    He said that the state government is to embark on massive agricultural produce and has directed the state commissioner for agriculture to produce a program that will bring out a revolution in that sector.

    The commissioner for information said that the program in agriculture will ensure food security, empowerment for both the youths and old, stressing that it will help to reduce crime rates in the state.

    Iwuoha said that the state government is sourcing for the sum of N1 billion agricultural loans from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), “When this loan comes it will be given to only genuine farmers and will not be used to settle political jobbers”.

    On education the information commissioner said that government is to renovate all the schools across the state and that the funds for the project will come from Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).

    He said that the funds when it comes will be channeled towards the project, “The era when funds accessed for projects in the state are diverted is over and the UBEC funds will be used to give the schools a facelift.”

     

  • Ikpeazu announces fee  reduction in Abia poly

    Ikpeazu announces fee reduction in Abia poly

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpezu has announced plans to reduce the tuition fee of the Abia State Polytechnic, Aba.

    Ikpeazu, who is the visitor to the institution, spoke at the 22nd matriculation ceremony of the school held at the pavilion. He was represented by the Commissioner for Education, Prof Ikechi Mgbeoji.

    Mgbeoji said a committee has been raised to come up with a harmonised tuition by the end of March. He said government decided to take the step to alleviate the sufferings of parents, guardians and students in acquiring higher education.

    He urged the students to reciprocate government’s gestures by being studious and shunning negative penchant that could jeopardise their academic pursuits.

    The news threw students and parents into a wild jubilation. They described the gestures as a big relief.

    A parent, Chinwe, said: “It is like Governor Ikpeazu knew how difficult it was to pay my daughter’s fees. But my worry like every other parent is the implementation of the decision owing to the bureaucratic bottleneck in governance.

    “We are optimistic that the governor meant well and we hope that by the end of the month, like the governor’s representative said, there will be an officially harmonised fee.”

    A student, Ella, thanked the governor for his concern. She said an affordable fee will encourage more Abians, including prospective students from neighbouring states to acquire higher education in the state.

    Acting Rector Mr. Okpara Onyekwere, and Chairman of the Governing Board Chief Chukwu Wachukwu pledged the school’s support and loyalty to the Ikpeazu-led administration.

    They urged the students to be focused and shun anti-social behaviours, warning that the polytechnic has no room for vices.

    They, however, promised to protect the student’s interest, adding that they would ensure that lecturers teach well and churn out graduates that would compete favourably with their counterparts in the labour market.

  • Why we upheld Ikpeazu’s election, by Apex court

    Why we upheld Ikpeazu’s election, by Apex court

    The Supreme Court, on Friday, held that Okezie Ikpeazu was returned as governor of Abia State because Alex Otti failed to prove the allegations brought against his victory in the April 11, 2015 governorship election.

    Ikpeazu and Otti contested the election on the platforms of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) respectively.

    Giving reasons for its February. 3 judgment, Justice Suleiman Galadima, held that Otti and the APC were unable to prove the issue of over voting, allegations of violence and corrupt practices, allegedly perpetrated by the respondents.

    “On the issue of over voting, the court holds that there was no sufficient proof as the voter register and the card reader report were not tendered.

    “The criminal allegation of corrupt malpractices carried out by PDP loyalists for the benefit of the governor was not also proved,’’ he held.

    On the cancellation of the election results in Obingwa, Osisioma Ngwa and Isiala Ngwa by the returning officers, Galadima held that it was wrong.

    “That action amounted to the disenfranchisement of voters. It was also inappropriate for the tribunal to order the cancellation of election.

    “All of this misappropriation only gave room for the unlawful declaration of the APGA candidate by the lower court.

    “Those actions were perversion of justice and the apex court could not have allowed them,’’ he said.

    Galadima further held that the evidence placed before the court showed clearly that the tribunal usurped the constitutional duties of INEC.

    “On the card reader, the court maintains its earlier position that the tribunal cannot supplant the voter register.

    “The gadget is only meant to authenticate bearers of voter card and not meant to usurp the statutory power of the voter register.

    “At the moment, the voter register remains the only authentic document as provided by Section 49 of the Electoral Act to prove allegation of fraud in elections,’’ Galadima declared.

  • Ikpeazu hails Mark

    Ikpeazu hails Mark

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has congratulated former Senate President David Mark on his victory in the re-run election for Benue South Senatorial District.

    Ikpeazu said Mark’s triumph at the polls was another feather to the Peoples Democratic Party and another victory for democracy in the country.

    The governor described the victory as the voice of the people and a vote of confidence by the people of Benue South whom Mark has represented meaningfully in the red chambers of the National Assembly.

    He urged the senator to see his victory as a clarion call for higher service and stewardship by his constituents who have reposed so much trust, loyalty and confidence in him by ensuring his victory at all the elections.

    Governor Ikpeazu also assured Senator Mark of the love and support of the people and government of Abia State at all times, describing him as a friend of the state.

    He prayed God to guide the senator and grant him good heath and wisdom with which to lead the people and serve the country.

     

  • ‘Ikpeazu, lawmaker can help me’

    ‘Ikpeazu, lawmaker can help me’

    Knowing there is dignity in labour, Mr Sunday Ezema, who is paralysed in one leg, rides a tricycle to earn his keep. In this chat with SUNNY NWANKWO, he says he can do with some help from the Abia State government or a lawmaker cum philanthropist. 

    He lost the use of his right leg after an injection and cannot walk except with crutches.  Still, Mr Sunday Ezema, who hails from Opi, Nsukka, Enugu State, will not sit and moan or beg. He learnt to ride a tricycle and soon acquired one with which he ferries passengers round Aba, the commercial heart of Abia State.

    His parents, he said, are peasant farmers back “in the village,” as he put it.

    He also spoke about his deformity, saying, “This condition happened  when I was small; that was at the age of 10. I took ill and was taken to a clinic to be given injection and after that, the deformation set in. the injection was given to me in my village.”

    He said he could not afford to go to school “because my parents are poor; they didn’t have the money to train me. I stopped at Primary Five…I came to [Aba to] hustle like others, at least to see how I could make both ends meet and be useful to myself. I came to Aba in 2010. I was leaving with one of my brothers who encouraged me to learn how to repair phones. I was doing that until I met someone that wants to sell his keke and indicated my interest, at least to gradually be paying him and he accepted. I started driving this keke in 2013.”

    How much does he make in a day?

    “Due to my condition, I don’t work in the morning. You see that I have to cross my leg to enable me apply the brake, so I usually find it strenuous to start working from morning hours. What I do is that, I start working between 3pm and 4pm and close for the day as soon as my leg start paining me. So, sometimes, I make between N1,500 and N3,000  that depends on the level of patronage for the day and the much my strength can carry me.”

    Would he stop riding the keke if he got any help?

    “Yes,” he replied, “because it gives me great pain and stress driving this keke. I am using this opportunity to thank the Governor of the state, Dr. Victor Okezie Ikpeazu for  what he is doing to transform Aba. I want the governor of the state and the member representing Aba North and South Federal Constituency, Hon.  Ossy Prestige who I have been hearing all the good things he has been doing for the people he is representing to please come to my help and assist me. Prestige has been touching the lives of people in Aba North and South and I want to also be part of the lives that he will touch.”

    What would he do if government or individuals came to his aid?

    “If I get help from the governor, Prestige or any other individual, I will like to open up a shop. I will like to open up a boutique or provision store. All I want is to get a shop where I can stay and be doing business to be getting small money.

    “I am the first male child of my family. We are five in number; three girls and two boys. And you know that as the first son, I need to take care of them and others. One of my sisters is married, but unfortunately, she and her husband are not that financially buoyant. It is putting more pressure on me and my health condition has not being helpful for me to fend for myself and other members of the family.

    “So, I will be very glad if the governor, Prestige and others will look my way and I promise to make judicious use of whatever they would give or provide for me.”

     

  • Bank presents highway kits to Ikpeazu

    Sterling Bank Plc at the weekend presented reflective kits for street sweepers and highway managers to Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu.

    The bank, through its “Sterling Environmental Makeover” (#STEM) series, cleaned major markets, highways, streets and motor parks in different states.

    A statement said the effort focuses on environmental sustainability and aims to promote clean environment and good health among Nigerians. Waste management authorities of the states were partnered for the exercise.

    The cleaning held simultaneously in Lagos, Aba, Abuja, Ibadan, Kano, Kaduna, Owerri, Osogbo, Port Harcourt and Uyo.

    The statement said the exercise, which was initiated in 2013 in furtherance of its core purpose of enriching lives, adding that the bank will continually engage in initiatives that promote a healthy environment, especially those that align with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

  • Ikpeazu appeals for calm

    Ikpeazu appeals for calm

    With the Supreme Court verdict safely tucked away and opposition attacks still fresh, Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has appealed for calm so that the task of governance can proceed without any further hindrance.

    The governor quoted the scriptures: “From henceforth, let no man trouble me: for I bear in my body the mark of our lord Jesus Christ,” Galatians 6:17.

    With these words, Dr. Ikpeazu advised the opposition and other detractors not to distract him in his mission to render services to the people of the state.

    The governor said the protracted legal battle that ended at the Supreme Court was a huge distraction and having come out of it, he needs all the time and energy to focus on the task of rebuilding the state.

    He spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, Godwin Adindu, saying  the era of acrimonious politics in the state is over with the verdict of the Supreme Court.

    Noting that opposition groups hardly give up on their antics, he stated that the era of hurling stones should be over and the opposition  shield their swords and join him in developing the state.

    He disclosed that his infrastructural renewal drive will receive an impetus with the flag-off of the construction of three roads in Bende Local Council, bringing to 50 the number of active roads being built by his government in the last eight months,  over 20 of which commissioned.

    Ikpeazu said he will focus more on roads because of their deplorable condition especially in Aba, adding that his administration is determined to change the unflattering Aba narrative to a city of promise and hope.

    The governor said the state has just launched the Traffic and Indiscipline Management Agency with 500 youths in its employ and also launched the Infrastructure Management Agency, adding that apart from providing jobs, the two agencies are designed to be self-sustaining.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ikpeazu, Otti: Who wins at Supreme Court?

    Ikpeazu, Otti: Who wins at Supreme Court?

    There is anxiety in Abia State as the governorship battle shifts to the Supreme Court. JOSEPH JIBUEZE reviews the Court of Appeal’s judgment, which nullified Governor Okezie’s Ikpeazu’s election, and the  expectation of the two parties at the apex court.

    There was jubilation in Abia State when the Court of Appeal sitting in Owerri, on December 31, last year, declared the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) governorship candidate, Dr Alex Otti, as winner of the election and supplementary poll held on April 11 and 25.

    The court, presided over by Justice Oyebisi Omoleye, nullified the declaration of Okezie Ikpeazu as winner of the elections. Otti and APGA were the appellants. Ikpeazu, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were the respondents.

    In arriving at the decision, the appellate court held that Otti scored the majority of lawful/valid votes cast and satisfied the constitutional requirements of one quarter of votes in at least two-thirds of the 17 Local Government Areas (LGAs).

    On that basis, the court held that Otti “is hereby returned as the duly elected governor of Abia State.” Also, on the panel were Justice Chinwe Iyizoba, Justice Samuel Oseji, Justice Tijani Abubakar and Justice Jamilu Tukur.

    Justice Omoleye added: “It is hereby ordered that the Certificate of Return already issued to the first respondent, Okezie Ikpeazu, by the third respondent (INEC) is set aside.

    “It is further ordered that the third respondent, INEC, shall forthwith issue the Certificate of Return to the first appellant, Alex Otti, as the winner of the Abia State governorship elections conducted on the 11th and 25th April 2015.”

    Seventeen issues were raised in the appellant’s brief of argument filed on December 4, 2015. Among the issues were whether in the light of the Electoral Act, the approved regulations and manual for election and evidence on record, the learned tribunal judges were not wrong when they failed to set aside Ikpeazu’s return as winner.

    Otti and APGA also urged the court to determine whether, having regard to the pleadings and the evidence on record, the tribunal was not wrong in holding that the petitioners’ claims were not grantable. They also asked whether the tribunal was not wrong in failing to resolve the issue relating to who, between Otti and Ikpeazu, scored the majority of lawful votes cast in the election, an issue that was properly raised before the tribunal and supported by evidence.

    It was the appellant’s contention that Section 140 (3) of 2010 Electoral Act states that if a tribunal or court determines that a candidate who was returned as elected was not validly elected on the ground that he did not score the majority of valid votes cast, the tribunal shall declare as elected the candidate who scored the highest number of valid votes and who satisfied constitutional requirement.

    To be declared the governor, a candidate must satisfy two conditions, namely: the constitutional requirement of spread in two/third of the Local Government Areas, and the highest number of lawful votes – which refers to those cast in accordance with the Electoral Act.

    Conversely, an invalid vote cannot be used to compute the number of votes cast in an election. In HDP vs Obi (2012) 1 NWLR (PT 1282) 464, invalid means is defined as “without validity, efficacy weight or cogency and having no effect.” According to the court, computing an invalid vote “will be like counting both the living and the dead in a census exercise.” The court also compared an invalid vote to a child asking the mother “to add chaff that has been sifted from the wheat into the wheat meal on the fire.”

    Otti and APGA’s prayer was that the votes recorded for Obingwa, Osisioma and Isiala Ngwa were characterised by malpractices, and were therefore invaalid and should be cancelled. The appellate court agreed with the submission, contrary to the tribunal’s position that there was a rerun in those areas and that Otti and APGA participated.

    The tribunal had ignored exhibits showing over-voting and other irregularities. It ruled that having gone through a rerun, all exhibits tendered by Otti’s witnesses would not to be considered. The tribunal, therefore, did not look at documents tendered by the appellants to show substantial non-compliance and over-voting.

    The law is that once over-voting is established, results of those areas must be cancelled, and if the leading candidate has enough spread constitutionally, he will be declared winner. This is because there is no rule that everybody must participate in an election. Even, if election did not hold in those areas, results will still be declared.

    Otti’s lawyers referred to precedents, such as the case of Aregbesola vs Oyinlola, in which 10 LGAs where over-voting occurred were cancelled and Rauf Aregbesola was returned after more than 300,000 votes were invalidated; as well as the case of Agagu vs Mimiko, in which the result for wards in Ese Odo, Okitipupa and Akoko Northeast were nullified and Olusegun Mimiko was declared the winner.

    Other precedents include Fayemi vs Oni, in which results were also invalidated and Kayode Fayemi was returned as having scored the majority of lawful votes, and INEC vs Oshiomole, in which results for Etsako Central, Akoko Edo LGA and several wards were cancelled yet Oshiomole was declared governor. Otti’s lawyers argued that it is only when there is no winner of majority votes and with constitutional spread that rerun can be ordered.

    On whether Otti’s reliefs were grantable, the appellate court said it found it quite perplexing that the tribunal, instead of reading and considering carefully the pleadings and evidence adduced in Otti’s petition and determining all the issues raised, seemed more concerned with getting rid of as many of the reliefs as possible by striking them out for one “unacceptable” reason or the other.

    “All the reasons given are untenable and at the end of the day amount to depriving the appellants of fair hearing guaranteed under the Constitution. These generalisations that the claims of the appellants/petitioners were not grantable without giving plausible and definite reasons are unacceptable in law. The view of the tribunal that the claims of the appellants were not grantable is clearly misconceived in law and facts,” Justice Omoleye said.

    On the issue of over-voting, the appellants had complained that the tribunal wrongly concluded that there was proper accreditation of votes and that there were other modes of accreditation recognised by INEC.

    Upholding the appellants’ arguments, the appeal court held: “The finding of the tribunal that the card reader data is not the primary and sole source and record of number of accredited voters was wrong.”

    On annulment of elections in Obingwa, Isiala Ngwa North and Osisioma, the appellate court faulted the tribunal for not going ahead to consider the appellants’ grievances on merit after holding that the State Returning Officer had no power to annul and de-annul the election results.

    “In what appeared to be a conscious resolve to avoid and evade the determination of the petition on the merit, the tribunal chose to embark on swinging forward and backward, delving into imaginations that results were cancelled and elections declared inconclusive and that re-run elections were held in the disputed three LGAs. The conclusion does not represent the correct position of the law, based on the evidence before the tribunal,” the Court of Appeal held.

    The appellate court found that the results from the LGAs tally with the appellants’ grievance that they do not represent the correct outcome of the election. The appellate court said ordering of fresh election could only arise where a clear winner did not emerge after deduction of illegal votes.

    Having established that there was over-voting in Isiala Ngwa, Obingwa and Osisioma, the court said the entire votes recorded there would be deducted from the overall result declared by INEC.

    The Court of Appeal held: “Following the deductions of the unlawful votes garnered from the disputed three LGAs, the first appellant (Otti) having scored 164,332 valid votes, as opposed to the first respondent (Ikpeazu) who scored 115,444 votes, ought to have been declared the winner of Abia State Governorship elections conducted on April 11 and 25, 2015.”

    The Court of Appeal, therefore, set the tribunal’s judgment aside.

    It held: “Having resolved all the above issues other than the issue relating to the powers of the Returning Officer with regards to cancellation and de-annulment of election results in favour of the appellants, we hereby hold that this appeal has merit and out to succeed.

    “The appeal is accordingly allowed. The judgment of the tribunal delivered on November 3, 2015 is hereby set aside.”

    Lawyers have hailed the judgment, saying it was well considered. A lawyer, who prefers not to be named, said: “From the evidence presented to the Appeal Court, it is easy to see how it arrived at the decision”.

    Some lawyers, however, preferred to await the Supreme Court judgment. “I am now counsel in the matter, hence cannot comment again,” said constitutional lawyer Sebastine Hon (SAN).