Tag: Imo State

  • Imo: AA demands arrest of INEC Returning Officer

    Following the outcome of the Imo State governorship election, the Action Alliance (AA) has called for the immediate arrest and prosecution of the Returning Officer of the governorship election, Prof. Francis Otunta.

    Otunta who is also the Vice Chancellor of Michael Okpara University of Agriculture Umudike, declared the candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Emeka Ihedioha as the governor-elect

    The Director General of AA candidate’s governorship campaign organization, Chidi Ibe, who addressed a press conference in Owerri, alleged that the Returning Officer “collected three million dollars to do a hatchet job in Imo state”.

    According to Ibe, “despite the glaring fact that the PDP’s candidate, Emeka Ihedioha did not meet the constitutional requirements, the Returning Officer went ahead to declare him the governor-elect because of the money he collected”.

    He added that, “the governor elect did not make the constitutional required two-third in at least 18 out of the 27 Local Government Areas of the state”.

    Read Also: Nwosu vows to reclaim mandate in Imo

    He said that the declaration of Ihedioha as the winner of the election was “a mockery of our democracy.”

    Ibe called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and Independent Corrupt and other Practices Commission to quickly investigate the Retuning Officer.”

    He said “I call on EFCC and other anti-graft agencies to investigate this retuning officer who came to Imo state to undermine the law. There is a rumour making the rounds that he collected three million dollars to declare the PDP candidate the winner.

    “The PDP candidate only made two -third in twelve Local Government Areas while our candidate, Uche Nwosu made two-third in 21 LGAs. The law is very clear on this. There ought to be a rerun between the two leading candidates”.

     

  • Okorocha: INEC can’t withhold my Certificate of Return

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha yesterday faulted a decision by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to withhold his Certificate of Return (CoR) as the senator-elect for Imo West District.

    He described the move as unfortunate and unconstitutional.

    The governor also accused the INEC of allowing itself to be used by those he claimed, were fighting him ahead of the 2023 presidential election by stopping him from going to the Senate.

    According to him, “only the court has the power to nullify any election after a winner has been declared. The electoral umpire does not have the power.

    “In my own case, my Certificate of Return has not been issued and I wonder why INEC will withhold my certificate for a frivolous reason, without hearing from me.

    “I am not a violent person and those who know me know that. This is why we have peace in Imo State. The Returning Officer could not have done that under duress under the watchful eyes of the Police, DSS and party agents.

    “I am not unmindful of the facts that those who are fighting me from Abuja are anxious to see me removed as a senator. I urge INEC to do the right thing immediately by releasing my certificate.

    “Let me tell every Nigerian that I fought no one and no one should fight me. If anyone fights me, he will be the loser at the end of it all. My INEC certificate cannot be touched or seized; doing so is belittling democracy in Nigeria.

    “It is only the tribunal that has the right to say otherwise once a result is declared. INEC cannot seize my Certificate by mere petition written by somebody in a case I was not given the opportunity to present my own side of the story.”

    Okorocha, who addressed thousands of youths, who came on protest over the conduct of the 2019 elections in the state, Wednesday, at the Government House, accused the State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Prof Francis Ezeonu, of bias with the worrisome manner he has handled the Conduct of the 2019 elections in the state.”

    He added: “The REC has shown that he was brought to Imo after the 2015 election to return PDP to power in the state.

    “The REC had acted illegally by ignoring the provision of the Constitution that makes it mandatory for a candidate to have 25 per cent in 2/3 of the Local Governments in the State by announcing the PDP candidate, Emeka Ihedioha who only met the requirement in 9 Local Governments instead of 18 local government areas, which is 2/3 of 27 councils winner”.

    He wondered why the REC accepted the figures from the three Aboh Mbaise, Ahiazu Mbaise and Ezinihitte local government areas.

    According to Okorocha, the 64,219 votes secured by the PDP from Aboh Mbaise Local Government Area alone, constituted 50 per cent of the total votes polled by Ihedioha from the state’s 27 councils.

    As far as he was concerning, Uche Nwosu, the governorship candidate of the Action Alliance (AA), who he backed against his All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Senator Hope Uzodinma, won the election.

    By his calculation, Nwosu got the required spread by having 25 per cent in 21 out of the 27 council areas.

  • Imo guber candidates score INEC high

    Governorship candidates of the various political parties in Imo State have expressed satisfaction with the Independent National Electoral Commission and security agencies over the conduct of the governorship and House of Assembly elections.

    The candidates unanimously affirmed that there was significant improvement in the conduct of the election compared to the Presidential and National Assembly election, especially in the early arrival of voting materials and orderliness at the polling units.

    The candidates including Uche Nwosu (Action Alliance), Ikedi Ohakim (Accord Party), Ifeanyi Araraume All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), among others also lauded the turnout of voters, which they said underscores the commitment of the people to electing their leaders.

    Nwosu who cast his vote, alongside his wife at his Eziama Obire Polling Unit 004, at exactly 9.48am, expressed satisfaction over the conduct of the election.

    He also commented security agencies for the prevailing peace across the state.

    Nwosu said; I am satisfied with the voting process. You can see I voted with my wife. So far the Card Readers are working well. I will win; Action Alliance will form the next government in Imo.”

    Former governor of the state and the governorship candidate of Accord Party, Ikedi Ohakim, also confirmed that there was obvious improvement in the elections.

    He said that the early commencement of voting was a great achievement recorded by INEC, compared to the previous election.

    According to him, “there is improvement in today’s election, materials arrived early and there is peace across the state, except for pockets of skirmishes but is not yet uhuru”.

    Meanwhile there were reports of shooting and snatching of ballot boxes in some parts of the state.

    Security operatives on election duty also arrested five fake Policemen and two soldiers in Ideato South Council Area of the State.

    The State Commissioner of Police, Dasuki Galadanchi, who disclosed this to The Nation, also said that some armed hoodlums who invaded a Polling Unit in Oke Uvuru Counci Area were arrested with stolen ballot papers.

  • AA candidate Nwosu votes, upbeat on victory

    The governorship candidate of the Action Alliance (AA) in Imo state, Uche Nwosu, has expreased satisfaction over the conduct of the governorship and House of Assemly election.
    Nwosu who cast his vote, alongside his wife at his Eziama Obire Polling Unit 004, at exactly 9.48am, said he is certain he will defeat other candidates in the keenly contested election.
    The AA candidate also expressed satisfaction over the security situation,  adding that though the state was politically charged, the security Agencies were on top of the situation.
    According to him, he was expecting large turnout number of voters unlike in the last election.
    Nwosu said ‘I am satisfied with the voting process.you can see I voted with my wife. So far the Card Readers are working well. I will win, Action Action will form the next government in Imo”.
  • Alleged vote buying plot: EFCC arrests Imo Accountant-General over strange withdrawal of N1.05bn

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Enugu Zonal Office, has arrested the Acting Accountant-General of Imo State, Mr. Uzoho Casmir, on suspicion of laundering the sum of N1.050 billion.

    The cash was allegedly withdrawn in three tranches between Tuesday and Thursday.

    EFCC believes that the money was meant for vote buying.

    The suspect, who was arrested on Thursday, was in custody at press yesterday.

    The EFCC, it was also gathered, is probing whether the cash was mopped up on the orders of the governor of the state, Owelle Rochas Okorocha.

    An EFCC source said: “We have intelligence report that cash was withdrawn through a new generation bank for use by the state government.

    “Casmir’s arrest followed intelligence report that the state government intended to use the money for vote buying in favour of a particular candidate in Saturday’s gubernatorial election.”

    He said intelligence further revealed to the EFCC that Casmir withdrew the amount in three tranches between Tuesday and Thursday this week in the following order: N200 million on Tuesday, N500 million on Wednesday and N350 million on Thursday.

    The source claimed that the EFCC had taken pre-emptive steps to stop further withdrawal from the affected accounts.

    “We have blocked the traced accounts while the arrested Accountant General has been providing useful information to the Commission,” he said.

    Casmir, he said further, was before his appointment a Director of Finance in Okorocha’s government and was “in 2016 questioned over N2 billion bailout fund given to the state by the Federal Government for the payment of salary arrears of civil servants.”

    The Acting Head of Media and Publicity of EFCC, Mr. Tony Orilade, confirmed the arrest of the Imo State Accountant-General.

    Meanwhile, the EFCC, Benin Zonal Office, has arraigned Bishop Ginika Obi James, Kingsåey Ibe Francis, Amaka Janet Okafor, Lokwutor Tina and Praise Ochei, before Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Federal High Court Asaba, Delta State, on a six-count charge of obtaining money by false pretence.

    According to a statement by the Acting Head of Media and Publicity of EFCC, Mr. Tony Orilade, the defendants were alleged to have fraudulently obtained various sums of money from their victims under the pretence of investing the money in a phony ‘Gideon Foundation Project’.

    The statement said: “The defendants were also alleged to have promised to share 40 per cent dividend from the investment with his victims which turned out to be fake.

    “One of the count reads: ‘That you Ginika Obi James, Kingsåey Ibe Francis, Amaka Janet  Okafor, Lokwutor Tina and Praise Ochei, sometimes in May, 2018, in Agbor within the jurisdiction of this honourable court did with intent to defraud conspired with yourselves to commit an offence to wit: obtain money by false pretences and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section a (1) (a) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other Fraud Related offences Act and punishable under Section 1(3) of the same Act.’

    “The defendants pleaded not guilty to the charges when it was read to them.

    “The prosecution counsel, Moses Arumemi, based on the plea entered by the defendants, prayed the court to fix a date for trial and to remand the defendants in prison custody.

    “However, counsel for defendants, Eli Elugwu, told the court that he has filed an application for bail and prayed the court to grant bail to the defendants, arguing that the offence was a bailabåe one.

    “After listening to the submissions of counsels, Justice Dimgba granted the defendants bail.

    “The first defendant, Bishop Ginika Obi, was granted bail in the sum of N500,000 and one surety in like sum, and that the surety must be a civil servant of not less than grade level 10.”

    “However, the four other defendants were granted bail in the sum of N200,000 and a surety in like sum. The surety must be a civil servant of not less than grade level 7.

    “Justice Dimgba adjourned the case till May 7, 2019 for commencement of trial and ordered that the defendants should be remanded in prison custody pending the perfection of their bail condition.”

  • At the mercy of erosion

    Residents of Ifakala community in Mbaitoli Local Government Area of Imo State feel trapped as their soil gives way to unrelenting erosion. OKODILI NDIDI reports

    For the people of Ifeakala in Mbaitoli Local Government Area of Imo State, it is an endless tale of agony and despair. More depressing is the fact that respite is not in sight as the people battle rampaging erosion that has defied all palliatives.

    Schools and health centres have been swallowed by ever deepening gullies. Farmlands and roads cave in as peasant farmers watch helplessly.

    Apart from building wooden bridges across the sinkholes by the natives to aid movement from one part of the village to the other, nothing tangible has been done to check the menace.

    A source disclosed that over four people, including two schoolchildren have been washed away by the erosion.

    One of the villagers, Paul Njoku, told The Nation that the agrarian village was once bubbly where farming and petty trading thrived before it was cut off from other neighbouring villages by the erosion.

    He said, “The erosion has dug a deep gully around the village and is steadily eating into the centre of the community; it is just a matter of time before the entire community caves in.

    “We have lost our farmlands and property to the ravaging gully and there is nothing we can do to stop it. We have appealed to the state government to no avail, now we have just resigned to fate. We lives are under serious threat but we just can’t abandon our ancestral community to run away as suggested by neighbouring villages.

    “We want public-spirited Nigerians and corporate organisations to come to our aid. The rains are coming and we don’t think the village will survive another rainy season. Already the roads have been cut off and we can’t drive in or out of the village to take our farm produce to the market, it is that bad.”

    Soliciting support for the community, Mr. Emeka Ahaneku, a politician and candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) for the State House of Assembly election, who took journalists on a tour of the community, noted that the scale of erosion menace in the community is severe and requires collaborative efforts between the state and Federal Government to tackle.

    According to him, years of neglect of the early signs of the landslide, was responsible for the massive gully that has completely cut off the community from other parts of the state.

    He said, “What is happening in Ifakala is enough to be declared an emergency, lives and property of the villagers are under severe danger and nothing is being done to check the ravaging erosion. I am seizing this opportunity to appeal to the State and Federal Government to despatch a delegation to Ifakala on an assessment tour without further delay”.

    Last year the Federal Government commissioned the Obowo/Ihitte Uboma Gully Erosion Control Works in Isiala Mbano Council Area of the State by to cushion the challenges of erosion in Imo communities.

    The Project was commissioned by President Muhammadu Buhari, but this intervention has not brought any relief to the people of Ifakala.

    The President, who was represented by the Minister of Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, expressed optimism that the project would recover gullied arable land as well as check flooding and the menace of gully and soil erosion in the state.

    He lamented the lingering problem of gully erosion in the Southeast part of the country, adding that the intervention of the Federal Government will provide a huge relief to the communities which have been grappling with ecological challenges

    According to him, the approval of the project would further consolidate on the gains of giant stride of his administration and demonstrates the sincerity of the APC led administration in the country.

    He expressed optimism that the successful completion of the project would in no small measure improve the living standard of the people of the communities and its environs, adding that it will reduce the dangers posed to lives and properties as a result of the erosion menace.

    The senator representing Imo North, Senator Benjamin Uwajumogu, described the completion of the project as a dream come true. He expressed satisfaction that one of his campaign promises made to the people of the area have been fulfilled

    Meanwhile, efforts to get the State Commissioner for Works, Josephine Udorji, were abortive, but an engineer in the Ministry, who didn’t want his name mentioned because he was not authorised to speak to the press, said that the level of devastation in Ifakala has gone beyond what the Ministry can handle.

    He said, “Last two years we visited erosion sites in Ifakala after series of SOS from the villagers and after the assessment, we did a report but it is now two years after and nothing has been done”.

  • EEDC invests in Anambra, Imo

    Electricity consumers in Awka, the Anambra State capital, and Owerri, the seat of Imo State government, will soon begin to enjoy improved power supply going by the level of investments the Enugu Electricity Distribution Plc (EEDC) has made towards improving its electricity infrastructure in the two states.

    These investments include the construction of a 1 x 7.5MVA Injection Substation at ABS, Awka, and upgrading of the 7.5MVA Injection Substation at Agu Awka to a 15MVA; while in Imo State, approval has been obtained for the construction of a new Oguta 33KV line valued at over N140 million, which will radiate from Egbu Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) station.

    The Head, Communications, EEDC, Mr. Emeka Ezeh, who made this known to newsmen in a release, said that the projects were necessitated by the challenges of poor electricity supply within the areas due to over loaded feeders.

    The 1 x 7.5MVA Injection Substation at ABS, Awka, which will be ready for commissioning within the first quarter of the year, is expected to improve electricity supply to Okpuno, Isuaniocha, Mgbakwu, Urum and Amanuke communities and the university community.

    The upgrade of Agu Awka Injection Substation is expected to address the electricity supply challenges and boost supply to Awka Industrial Layout, Ifite, Agu-Awka GRA, parts of Nkwere Awka, UNIZIK, Amansea, Ebenebe, Ugbenu and Ugbene communities.

    Also in Owerri, work will soon commence on the new Oguta 33KV line which will take care of customers in New Owerri, World Bank, Concord Hotel area, Iret e Community and industrialists within the area.  Effort has equally been made to radiate a dedicated feeder to improve availability to Alex Aluminium and other industrialists within the cluster.

    EEDC delivered major network enhancement projects ranging from de-loading of feeders, deployment of relief transformers and replacement of failed transformers. In Enugu State, EEDC completed and commissioned the 1 x 7.5 MVA Nike Lake Injection Substation at Nike, which greatly improved electricity supply to the entire Nike area and parts of Abakpa.

    In a related development, EEDC constructed three feeders to improve supply to her customers in Nsukka, they are the UNN 33KV, Nru 33KV and Wilson 11KV feeders. This has significantly improved power supply to the area and resulted to the deloading of Eha Amufu 33KV line.

    According to Ezeh, the company x-rayed its network, identifying areas that need critical attention with a view to strategically address them. It is not possible to attend to all the challenges at the same time, but there is a conscious effort by the business to deal with them and that has informed the investments in the network.

    These investments underscore our organisation’s commitment to strategically addressing the power supply needs of our customers, we are therefore hoping that they will reciprocate this gesture by ensuring they pay their electricity bills as and when due.

    It is also hoped that they join hands with the EEDC in safeguarding the power installations serving them from being vandalised, and desist from acts such as meter bypass and energy theft.

  • Uzodinma: Okorocha planning to rig Saturday’s election

    AHEAD of Saturday’s governorship election, the governorship candidate of All Progressives Congress (APC) in Imo State, Senator Hope Uzodinma has alleged Governor Rochas Okorocha has perfected plans to unleash mayhem on APC members.

    He spoke when 53 different groups, including the Kowa Party, market women in the 27 councils endorsed him for governor.

    “While we have been busy campaigning across the nook and cranny of the state, Okorocha … is threatening everybody that he will … chase us away..

    “I am proud that I delivered my polling unit, ward and local government to President Buhari. But Rochas’ son in-law, Uche Nwosu, who boasted that himself and his boss will give the President one million votes, lost his unit, ward and local government to PDP.

    “We are begging Okorocha to allow the people of Imo to elect who will be their governor. I urge security agencies to cut the excesses of the governor, else he will throw this state into chaos due to his ambition, because we will not fold our arms and allow Okorocha steal our votes.

    “When a governor starts acting like a rascal it is going to create crisis. We are ready to cast our votes and we are not afraid of anybody. We urge security agencies to be on the alert. We are not worried because I am going to win. We are glad that we have Federal Government forces that will provide security… So our people should go out and cast their votes and we will protect the votes,” he said.

  • Message to elders of Imo state – speak out!

    The macabre dance started in the early part of July 2011, soon after Rochas Anayo Ethelbert Okorocha became the governor of our beloved state: It was unfortunate! I say “unfortunate” because of the strange circumstances and the coalition of social forces that threw him up as the number one citizen of Imo State. To deceive the people with fake humility and open identification with the labouring poor in the state, Okorocha craftily and ingeniously arranged for press photographers to capture him eating ‘Akara’ (bean ball) on the streets of Owerri, our state capital. The photographs were deliberately and widely used in the media; the restless Owerri tabloids even used them on their front pages, in an attempt to depict the new governor as humble, pro-people and could be accessed easily by the ordinary man in the state. It was all photo trick, calculated to showcase Okorocha as “the man of the people”. And the unwary bought into the trick.

    When he finally settled down to governance proper, the real Rochas Okorocha began to emerge. His style, lack of decency and open disdain for bureaucratic procedures completely took over, along the line. Imo State became the new governor’s huge laboratory for all kinds of political experiments. And these experiments ranged from his collapsed Community Government Council, his three-day-a-week work formula that allows Imo civil servants to work on their farms for the remaining two work-days to what Okorocha called “Direct Labour in Contract Execution”. All kinds of experiments were introduced and mindlessly deployed to make Okorocha’s government look different, super, answerable and in tune with the popular wishes of the people. It was tragic, and before long, our governor was already running his government on flat tyres. Nothing was working, the notable legacies of his predecessors – Sam Mbakwe, Achike Udenwa and Ikedi Ohakim – were either dumped, ill-maintained or totally neglected to create the impression that he was his own man and pursuing his own vision. There was nothing specifically wrong with carving out his own niche, except that the overall impact was negative. The ordinary people, even the elite, began to grumble, complain and regret the day that Okorocha became our governor.

    Some of us began to write, grant interviews and spoke at seminars and workshops on what our state was rapidly becoming and we expected our elders, experienced and tested hands in administration, academia and political offices, to speak out and remind the young man now occupying Douglas House, the seat of government, to apply the brakes and re-organise his governance style and listen to genuine and sincere advice. Even the Catholic Archbishop of Owerri Diocese whose regrettable support for Okorocha helped him to win the controversial governorship elections in March 2011, may have been embarrassed by the new and awkward direction that Okorocha was driving the state. The prominent political elders whose voices carried weight and authority saw what was happening, but chose to be silent because of stomach infrastructure, political considerations or primordial sentiments. Yes, they refused to shout out or speak up. Men of God who command so much influence in the state and who have absolutely nothing to lose, preferred silence and refused to come out boldly to warn against consequences. Nothing like that happened and Rochas Okorocha continued to drive our dear state on flat tyres.

    Then came the year 2015: Those who knew that Imo State was headed in the wrong direction and needed to be pulled back from the brink thought that sincere-minded politicians would easily form a political coalition or partnership that would rescue the state from the grip of one man. Before this time, Okorocha had effortlessly removed his Deputy, Jude Agbaso, whom he accused of all sorts of crimes, not minding that Jude was donated to the Okorocha ticket by Jude’s elder brother, Martin Agbaso, whose political shortsightedness and miscalculation often prevent him from getting his political permutations right. Having humiliated his Deputy, Jude, out of office and ensured that the coast was now clear for him to do as he liked, Okorocha began to consolidate his grip on a state that he inherited a few years before from Ikedi Ohakim that had a vibrant and resilient economy, energy-filled civil service, good infrastructure of maintained roads, clean and green environment, running taps in, at least, the state capital, and an Imo State that recorded low crime rates as a result of deliberate security networking put in place by the Ohakim administration.

    The failure of the political elite in Imo State to construct a viable partnership that ensures that Okorocha was defeated in 2015 gave room for more amazing excesses that now characterise the administration. Yet, no strong words have come from our elders to advise on consequences or to collectively mobilise the people to stop him. Not too long after his re-election, his penchant for turning the state into a family business grew, and he continued to engage one accelerator gear after the other, and was gaining terrific speed. His two sisters were given sensitive appointments where state revenues are streaming from, then the appointment of his younger sister as our Commissioner for Happiness, a new ministry that distinguishes our state from others. He re-appointed his other sister as Chairperson of government organs in-charge of revenue from all markets in the state, then allocated three government ministries to his wife to  supervise; shifted more duties, and therefore more powers, to his son-in-law in Government House. But when he recklessly started positioning the young man to be his successor as his second term began to thin down, Ndi-Imo began to resist. While these excesses and greed were going on, plus Okorocha’s poor governance style and known disdain for procedures and processes, all having their toll on the once peaceful and vibrant state, our elders who should have spoken out and call our governor to order again preferred to keep quiet as the state sank deeper and deeper into something infinitely more difficult to describe. The Okorocha administration began to be called, openly, by Ndi-Imo as “Familiacracy” – a government of a family, by a family and for a family.

    Nor did any of our prominent traditional rulers, to my knowledge, speak out against the direction our governor was taking the state to. If our respectable chiefs and clergymen had protested the way the state was being governed, we would not have found Imo State at this awkward trajectory. And I remind myself that no strong voice in the state protested the abandonment of the popular Imo Equity Formula which our more dedicated second generation elders/leaders (after our first set of Mbakwes, Okparas, Mbadiwes, Njokus, etc) carefully put together at Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu’s Glass House office in Owerri in 1999. If Okigwe zone had not been denied the space to complete its full eight years, the spirit of the Imo Charter of Equity, otherwise called Imo Equity Formula, would not have been so grossly violated or seriously offended. That violation has brought us where the state has found itself today.

    It is still not too late to correct the mistakes that have been made and chart a new direction. Our elders need to urgently – even today – admit that a serious error has occurred in our political arrangement and recognise the need to put things right. The elders must realise that their silence has not been too golden and that the injustices of today may haunt us tomorrow. They now need to help put Imo State on the track. And this election period, and with the governorship election some few days away, is perhaps the appropriate time to pass information around, as a first step, directing and instructing our people on the critical issues at stake, and what must be done to reconstruct our society and chart a new way forward, usher in a new era of trust, better understanding and respect for the feelings and fears of our people in the three senatorial zones of the state. And finally, our people need to know that because of what Imo State has passed through these past difficult years, our next governor should, and must, be someone who possesses the experience, the vision for a totally raped state, and who can hit the ground running from Day One. Let’s re-start the re-construction of Imo State whose development and cohesion was interrupted by social forces who do not fully understand and appreciate out values and collective worth.

    • Esinulo was a Senior Media Aide to General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu in exile in The Ivory Coast

     

  • Okorocha warns against rigging of Imo guber election

    Imo state governor and Senator-elect for Imo West, Rochas Okorocha, has cautioned against any attempt by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and politicians to rig the governorship election slated for March 9.

    The governor who was almost denied the Imo West Senatorial seat by the Collation Officer, Professor Ibeawuchi Francis, after garnering the highest vote, warned that the people will resist any attempt to rig the governorship election.

    Okorocha who addressed journalists shortly after been declared the winner of the Senatorial election, said that the action of the Collation Officer was embarrassment to INEC and the institution he represents.

    According to him, “what baffles me is the attitude of the returning officer in this our exercise. It looks to me that there was a script been played out, which is coming to me as a rude shock, especially the manner elections here have been conducted in Imo State.

    “May I put it straight that if election was conducted the way it should be and in line with our Constitution and electoral act, we would have won the entire election. What we see here is a lot of people changing the rule and doing certain things to favour a particular party in the State”.

    Read Also: Okorocha to Ndigbo: vote Buhari or forget 2023

    The governor added that, “I find it a bit surprising because right now as I speak results are not been collated the way it should be. The centers provided by the Constitution is not been used rather the INEC boss is making other arrangements not really clear to me, because as the result gets there, it is been changed. As I speak to you now, there are attempts to change the President’s results.

    “On my own election, after having recorded victory in 9 out of the 12 Local Government Areas that were announced, we heard that they are now trying to move the result sheets to Owerri but when we inquired why, the man said he is tired and doesn’t feel safe, when nobody was threatening him. At the end of it, we discovered he doesn’t have the declaration sheet. I wonder where this is taking us to. I hope INEC would change this system because we will resist them if they try it in the next election”.

    The governor continued that, “they should examine the Returning Officer to know his mental state. If he is not mental, then he must be a criminal to ever think of that. How could someone ask you to change the result of an election he has already won? My score is above 90,000 and the nearest to me is slightly above half of it, when you combine both Jones and Izunaso’s votes. They can’t match or contest against me in Imo State not to talk of Orlu zone. Am I even supposed to contest for senate in Orlu, I never campaigned but only declared and campaigned for 3 days.

    “I ask the INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner here to quickly correct these anomalies. The Returning Officer is a bloody liar who may be acting a script. I enjoin him to return the money he may have collected from those who understand only rigging in election”.