Tag: Kogi poll

  • Kogi: Bello gets certificate of return

    Kogi: Bello gets certificate of return

    Faleke absent at event

    The Independent National Electoral Commission on Wednesday presented Alhaji Yahaya Bello of the All Progressives Congress (APC) with the certificate of return as the duly elected governor of Kogi State.

    The certificate of return was presented to Bello by the INEC Chairman, Prof. Yakubu Mahmud, at exactly 4:00pm, at the commission’s office in Lokoja.

    Represented by INEC National Commissioner, Prof. Anthonia Okoosi-Simbine, the commission chairman said the exercise followed the conclusion of the governorship election and in accordance with section 75(2) of the Electoral Act (as amended).

    The section, Prof. Mahmud said, prescribed for the issuance of certificate of return to the winning candidate of a political party in a governorship election within seven days of the election conclusion

    The deputy governor-elect, Hon. Abiodun Faleke, was conspicuously absent at the event.

     

  • Kogi poll: INEC distributes sensitive materials

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has distributed sensitive materials for the governorship supplementary election that will hold in 91 polling units in Kogi State on Dec.5.

    The state Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Mr. Halilu Pai, while supervising the distribution in Lokoja on Thursday, said the materials included ballot papers and result sheets, among others.

    Pai said the materials will be accompanied to INEC offices in 18 local government councils affected by the supplementary election, adding that the materials will then be moved to the polling units early morning of Dec. 5.

    He appealed to voters to approach the election with maturity and to eschew violence and electoral malpractice.

    Pai also said that only voters with the permanent voter cards will be allowed to vote, and that accreditation of voters will be done electronically.

    At the INEC office to witness the distribution of the materials were representatives of the Labour Party and the All Progressives Congress, civil society groups and security agents.

  • Kogi: Protesting women besiege INEC office

    Kogi: Protesting women besiege INEC office

    Scores of women protesting the declaration of the November 21 Kogi governorship election by the Independent National Electoral Commission as inconclusive yesterday laid siege at the commission’s head office in Lokoja, vowing not to vacate the place until INEC put things right.

    Decked in black apparel, the placards carrying women sat strategically at the entrance of the INEC office, while a detachment of policemen from the nearby state police headquarters kept close watch to forestall breakdown of peace, because of the already tense situation occasioned by the ‘inconclusive’ poll.

    The women many of who brought along with them garri, water and other edibles, accused INEC of plunging Kogi State into political turmoil and uncertainty, by declaring the victory of the duo of Prince Abubakar Audu and Hon. James Abiodun Faleke, of the All progressives Congress (APC), inconclusive.

    One of the protesters, Mrs. Folashade Joseph said INEC created the problem and must hasten to solve it.

    Her words: “We are here to register a protest about INEC’s declaration that the election was inconclusive, and to let them know that they are the ones that have created this problem now.

    “INEC wants to deliberately set Kogi on fire, for reasons best known to them.

    “We have over 2,400 polling units in Kogi State. We do not understand why INEC will say election inconclusive; in 91 polling units that had issues according to INEC, the registered voters are only 49,000, out of the over 500,000 people that that voted in Kogi State, and out of this 49,000, only 28,000 have PVC to vote, which means the votes expected cannot be more than 28,000.

    “APC is leading with over 41,000,   which shows that the party was victorious in the election and INEC should have clearly declared the election concluded and announced APC winner.

    “INEC has treated Kogi State very unfairly and is responsible for this various factions that has come up in APC. The election they intend to conduct is a mere waste of time and resources.

    “We are going to sit out here till INEC reverses it decision by doing the right thing and announce Audu/Faleke won; they won for APC, they have a joint ticket.

    “We are calling on well-meaning Nigerians and the president who is our father, to wade in, so that the right thing can be done.”

    Mrs. Olabisi Sunshine, another of the protesters said; “We have already done election. We want INEC to release our result; Audu/Faleke mandate, the result that they have already is utright win for their APC candidacy.”

  • Faleke urges court to declare Kogi election ‘as conclusive’

    The deputy governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the November 21 governorship election in Kogi State, James Faleke, has asked the Federal High Court in Abuja to among others, declare the election as conclusive.

    In a suit filed on Tuesday by his lawyers, including Wole Olanipekun (SAN) and Femi Falana (SAN), Faleke faulted the decision by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that the election was inconclusive.

    He also faulted INEC’s directive to the APC to substitute its governorship candidate in the election following the death of its earlier candidate, Abubakar Audu.

    Faleke urged the court to among others, order INEC to “make a return following the already announced results in the governorship election.”

  • APC picks Bello as Audu’s replacement

    APC picks Bello as Audu’s replacement

    Forwards request to INEC

     Commission confirms receipt of party’s communication

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has confirmed receiving a request by the All Progressives Congress (APC) to replace the late Abubakar Audu’s name with that of Alhaji Yahaya Bello for the supplementary governorship election in Kogi State.

    The confirmation by INEC showed that the APC has settled for Bello as late Audu’s replacement for Saturday’s poll.

    The receipt of the request was confirmed by INEC’s Deputy Director in charge of Publicity, Mr. Nick Dazang.

    He said, “They have sent the name of their replacement candidate, the second runner-up in their primaries, that is Yahaya Bello, to the commission.”

    He, however, failed to disclose when the request was made.

    Dazang assured the people of Kogi that the commission was fully prepared to conduct the Kogi supplementary and Bayelsa governorship elections on Saturday.

    He added, “The commission is committed to conduct the two elections, that is why in respect of kogi, despite what happened, we came out with public notice inviting the APC to submit its replacement candidate for the election.”

     

  • Kogi APC leaders back Faleke/Audu ticket

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kogi State on Monday threw their weight behind the running mate to the late Prince Abubakar Audu, the party’s candidate in the November 21 governorship election in the state, Hon. Abiodun Faleke, in his quest for recognition as his principal’s replacement and governor-elect.

    Audu died few hours after the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declared the November 21 poll inconclusive. The commission later fixed December 5 for a supplementary poll in 91 units across 19 local government areas in the state.

    Addressing hundreds of party supporters at the Government Reservation Area (GRA) Lokoja residence of its late flag bearer, the APC leaders, led by former Minister of Police Affairs, Mr. Humphrey Abah, denounced members of the party’s National Working Committee, over what they described as attempt to bring in a candidate through the back door.

    They called on the national leadership of the party to do the needful by immediately naming Faleke as the Kogi APC candidate and the eldest son of the late Audu, Mohammed, as his deputy.

    They said that any attempt to foist a candidate who was not part of its victory nor participated in achieving the poll success was unacceptable and has been rejected.

    With Faleke and Audu ‘s son sandwiched in the middle on the podium erected within the premises, the party leaders which included former acting governor of the state and APC Board of Trustees (BoT) member, Chief Clarence Olafemi, the state deputy chairman of the party, Shaibu Osune, Hon. Enah Oseni, Alhaji Jibrin Isah (Echocho),Daniel Isa (Prof.), Alhaji Ibrahim Atodo and Mrs. Folashade Joseph, chairperson, women mobilization, Audu/Faleke campaign team,they said they will from there move to Abuja, to make their position known.

     

     

     

  • Kogi poll: INEC, APC flounder

    Kogi poll: INEC, APC flounder

    After delivering a devastating message on politics and politicians two Saturdays ago, Kogi State voters were expected to follow through with a tutorial to the country on how best to manage an electoral conundrum consequent upon both the death of one of the candidates in the election and lack of constitutional clarity. Alas, just when it mattered most, they wilted. But whether the wilting was caused by a lack of political depth or lack of principles is hard to say at the moment. By a substantial margin of 240,867 votes to 199,514 votes, the Kogi electorate had given the All Progressives Congress (APC) ticket of Abubakar Audu and his running mate, Abiodun Faleke, a commanding lead over the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ticket of Governor Idris Wada and his deputy, Yomi Awoniyi. Some 41,300 votes were said to be outstanding, nearly half of which were cancelled or unlawful votes that had no business being regarded as outstanding. The rest of the votes had not been cast at all. Out of the 41,300 votes potentially left to be cast, sources within INEC had indicated that approximately 25,000 were backed by permanent voter cards (PVCs).

    By any mathematical proposition, the real (as opposed to the registered voters) outstanding votes could not exceed the number of PVCs collected in the 91 polling units spread across some 18 local government areas of the state. But it was this elementary and unvarnished fact that INEC mystified to declare the Kogi governorship election of November 21 inconclusive. It was this electoral shenanigan that also put the otherwise thoughtful APC at sixes and sevens, its thinking process paralysed. And it was this bald reasoning incorrectly deduced from uncomplicated facts and figures that the state’s ethnic groups and senatorial districts seized upon to return to their atavistic past.

    Kogi State has sadly become a riddle. It defied all speculations, as this column hoped and foretold, to vote Prince Audu, using their head rather than their heart. The PDP reminded the electorate that Prince Audu was corrupt, having been dragged by the EFCC to court for allegedly embezzling or misappropriating more than N10bn of the about N20bn the state collected as statutory allocation in his four years in office. But Kogites ignored the rambling narratives of the PDP and the shoddiness of the EFCC, recalling in contrast that the two PDP governments which succeeded Prince Audu in 2003 to 2015 collected more than N500bn and had nothing to show for it. President Muhammadu Buhari had also remorselessly declined to attend the campaign rallies of the APC in both Okene town and Lokoja. But Kogites simply sneered at the hidden meaning of the president’s absence, and embraced both Prince Audu and his party the more. Then many armchair commentators and analysts finally weighed in and without real evidence predicted that either Prince Audu would lose or the election would be too close to call. This column wondered where they got their facts, for the objective reality on the ground favoured Prince Audu and Hon Faleke by an undisputed margin.

    In the end, the APC ticket swept the poll taking 16 local government areas to PDP’s five. Its lead, at the time INEC declared the election inconclusive, was unassailable and incontestable. INEC’s decision to hold a supplementary election and accept a substitute APC candidate are gratuitous and legally and logically unsustainable. INEC, speaking in sync with the Attorney-General, Abubakar Malami, ordered a supplementary election in the affected 91 polling units for December 5, and the replacement of the late Prince Audu. In their opinion, though the law does not explicitly provide for this scenario, an extrapolation had to be done to solve the exigent riddle. Banking on the correctness of the INEC and AGF positions, Prince Audu’s political associates from Kogi East senatorial district indicated unanimously that they would want the APC to allow Prince Audu’s son, Mohammed, a barrister, to replace the late candidate. They offered no precedence, nor suggested why they thought such monarchical disposition would bode well for a state like Kogi brimming with experienced and ambitious politicians across all political parties and from all senatorial districts, including Prince Audu’s Kogi East. If the APC should decline to put the younger Audu forward, as indeed it has done, then whoever wins the final ballot would be impeached, they threatened.

    Unprincipled and vacillating, Kogi PDP leaders have also seized upon INEC’s missteps to lampoon both INEC and the AGF, and have called for INEC to declare Governor Wada winner in the absence of Prince Audu. By their strange logic and science, they have delinked Hon. Faleke from the APC ticket. Their strange knowledge of the law in the PDP does not debar them from the sinister request of openly and grotesquely undermining the law and opening themselves to general ridicule. Kogi East, which produced Prince Audu, is also anxious to sustain their hegemony rather than recognise the inviolability of the shifting dynamics of Kogi’s electoral politics.

    However, of all the subterfuges that followed the death of Prince Audu and INEC’s declaration of the election as inconclusive, the most baffling comes from the APC itself. The party was expected to recognise clearly the victory the Audu/Faleke ticket afforded it. It was also expected to defend the victory and, in line with the relevant provisions of the law, anchor a campaign to compel INEC to declare the election conclusive, resist candidate substitution (with the attendant implication that someone else could unlawfully inherit the APC votes), and champion the moral rebirth of the country by using the Kogi impasse to sanitise the crass ethnocentrism, sectarianism and troubling power games inundating and undermining the peace and stability of Nigeria. Instead, the party paradoxically appeared eager to fritter the hard-won victory of November 21, and more enthusiastically pander to primordial politics. They have settled for Yahaya Bello, who was runner-up to Prince Audu in the state’s governorship primary. It unfathomably makes sense to the deep minds of the APC that a stranger to the Audu/Faleke ticket would be made to benefit from the electoral success of November 21 and 22. Mr Bello, like the Speaker of the House of Assembly and the Chief Justice, are Ebira from Kogi Central, the Igala’s worst enemies.

    The APC’s National Working Committee (NWC) is reportedly bitterly divided over the Kogi stalemate, and though it finally but heedlessly settled for Mr Bello as the substitute candidate, that division will not only refuse to abate, it is an ugly indication of the fissures, riotous politics and volatile fault lines in the ruling party. APC, it is clear, is not what it is cracked up to be. Judging from the crises that have engulfed it since May when it took office in Abuja, it appears to lack discipline, cohesion, character, and now reason. Having got off on the wrong foot nationally, and in the process trivialised governance, the party does not appear to possess the integrity and sound judgement necessary to build a great and enduring party, nor to rule a complex and increasingly challenged country. Its reasoning on the Kogi stalemate is horrifying and appalling. If they are unable to inspire the country by a brilliant solution to the Kogi crisis, how can they be trusted to midwife real and visionary change? How can they be relied upon to build a new social and political order for the country? Given their amateurish approach to the Kogi crisis, and the elevation of intra-party competition above justice and fairness, perhaps with an eye on 2019, could the country expect them to tackle major political and legal challenges with fortitude, dispassion and brilliance? On the Kogi crisis, the APC has behaved appallingly by turning itself into a party without depth, without reason, without a core, and without a soul. It needs to urgently rediscover itself if it is not to self-destruct, if it is to arrest the imminent disintegration the struggle for power within its ranks is making inevitable.

    The balance of opinion and the weight of informed legal interventions in the Kogi impasse are decidedly in favour of enabling Hon Faleke to embody the victory wrought by the APC two Saturdays ago, as the two boxes below show. If INEC will not reverse itself but would prefer the courts to adjudicate, the APC must be clear-headed enough not to submit to the messy ethnocentrism and sectarianism complicating the Kogi stalemate. Grafting Mr Bello from Kogi Central onto the APC governorship ticket, as they have done, is legally and morally unsustainable and certain to complicate the state’s political dynamics as well as exacerbate the grief of Kogi East. It is now certain that the frustrations of those who looked up to the APC for real change are set to grow, compounded by the party’s dithering at the national level, the amateurishness it is manifesting in Kogi, and the obvious lack of motivation, purpose, direction and grit evident in its actions so far. More and more, the electorate will begin to fear that nothing is holding the APC’s centre together, that it is drifting, and that it may end up a flash in the pan. It may be okay to see and worry about the intensity of the Kogi crisis; but it is even more apposite to see the Kogi stalemate as a barometer of the weaknesses and lack of cohesiveness of the APC, and of the impending disaster staring the party in the face.

  • Kogi poll crises deepen as Faleke claims victory

    Kogi poll crises deepen as Faleke claims victory

    Declare Wada winner, says PDP

    Senatorial District tips Audu’s son

    All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders were battling yesterday to settle the crises –  of constitution, choices and sentiments – triggered by the death of its Kogi State governorship candidate Prince Abubakar Audu.

    Amid the struggle to douse the tension by consulting its stakeholders, the party was flooded with petitions on the dispute.

    Audu’s running mate Abiodun Faleke said the baton should constitutionally and logically be his as the score announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was for the Audu/Faleke ticket. A new primary, said Faleke, is out of place.

    APC was leading by 41,000 votes. INEC declared the election inconclusive and ordered a supplementary election in 91 polling units. Of the 49,000 registered would-be voters in these units, only 25,000 have voter cards. This, lawyers say makes the supplementary poll unnecessary.

    But, to some party leaders in Kogi East Senatorial District, the home of the late Audu, his son Muhammed should step into his father’s shoes.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) said it should get the prize because, in its view, with Audu’s death, APC had lost out. Its candidate and incumbent Governor Idris Wada scored 199,514 votes.

    APC may take a decision today (Friday) after the consultations.

    National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun and some members of the National Working Committee (NWC) were consulting some leaders of the party.

    Odigie-Oyegun was scheduled to meet with President Muhammadu Buhari, but it was unclear if he did before the President travelled out to Malta for the Commonwealth Heads of State and Government Summit.

    A top party leader, who spoke with our correspondent, said: “The National Chairman and some members of the NWC have been consulting party leaders across board on the way forward.

    “The consultations were really tasking but we hope that by Friday we should arrive at a conclusion. We may make our decision known on Friday.

    “What is delaying our final decision is the deluge of petitions sent to the National Secretariat by various groups, stakeholders and legal experts.

    “You can see that our leaders would have to sieve political and legal advice and weigh options.”

    The NWC meeting, which was scheduled to hold at the party secretariat yesterday, did not hold.

    National Secretary Mai Mala Buni, who was billed to represent the chairman at the APC Youth Summit, could not attend the event. He was said to have been summoned to the Villa for a meeting.

    For most part of the day, the APC secretariat was empty. No official of the party was around. Sources said they were holding meetings at an unnamed venue.

    Odigie-Oyegun, who came into the secretariat at about 4.30pm, spent less than 30 minutes in the office after meeting with the national secretary.

    Odigie-Oyegun simply told reporters: “I don’t want to say anything now until the process is concluded.”

    On the call by the PDP to be declared winner of the election, Odigie-Oyegun said the party would not take up issues with the PDP, until it concludes its consultations.

  • PDP to INEC: Declare Wada as winner of Kogi election

    PDP to INEC: Declare Wada as winner of Kogi election

    . . . Seeks APC’s exclusion from supplementary poll

    The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to declare its candidate, Governor Idris Wada, as the winner of the November 21 governorship election in Kogi State.

    The party is also seeking the exclusion of the All Progressives Congress (APC) from the supplementary election slated for December 5. The INEC had declared the election inconclusive following the cancellation of the poll in 91 units across 18 local government areas in the state.

    The party’s position was contained in a communiqué issued at the end of its national caucus meeting held in Abuja Wednesday night.

    The communiqué, signed by the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh, insisted that with the death of the APC’s candidate, Prince Abubakar Audu , during the election, the APC has legally “crashed out” of the race.

    Audu had died on Sunday, while the results of the election were still being collated. He had won in 16 out of the 21 local government areas in the state and leading the PDP candidate with over 41,000 votes.

    The INEC has declared the election inconclusive, citing irregularities and violence that led to the cancellation of the election in 91 polling units across 18 LGAs.

    The electoral body had declared the election inconclusive and offered to conduct supplementary election in units where the election was cancelled. It had also given the APC a window to field a substitute candidate for the supplementary poll.

    But the PDP condemned the INEC’s position, saying no known law or constitutional provision allowed the substituting of candidates, once the ballot process has commenced. The party has threatened to challenge INEC’s decision in court.

    “The PDP completely rejects the decision of INEC in yielding to the unlawful prompting of a clearly partisan Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mallam Abubakar Malami, to allow APC to substitute a candidate in the middle of an election, even when such has no place in the Constitution and the Electoral Act.

    “With the unfortunate death of Prince Abubakar Audu, the APC has no valid candidate in the election, leaving INEC with no other lawful option than to declare the PDP candidate, Capt. Idris Wada, as the winner of the election,” the communiqué said.

  • PDP asks AGF, INEC chairman to resign over Kogi poll

    PDP asks AGF, INEC chairman to resign over Kogi poll

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has asked the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mallam Abubakar Malami and the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmud Yakubu, to resign their positions.

    According to the party, Malami misled the INEC into arriving at an “unconstitutional decision” to allow the All Progressives Congress (APC) to substitute its candidate in the inconclusive Kogi State governorship election.

    Briefing journalists in Abuja on Tuesday, PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, said the party was shocked that INEC, a supposedly independent electoral umpire could succumb to the antics of the APC by following the “unlawful directive” of an obviously partisan AGF to substitute a candidate in the middle of the ballot process.

    Metuh said, “We are all aware that the two legal documents guiding INEC in the conduct of elections; the Constitution and the Electoral Act, have provisions for electoral exigencies as well as empower the electoral body to fully take responsibility for any of its actions or inactions without undue interference from any quarters whatsoever.

    “We are therefore at a loss as to which sections of these two relevant laws, INEC and the AGF relied on in arriving at their bizarre decision to substitute a dead candidate in an on-going election even after the timelines for such has elapsed under all the rules.

    “INEC as a statutory body has the full complements of technical hands in its legal department to advice it appropriately and we wonder why it had to wait for directives from the AGF, an external party, if not for partisan and subjective interest.

    “Consequently, the PDP rejects in its entirety, this brazen move by the APC and INEC to circumvent the laws and ambush the yet-to-be concluded election by introducing a practice that is completely alien to the constitution and the electoral act.

    “The clear implication of this action of the AGF and INEC is that the APC would be fielding two different governorship candidates in the ongoing Kogi election, meaning that INEC would be transferring votes cast for late Prince Abubakar Audu to another candidate, scenarios that have no place in the constitution of the land.

    “Whereas the PDP, in honour of the sanctity of human life and respect for the dead, had since Sunday refrained from making comments on the conduct of the election, we can no longer maintain such in the face of the barefaced attack on our democracy.

    “This INEC under the leadership of Prof. Mahmood Yakubu has shown itself as partisan, morally bankrupt and obviously incapable of conducting a credible election within our laws.

    “In view of the foregoing therefore, the PDP demands an immediate resignation of the INEC Chairman, as the nation’s democracy cannot afford to be left in the hands of an electoral umpire that cannot exert its independence and the sanctity of the electoral process.”

    As a result of the development, the party has summoned an emergency national caucus meeting for Wednesday, to enable it take a decision on what it described as “threat to democracy.”