Tag: Iyiola Omisore

  • Dasukigate: Court okays EFCC’s detention of Omisore

    Dasukigate: Court okays EFCC’s detention of Omisore

    Detained former Osun State Deputy Governor, Iyiola Omisore failed Friday in his quest for freedom as a High Court in Abuja dismissed his bail application.

    Omisore was arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on July 3 for allegedly receiving about N1.3bn from the Office the immediate past National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki in 2014 with no evidence of projects executed.

    He applied to the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), alleging unjust detention, breaches of his fundamental rights and sought to be admitted to bail.

    In a ruling Friday, Justice Olukayode Adeniyi faulted Omisore’s rationale for filing the application.

    The judge said Omisore’s prayers could not be granted because he filed the application while the order of the court, empowering the EFCC to remand him, was still subsisting.

    The judge noted that the order to remand him for 14 days was made by Justice J.O Okeke (also of the FCT High Court) on July 8, while Omisore filed the bail application on July 11.

    Justice Adeniyi held that the only option open to Omisore was to await the expiration of the remand order to renew his application for bail.

    The judge said under the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015, where an order for the remand of a suspect is made by a High Court, the order can only be reversed or set aside by a court sitting as an appellate jurisdiction.

    Justice Adeniyi observed that lawyer to Omisore, Goddie Uche (SAN) failed to show with “any legal submission” that the court has the power to grant bail to the suspect despite the subsistence of the earlier order for his remand.

    He noted that: “In the present case, the remand order was issued on July 8, 2016. It is not in dispute that this instant application was filed on the same date on July 8, 2016 and up till date, the said remand order has yet to fully run its course.

    “Therefore, by my understanding of the provisions of the ACJA, the only time the court is competent to consider whether or not to exercise its discretion to grant bail to a suspect, in the same situation with the applicant in the present case, is either pursuant to section 295 of the ACJA, at the point the application for remand is made, or in the case when a suspect is still in custody or remand at the expiration of the order of remand made pursuant to section 296(1) and (2) of the Act,” the judge said.

    Justice Adeniyi said if Omisore’s lawyer had informed Justice Okeke that the EFCC had granted the ex-Senator an administrative bail, the order for his remand may not have been made, and perhaps, Justice Okeke might have granted bail to Omisore.

    The judge added, “Nevertheless, the court, having in its wisdom and competently so, ordered the remand of the applicant in the first respondent’s (EFCC’s) custody for 14 days, which order is still subsisting, any attempt to grant the instant application will be tantamount, in my firm view, to vacating the remand order.

    “I do not suppose that the ACJA envisages or contemplates the situation wherein, a court other than a court exercising appellate jurisdiction, having made an order of remand under sections 294 and 296 thereof, should proceed within the lifespan of the same order to make such other order upon the application of the suspect which has the effect of countermanding the remand order.

    “The applicant’s learned counsel has failed to show what power this court has and I am not aware of any to make an order in the nature as prayed in the instant application which has the tendency and implication of upturning a subsisting order of my learned brother, Okeke J.

    “I must therefore agree with the submissions of the first defendant’s counsel that in the present situation, that the court having made an order for the remand of the applicant for a period of 14 days, cannot turn around to make another order countermanding the same order for remand for the release of the applicant on bail.

    “In other words, the issue of bail to the suspect cannot arise before the same court that has validly made an order for his remand during the lifespan of the order.

    “In my view, the cause open to the applicant is to await the expiration of the order made on July 8, 2016 and thereafter exercise his rights under section 296(3) of the ACJA to renew his application for bail.

    “In totality, and without any further ado, my decision is that the instant application is premature in the circumstance. It is hereby incompetent and inappropriate.

    “Even though, I have not considered it on merit, the application must and is hereby dismissed,” Justice Adeniyi said.

    The EFCC had, while opposing the bail application on Thursday, justified its continued detention of Omisore and urged the court to refuse his application.

    The commission, in a counter affidavit deposed to by one of its operatives, Kassim Yusuf, said it was‎ still investigating Omisore for alleged offences including, retention of proceeds of crime, among others. Yusuf, who stated that Omisore’s arrest and detention were backed by court orders, said the commission was planning to invite a number of the ex-Deputy Governor’s associates, who he named during interrogation.

    He said the EFCC is ” investigating cases of alleged payments $ade by the office of immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (rtd) to individuals and companies, with nothing to show for it.

    “In one of the alleged cases which the 1st respondent (EFCC) is investigating, the name of the applicant (Omisore) featured prominently as a sole signatory to Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc.

    “A copy of a letter to UBA, forwarding signatory mandate card and statement of account of Firmex Gilt Ltd is hereby attached.

    “Several payments were also made by the office of the immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki Trtd) into the bank account of Sylvan Menamara Ltd domiciled at Diamond Bank, with nothing to show for for it.

    “Copies of e-payment schedules from ONSA and statement of accounts of Sylvan Menamara Ltd are hereby attached.

    “From Sylvan Menamara Ltd’s Diamondaccount, the sum of N160,000,000 was deposited into the said account on 4th August, 2014 by the then NSA. Thus sum was subsequently transferred into Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at UBA Plc on 8th August 2014.

    “Investigation so far carried out, reveals that the applicant recieved hundreds of millions of naira from the office of the National Security Adviser, with nothing to show for it.

    “In the course of interviewing the applicant, he has mentioned names of persons and companies through which monies from the office of the National Security Adviser got to him.

    “There is need to those persons and companies mentioned by the applicant to make some clarification. If the applicant is granted bail, he will interfere with witnesses and he will also prejudice and frustrate our on-going investigation,” Yusuf said.

  • Why we can’t release Omisore now – EFCC

    Why we can’t release Omisore now – EFCC

    …Gives details of how ex-Osun D/Gov got funds from Dasuki

     

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has justified its continued detention of former Deputy Governor of Osun State, Iyiola Omisore.

    The EFCC gave details of its findings as regard how state’s funds were allegedly transferred to Omisore from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).

    It said its investigation of Omisore’s alleged involvement in the diversion of state’s funds through the ONSA was still on-going and that it would need to hold on to the ex-Deputy Governor to prevent him from absconding.

    An EFCC’s investigator, Kassim Yusuf, said these in a counter-affidavit the commission filed against an application for bail filed by Omisore before the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    Yusuf, who stated that Omisore’s arrest and detention were backed by court orders, said the commission was planning to invite a number of the ex-Deputy Governor’s associates, who he named during interrogation.

    He said the EFCC is ” investigating cases of alleged payments $ade by the office of immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (rtd) to individuals and companies, with nothing to show for it.

    “In one of the alleged cases which the 1st respondent (EFCC) is investigating, the name of the applicant (Omisore) featured prominently as a sole signatory to Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc.

    “A copy of a letter to UBA, forwarding signatory mandate card and statement of account of Firmex Gilt Ltd is hereby attached.

    “Several payments were also made by the office of the immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki Trtd) into the bank account of Sylvan Menamara Ltd domiciled at Diamond Bank, with nothing to show for for it.

    “Copies of e-payment schedules from ONSA and statement of accounts of Sylvan Menamara Ltd are hereby attached.

    “From Sylvan Menamara Ltd’s Diamondaccount, the sum of N160,000,000 was deposited into the said account on 4th August, 2014 by the then NSA. Thus sum was subsequently transferred into Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at UBA Plc on 8th August 2014.

    “Investigation so far carried out, reveals that the applicant received hundreds of millions of naira from the office of the National Security Adviser, with nothing to show for it.

    “In the course of interviewing the applicant, he has mentioned names of persons and companies through which monies from the office of the National Security Adviser got to him.

    “There is need to those persons and companies mentioned by the applicant to make some clarification. If the applicant is granted bail, he will interfere with witnesses and he will also prejudice and frustrate our on-going investigation,” Yusuf said.

    Arguing the counter-affiadvit yesterday, EFCC’s lawyer, Takon Ndifon argued that Omisore’s detention was not unlawful and did not amount to an abuse of his rights.

    He contended that the fundamental rights enforcement suit initially filed before the court by Omisore, was merely intended to frustrate his investigation.

    Ndifon stated that Omisore was invited by the EFCC on April 11, in relation to the investigation, but promised to honour the invitation on April 14.

    “Instead of honouring the invitation in line with his rescheduled date of 14th April, 2016, he came and misled this court by obtaining an order of interim injunction restraining the 1st respondent (EFCC) from unlawfully arresting and detaining him without following the due process of law,” Ndifon said.

    He stated that his agency, in compliance with the law, obtained a warrant of arrest and remand warrant “to keep the applicant in its custody for 14 days pending the conclusion of its investigation and the arraignment of the applicant in court.

    Ndifon faulted Omisore’s claim to ill health, noting that he did not mention his ailment in his motion and that he also failed to establish that his purported ailment cannot be treated in the country.

    “We further submit that, based on the applicant’s antecedent, if he is granted bail, he will abscond and he will never willingly present himself to the 1ts respondent for arraignment before any court of law.”

    Omisore’s lawyer, Chris Uche (SAN) urged the court to grant his client bail. He faulted Omisore’s continued detention and argued that the court, having restrained the EFCC from arresting him, his current detention was illegal.

    Uche also referred to his cleint’s ill health, which he said required that he be released from custody and allowed to attend to seek medical attention outside the country.

    Justice Olukayode Adeniyi, after listening to parties, fixed ruling for Friday.

  • EFCC arrests former Osun Deputy Governor Omisore

    Former Osun State Deputy Governor Iyiola Omisore has been arrested by the EFCC is Abuja.

    Senator Omisore was arrested Sunday at his Abuja residence.

    Details later

  • Reality bites for Iyiola Omisore

    Sometime ago, the mention of Iyiola Omisore conjured the image of a man-made deity held in awe by friends and foes. Like all man-made deities, however, the extraordinary image he paraded has faded out. Like the dew at the blast of sunlight, Omisore has slipped off his pedestal, losing his demi-god identity.

    Gone are the days when his word was law and he caused many in the corridors of power to tremble before him. The former strong man of Osun politics must have realised by now that acclamations are as transient as the fortune of a prodigal son. Unlike the former President Goodluck Jonathan era when his image loomed large, Omisore’s life is now devoid of the frills and accoutrements of power.

    Even his Osun State country home which once served as a convergence point for grassroots politicians is now desolate.

  • Iyiola Omisore gives father -in-law a befitting burial

    Death is shamed and made inconsequential when a departed is not mourned, but celebrated. Last Friday, controversial politician, Senator Iyiola Omisore’s father -in-law, Dr Ayinde Orafunminiyi Orafidiya’s final burial programme commenced. On that day, a service of songs was held in honour of the deceased at his residence, Ayinde Orafidiya close, Parakin, Ile-Ife. It was followed with burial rites the next day, at St. Murumba College, Old Catheco, Ile-ife.

    The remains of Pa Ayinde were later interned at his residence, while reception followed immediately after at St. Murumba College. It was indeed an exclusive party, as Erelu Mojisola Omisore and her siblings buried their father, who died at the age of 78. Adewale Ayuba was on the bandstand for the main party, while hip hop act, 9ice, performed at the after party, which held at Cameron Hotel, Ile-Ife.

  • APC candidate lauds Osun Tribunal

    APC candidate lauds Osun Tribunal

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for Obokun constituency in the Osun State House of Assembly, Olatunbosun Oyintiloye, has said the re-affirmation of Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s re-election victory by the election petition tribunal was another victory for democracy and the people.

    He said the judgment was not only a legal affirmation, but an endorsement of the people’s will.

    The Justice Elizabeth Ikpejime-led tribunal had on Friday dismissed the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Iyiola Omisore, challenging the governor’s re-election.

    “The judgment is a victory for democracy and the wish of the people, as all the efforts of the PDP to upturn the tenet of democracy failed.

    “The tribunal judges have to be praised for turning down the alleged financial overture made to them by the petitioners and their display of high integrity has shown that this nation would survive the hurdles we have been subjected to by the federal force.”

  • Omisore’s witness discredits own statement

    Omisore’s witness discredits own statement

    A witness of the Peoples Democratic Party governorship candidate in Osun State, Senator Iyiola Omisore, Moshood Adejare, discredited his written statement at the Election Petition Tribunal yesterday.

    He admitted that there were errors in the statement.

    Adejare, who was the PDP supervisor for Kuye ward 2 of Ede South Local Government, had alleged in his written statement on oath that there was over-voting in his ward.

    But he retracted his claim while giving evidence and said there was no over-voting in the result of the election which has been tendered as evidence.

    He said: “I can’t see any over-voting in the result sheet. There are a lot of errors in my written statement, because I didn’t intend to say over voting in it.”

    Still under cross-examination, the witness attention was drawn to his statement where he claimed that he was from Ede North, as against what he told the court that he was a ward supervisor in Ede South and the witness admitted that it was another error.

    The witness, who had stated in his deposition that the registered voters in some polling units in his ward exceeded 750, also retracted the claim.

    He said there were no units in his ward which had more than 750 registered voters.

    Adejare also claimed in his deposition that there was super-imposition of results in his ward.

    He again retracted the statement and confirmed that there was no super-imposition of the result which was tendered before the court.

    Another witness, Oluwaseun Fapohunda, who claimed to be the PDP Collation Agent in Oriade Local Government, denied that he said Governor Rauf Aregbesola voted in his unit 14, ward 5 of the council. Aregbesola is from Ilesa East Local Government.

    The witness was cross-examined by Aregbesola’s counsel Akin Olujinmi; All Progressives Congress (APC) counsel Kunle Adegoke and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) counsel Ayotunde Ogunleye.

    In the course of giving evidence, Fapohunda, who had told the court that the governor voted in his unit subsequently said, “When did I say that? He didn’t vote in my unit.”

    When the tribunal chairman read to him what he had earlier said that Aregbesola voted in his (witness) unit, the witness was dumbfounded.

    The witness also told the court that he voted on the election day and the PDP agents at the polling units and ward collation agents signed the result form appropriately.

    Other witnesses, Opaleye Taofeek from Ward 4 Boripe Local Government and Habeeb Tirimisiyu from ward 4, Ayedaade local government told the tribunal that they voted and PDP agents in each of the units signed the result form.

     

  • Verification continues at Osun tribunal

    Verification continues at Osun tribunal

    Defense counsel devoted yesterday to vetting, sorting and verification of Certified True Copies of documents tendered before the Osun Election Petition Tribunal by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the August 9 governorship election, Senator Iyiola Omisore.

    The legal team of the respondent, Governor Rauf Aregbesola of the All Progressives Congress (APC), who won the election, clinically went through all the documents presented by the petitioner, who was challenging results in 17 local governments.

    Kemi Pinheiro was later joined by Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and later Femi Falana on the side of the respondent. Alex Izinyon led Titus Ashaolu, and Nathaniel Oke for Omisore.

    Akin Olujinmi and Oluwarotimi Akeredolu later arrived to join Aregbesola’s legal team.

    The exercise, which was typified by lighter moments and exchange of banters between petitioners and respondents lawyers, moved rapidly to Ola-Oluwa Local Government.

    Security was tight as only lawyers and reporters were allowed to come to the tribunal; politicians were kept at bay.

    It was learnt that this followed a directive by the tribunal through the registrars.

    Anti-bomb and metal detectors were deployed at the venue by a special police unit; cars were screened while lawyers were made to go through metal detector screening.

     

  • Osun Pdp grand narrative of untruth

    Osun Pdp grand narrative of untruth

    The carefully packaged untruths that vividly characterised the campaigns of the Peoples Democratic Party in the August 9 governorship election in Osun State are yet to find obscurity. Anyone who thought the blow of defeat dealt this bumbling and blustering behemoth at the polls was all that would be required to exorcise the goblins of its spectacular misrepresentations was surely mistaken.

    The largely discredited candidate of the party, himself a sworn enemy of truth, Senator Iyiola Omisore, is now before the Governorship Election Petition Tribunal with a tome of conjured claims. Any conscious observer of happenings within the Osun PDP will readily agree that beginning from the time Senator Omisore indicated interest in flying the flag of the party as its governorship candidate, all through to the time the questionable primary in which he emerged winner was held, one fact remained constant – this Ife prince and his claque were always tinkering with the narrative of fact. Odourising every corner with the sweet fragrance of slush fund, they confected and sustained a misleading narrative of their general acceptability and popularity.

    Take a look at the Osun PDP: virtually all the big guns with electoral value who observed that Omisore’s candidacy would circumscribe the fortunes of the party were either shoved out of the party or intimidated into silence. In his various horse-trading with Aso Rock and the Wadata House, Omisore dazzled them with the false narrative of his wide-spread acceptability and solid popularity. Not knowing any better themselves, or hamstrung by their own 2015 goal, the presidency and the national leadership of the party accepted the fictitious narrative of the devious candidate, believing unquestioningly his meretricious claim that he is resplendently attired as against the glaring fact of his nakedness. With some contrived chutzpa, he swanked that he alone could bottle the genie that is the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola.

    Thenceforth, Omisore and those who have always subscribed to the Churchillian worldview that the Princess of truth is so delicate that she requires a bodyguard of wounding lies went out on the hustings in a blaze of fantastic untruths. As it was in their party during the horse-trading, the thrust of their campaign was an invented narrative of non-performance, corruption, religious crisis, et cetera, against Ogbeni Aregbesola. Boondoggles of wicked and unsupportable claims against the governor were blazed across the state and all over acquiescent media platforms. Everywhere the disorderly campaign train of Omisore went to in the State, they ensured that Aregbesola’s widely acclaimed performance was discredited – not with verifiable facts and arresting logic but with an ostentatious chronicle of belittling dishonesties. Listening to their hopeless sound bites and the overconfidence they projected, you would be forgiven if you thought PDP would rout APC. Their narrative projected the false image of a widely beloved candidate.

    It requires no special expertise to be convinced that the PDP-Omisore campaign for the Abere seat was deeply rooted in and inflexibly sustained by depressing falsehood, deceitful promises, and mind-boggling denial of the truth and credible narrative of development that each household in Osun now benefits from and bears eloquent testimony to. In a bid to totally mislead the electorate, the Omisore crowd plumbed a new depth in infamy. Not having any useful connection with the ordinary people, Omisore’s minders put their paymaster on the stage for a farcical show that further foregrounded their falsehearted posturing.

    On a particular day he rode on a bike to craftily prove that he is of the ordinary people (famously known as Okada); on another day he tortured his innards with popcorns; and on yet another day a full-scale assault was directed at his insides with those two corns he masticated with the ferocity of a baddie. Do the ordinary people he deigned to identify with eat two corns at the same time on each hand? For the discerning folks, the image of a would-be governor eating with both hands was graphically telling. The electorate noted that, learnt from it, and rejected him with their votes.

    The Election Day was not without its bizarre share of the grand artifice that Omisore is comfortably habituated to. It is generally known that the Election Day particularly was one hell of a day for many members and supporters of the APC. They were not only callously disenfranchised; a number of them were harried and grievously inconvenienced. But not one PDP fellow was in any way known to suffer the same invidious fate. Strangely today, the grandiose narrative of the Omisore in-group and his out-of-luck hack writers is that it was their members who were horribly treated on Election Day by the same security agents their Abuja leaders lent to unprofessional uses. This, they noise about in their hoary voices, negatively affected their ‘bright’ chances at the polls. In their devious mouths is a new narrative that now projects them as the wronged – the hapless victim, the modern doppelganger of the Shakespearean Shylock, more sinned against than sinning.

    It is this same lie-suffused narrative that still defines their post-election actions. They have submitted a bulky petition of contrived truths and imagined grievances before the Election Petition Tribunal. They want to retrieve, according to them, their ‘stolen mandate’.

    This party of questionable minds is even incapable of truthfully reporting the fact of its operations. It has six lawyers who are Senior Advocate of Nigeria in its legal team, yet it tells the public, matter-of-factly, that it has nine. When it filed a motion for inspection of electoral materials, it went to town to say it has filed a case. So engrossed are the Osun PDP in their new narrative of lies and victimhood that they cannot even feign virtue. All of the evils that they perpetrated against the APC and the people of Osun generally before and during the election are the claims that form the fundaments of their petition before the Election Petition Tribunal.

    Similarly, the story of the two INEC Electoral Officers (EOs) that the PDP blazed all over the media is in furtherance of their morbid projection of their new narrative that favourably depicts them as the victim of the ‘wrongful conducts’ of the APC. The fact of the matter is that the two EOs for Obokun and Osogbo LGAs were acting in cahoots with the PDP, which suddenly left them in the lurch. Seeing that the hatchet job they commissioned the two EOs to do in their favour on Election Day had suffered irreversible setback, they flipped the case against them, mendaciously saying that the EOs sought to rig for the APC. The PDP spawned a new narrative of it being the one at the receiving end of the unlawful behaviours of the EOs.

    The now-suspended Osogbo EO had before the Election Day been acting the script of the PDP without disguising his partisanship. For example, he was known to have refused many registered voters their Permanent Voter Card (PVC) once he suspects they have sympathy for APC. He would tell them to come another day. This sabotage was checked through the intervention of some APC leaders who reported him to his seniors. He was also the same officer who refused to give the APC agents their identification tags on Friday, the day slated for the collection. When he would release the tags, it was on Election Day and he only gave out 67 instead of 227. Again, some APC leaders had to report him to his superiors before he let go of the cards. The icing on the cake of his illegal behaviour was when he refused to produce the Form EC8C meant for recording the results from the wards in Osogbo LGA. It would take a complaint from the APC and a query from his superior before the EO unwillingly produced the Form.

    The fact is that this EO was doing the bid of the PDP leaders who had bought his conscience and had instructed him to use a different Form EC8C, which would contain different results showing high votes for the PDP. If any party complained and supported their grouse against the criminal actions of the EO with concrete evidence, it was the APC. Not the PDP. Yet, it is the same PDP which never had any complaints against the EO that is now about town with an improbable narrative stating that the EO worked to rig for the APC.

    By the same token, the PDP was in an unholy alliance with the Obokun LGA EO. On the Friday preceding the Election Day, some observant APC youths intercepted a Hilux van loaded with ballot papers. In company with another man whose name was given as Ismaila Taofik, the two were handed over to policemen who took them to the State CID at Osogbo. Curiously, it was to a PDP arrowhead from Ile-Ife, Prof Oladipo Oladapo, that the two men were released. No charges were registered against them; those who released them said they acted on ‘order from above’. But then the APC petitioned INEC on the matter, asking for thorough investigation.

    That EO and his companion were simply taking the ballot papers to the house of a PDP bigwig before they were discovered. It is assaulting, therefore, to hear the clangour of the PDP disowning this EO and claiming he, like his Osogbo counterpart, aided the APC in rigging the election they (the PDP) were sure to win.

    The indisputable point remains that the blatantly false, extremely provocative, and utterly preposterous narrative of the PDP is meant to serve as a cover for the devilish blitzkrieg it is hoping to carry out with its lie-riddled petition before the Tribunal. It will not argue its case with facts and logic. The party will twist facts. The narrative of untruth it is fervently circulating is its only logic. For the record, the Osun PDP is not a victim of any wrongdoings. It fielded an unsellable candidate. It ran a lie-based campaign. The majority of the electorate found its claims to be illusory. And so the PDP and its discredited candidate were soundly rejected. Another round of rejection awaits them at the Election Petition Tribunal where they are now staging a new farce.

    Oyelami writes from  Gbongan, Osun State.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Osun: Omisore submits 850-page petition against poll result

    Osun State ‎governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Senator Iyiola Omisore, has filed a 850-page petition before the state governorship Elections Petition Tribunal at the state High Court Osogbo against the result of the August 9 poll.
    In the petition, he challenged the results of 17 Local Government Areas of the state in the election in which the All Progressives Congress candidate, Rauf Aregbesola, was declared the winner by the Independent National Electoral Commission.
    Accompanied by the state chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Ganiyu Ola-Oluwa and other chieftains of the party, Omisore told the reporters that “I will reclaim his mandate through the tribunal.”
    No fewer than seven Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SANs) were engaged by Omisore to prosecute his case before the tribunal.
    In the petition, Omisore is seeking an order of the tribunal to cancel the results of the August 9 Governorship election in 17 Local Government Areas of the state.
    The Local Government Areas include, Ifelodun, Olorunda, Osogbo, Ejigbo, Ede South, Ede North, Ilesa West, Ilesa East, and Ila among others.The PDP governorship candidate also called for fresh conduct of the governorship election in the affected 17 Local Government Areas.Besides, he sought the order of the tribunal to declare him the authentic winner of the August 9 Governorship election.
    He stated that “the last Governorship election was marred by careless rigging perpetrated by the All Progressives Congress (APC) through the Osun Youths Empowerment Scheme (OYES) cadets.”
    The Secretary to the tribunal, Mr Muhammadu Adamu Aliyu, who received the petition on behalf of the tribunal chairman, assured that the tribunal would carry out its duties without fear or favour.