Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Simi apologises to fans

    Following the post of her #fvckyouchallenge, via her Instagram account, singer Simi has apologised for the use of the line: “abi o ro bi mo kola ni”, a Yoruba phrase for ‘Do you think I have tribal marks’.

    The singer noted that the words used in the video did not go well with some people, saying it was insensitive on her part.

    Taking to Instagram to address the issue, she wrote: “Guys I had to bring down my post cos I used the line “abi o ro bi mo kola ni” “Do you think I have tribal marks?)- Which people meant to say “Am I stupid”.

    “It’s an old Yoruba ‘joke’, but I never acknowledge how insensitive it is. It offended some and I shouldn’t have used it. Lots of unlearning to do. We should remember to be sensitive and empathetic to others.”

    “Also I know the video is all over the place already, but it’s a step in the right direction and I apologize to anyone that was/is offended by it I only ever mean well.”

    Commending the singer for coming out to address the issue without feeling offended by people calling her out for using such words, its_rumens wrote, “I love your maturity and the fact that you did the needful. Respect!!!

  • Task force arrests impostors for extorting money from motorist

    The Lagos State Task Force on Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences has arrested two persons for alleged impersonation and extortion of money from a motorist.

    In a statement yesterday, the agency’s spokesman, Taofiq Adebayo, said  Ademola Oyegunwa, 40, and Olaogun Adamson, 48, were arrested at Ojota after they had negotiated and collected N15,000 from the motorist.

    Quoting his boss, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), Adebayo said preliminary interrogations showed that the suspects presented themselves as task force officials and arrested the motorist for traffic obstruction.

    “They arrested the owner of the vehicle for obstruction at Ojota, drove him to Bolade bus stop, opposite the task force office, where they negotiated and collected the N15,000 from him.

    “We have received complaints from motorists, particularly commercial bus drivers, about the activities of these unscrupulous fraudsters who specialise in impersonating officers of the agency and defrauding people.

    Read also: Police team arrested over killing of youth in Lagos

    “The chairman reiterated that police officers attached to the Lagos State Task Force enforcing traffic and environmental sanitation laws wear jackets with the inscription,  ‘LASG TASK FORCE’, for proper identification while on duty.

    “Only Lagos State Task Force and Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) are empowered by law to enforce traffic laws on ‘BRT’ corridors across the state’’.

    The suspects will soon be charged to court.

  • Sterling Bank grows net profit by 14.9% to N9.2b

    Sterling Bank Plc grew its bottom-line by 14.9 per cent to N9.2 billion in 2018, sustaining its upward growth trajectory.

    Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of the bank for the year ended December 31, 2018 showed that profit after tax rose to N9.2 billion in 2018 as against N8 billion in 2017. Gross earnings had increased by 14 per cent from N133.4 billion to N152.2 billion.

    The report showed that in line with the bank’s commitment to sectors that will create jobs, improve living standards and bring about economic growth for the country, Sterling Bank increased its financing efforts in the agriculture sector which accounted for about 10 per cent of its loan book. The bank also maintained a healthy capital and liquidity position at 13.3 per cent and 42.2 per cent respectively on account of additional tier 2 capital injection.

    Chief Executive Officer, Sterling Bank Plc, Abubakar Suleiman, said the 2018 performance demonstrated the bank’s commitment to the race it set out on at the beginning of the year.

    “We continued to identify more with our strategic pillars – agility, digitisation and specialisation – enabling us to set the stage for positive and sustainable growth across the business. Our investments in people and technology platforms drove significant traction in the retail and consumer segment, in line with our medium to long term goals,” Suleiman said.

    Reflecting on key performance drivers during the financial year, Suleiman said that consumer loans were up 108.3 percent driven by SPECTA – Nigeria’s leading lending digital platform.

    He added that mobile channel usage grew over 80 per cent following the launch of Sterling OnePay, an omni-channel mobile banking platform as transaction volumes doubled on the instant payment platform.

    “We would maintain a more customer-centric approach to achieving growth and strive to scale our digital products. Specifically, we will further diversify our loan book by targeting 20 percent share to Health, Education, Agriculture, Renewable Energy and Transportation – our HEART sectors,” Suleiman said.

    According to him, Sterling Bank would increase access to loans for a wider customer base through other exciting variants of SPECTA and further decentralise the investment market through digital platforms, refocus its corporate and investment banking segment with emphasis on providing innovative solutions to key corporates and banking the value chain.

    Sterling Bank was recently named the most Innovative Bank of the Year by the Central Bank (CBN) and Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS), has reported.

  • Why SIM card registration is stringent, by NCC

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said it reviewed and made the process of replacing lost, stolen or damaged Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) cards more stringent to safe subscribers from the antics of fraudsters.

    It made the clarification while addressing various service-related concerns and issues raised by telecoms consumers during a Consumer Conversation Programme (CCP) hosted by the Commission in Lafia, Nasarawa State at the weekend.

    Its Director, Zonal Operations Department, Mrs. Amina Shehu, said the Commission has found that, at times, a subscriber may be having issues with his or her phone number, thinking it was a network issue, but by the time he or she discovers what is happening, money has been fraudulently taken out of his or her bank account.

    Shehu, who was represented at the forum by a Principal Manager in the Zonal Operations, Mr. Ekisola Oladisun, said SIM swap or replacement fraud has a lot of issues attached to it because, often times, a lot of people who are not the owners of some of the numbers go to do SIM swap at various customer centres of the service providers.

    “There have been cases of fraudulent activities done on people’s bank accounts, as a result of SIM swap and the victims often complain to the Commission expecting that the NCC would compensate them.

    “To stop this SIM swap fraud, the Commission in 2017 developed ‘Guidelines on SIM Replacement’, which sets water-tight rules for telecoms consumers to replace their SIM card when there is a need for it. The Guidelines sets stringent conditions which require that consumers identify themselves properly before replacing lost SIM. This is to ensure that telecoms subscribers are well protected from being victims of SIM swap fraud,” she said.

    She said the Commission has noted that there is the likelihood by subscribers to think that network providers are putting them through stress to have their SIM replaced, by asking them to bring court affidavit, national identification card (or other valid IDs), SIM pack, amongst other requirements.

    “But what telecoms consumers should know is that they must appreciate the fact that all the information being required from them is to establish that anybody coming for SIM swap proves that the number that is being requested to be swapped belongs to him/her,” she said. She urged consumers to immediately report to their respective bank to block their accounts once they lose SIMs that linked with their bank accounts.

  • Abe: no individual can determine Rivers’ future

    No individual can determine the future of Rivers State, Senator Magnus Abe (Rivers South East), has said.

    Abe, who spoke on a radio programme in Port Harcourt, at the weekend, said the right to choose who governs the state and those who will lead must remain exclusively with the people.

    He noted that it is the responsibility of the leaders to ensure that the process is done peacefully and responsibly to give the people the right and power to chose who leads them.

    He said: “If Nigerians, if Rivers people want a better state and a better life, they must come out and fight for what they believe in, and that is what I think we ought to be doing.

    Read also: Rivers: INEC to resume collation of election results

    “The people came out and stood their ground during the election, and at the end of the day, everybody have to submit to what the citizens wanted.

    “I believe the future of Rivers is in the hands of Rivers people. They need to come together and decide on what is right and proper, and how we can make things better. It won’t happen by accident; people must come out and fight for it, and I am ready to be one of those people who will fight for a better Rivers State.”

  • The return of PDP

    Sir: The performances of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the just concluded presidential and gubernatorial polls must have surprised many Nigerians. With the defeat and the attendant shock or confusion that trailed the party after its defeat in 2015, many Nigerians had thought the party would cease to exist. These assumptions were proved wrong as the party which was gasping for oxygen finally breathed a fresh air in the 2019 general electiona.

    In the build-up to the 2015 general elections, the party was enmeshed in zoning crises. The position of president which was supposed to be zoned or rotated to the North was denied by the incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan. This action led to the mass exodus of the party’s members to the new APC. Other factors that contributed to the party’s defeat were corruption and insecurity. Nigerians were fed up with worsening insecurity in the Northeast states and other parts of the country. The menace of Boko Haram and the escalation of bombings across the country indicated total leadership failures. These negative indices shaped the 2015 election and aided APC to power.

    The PDP also suffered post -election crises. The former acting chairman, Ahmed Makarfi, fought a fiece battle with his arch-rival, Modu Sheriff over the control of the party. At last, through the court, Makarfi was recognized as legitimate acting chairman of the party. The party later succeeded in conducting a rancour-free convention where new leaders emerged. Now, that is history.

    The questions begging for answers are how the party which was silently dying got a new life? What magic wands did the party employ to put its house in order?

    The APC since the time it came on board has been making political blunders. Firstly, the corruption it accused PDP of entrenching has also been perpetuated under its watch. The Babachir Lawal’s grass-cutting saga, the reinstatement of former chairman of the President Task Force on Pension Reforms, Abdulrashid Maina etc. remains fresh in the mind of Nigerians.

    The APC-led government was also accused of selective war against corruption. The general insecurity bedevilling the country has refused to go. Boko Haram challenges which were limited to Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states have spread to middle belt and Northwest states. The herdsmen versus farmers skirmishes has become the order of the day. In Zamfara State, cattle rustlers have been having a field day. Hardly a day passes without reported cases of killings. Many villages have been sacked by these bandists.

    Under APC, many states civil servants are owed salaries for months. The states governors have failed to effect the necessary changes they were voted for. No wonder, APC lost Bauchi, Sokoto and Adamawa states. The gradual return of PDP has shown that political culture has changed.

    Nigerians are now politically wise. They are ready to vote out any non-performing government at any time.

     

    • Ibrahim Mustapha,

    Pambegua, Kaduna State.

  • Ajimobi: Politics trumping legacy?

    The debt for the above title goes to my colleague, Republican Ripples’ Kunle Abimbola’s whose didactic piece on the odyssey of Abiola Ajimobi, the outgoing governor of Oyo State, stirred this piece.

    Never one to shy from rippling through difficult terrains including those where angels feared to tread, Abimbola’s article, ever point-blank and incisive, couldn’t unfortunately resist ther overture to that popular, yet simplistic narrative that although Abiola Ajimobi may have delivered stellar performance, his supposed conceit did him in!

    Now, I understand the point about Ajimobi being an unlikely candidate for a popularity contest – a terrible flaw supposedly for a politician of such a stature – if you ask me. Again, if you ask me, a steward of state asking a bunch of unruly, red-eyed undergraduates to respect ‘constituted authority’ isn’t exactly good company on a day the mob is not only primed to action but have long declared a fatwa on the establishment.

    You know the other stories – the most striking being the bruising encounter with the musical icon, Yinka Ayefele; the parallel but contemporaneously running sub-narratives of supposed mindless officialdom and the false moral equivalences routinely presented by those with axes to grind; and then the story of an alleged dabbling into the chieftaincy affairs of the ancient city of Ibadan etc. On the latter, I am willing to bet, given the man’s deep roots in tradition, that the entire story has not been told!

    Those are supposed to be Ajimobi’s cross for which he must bear to Golgotha. But unlike Golgotha which, in the eyes of Christendom, was mankind’s redeeming point, such has been the spirited attempt to treat these as unforgivable sins for which an electoral shellacking isn’t sufficient recompense but something as would require a legacy of excellent performance to be wiped off the books!

    That is a-historicity at the worst and poor judgment as best.

    In a clime where losing an election is akin to a death sentence, I understand why the pain of being banished to Siberia can be difficult to bear.

    It is certainly a familiar story. A man known to have done well loses and election which would ordinarily been a walkover. In my own state of Kogi for instance, we had a governor who performed excellently only to be suffer the pain of rejection few years later for the same sins that Ajimobi is accused of – of talking too much and for being rather brash.

    I am talking of the late Abubakar Audu – a man who wasn’t just an enigma but an acknowledged star performer. Apparently, the people of Kogi would rather have a tribe of incompetents take turns than have a man who made things happen call the shots! Today, the people of Kogi know better.

    With successive disasters occupying the Lugard House ever since, and the state barely leaving where the late Audu left it aeons ago, perhaps only death could have aborted the triumphant return of the cocky prince once rejected by the electors to the coveted throne in 2015! As they say, the rest is history.

    Back to Ajimobi – the man who defied all the odds to earn a second term (koseleri), losing election is supposed to big deal. In fact, losing to Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) Kola Balogun in the contest for the Oyo South senatorial seat by a mere difference of 13,502 is supposed to be terrible, irrecoverable injury – a re-enactment of the so-called myth of koseleri!

    Never mind that the man has since moved on: “I hereby accept the result as announced. Although there were a number of grievous infractions and established electoral malpractices, I have decided to let go in the interest of peace…” – a treatise on leadership –the finest grade – from a man known to shoot from the hip. Rather than let him be, some people, it would appear, are only too eager to suffer his legacy to terribe revisionism. That, in my view, should not be allowed to happen.

    Which takes us to the crux of this piece – the Ajimobi legacy. In a country where performance is reckoned in bridges and roads, the story across the board is that the man has peformed excellently well. Yes, away from the urban jungle and cesspit of filth and squalor that it was barely a decade ago, I can tesify that the capital city, Ibadan currently wears a modern face. For a city which owing to its military origins, is known to lack any element of planning, it’s hard to miss the deliberate order that have been imposed in the area of physical planning and urban aestethics under Ajimobi’s watch. The roads are wider and neater; the inner cities are on a steady path of renewal.

    For a city that never had a masterplan, I hear that one is finally in place; ditto a drainage masterplan to ensure the banishing of flooding in the ancient city permanently. From Oke-Ogun to Oyo and Ogbomoso, the testimony is virtually the same of how the administration of Ajimobi has done valiantly well to transform their rustic landscapes into modernity through massive infrastructure upgrades; how he has delivered on virtually al items of modern governance, perhaps surpassing previous administrations before him – all with the caveat that the man could have even done better if he had talked less.

    To yours truly, the man greatest achievement is to be found in how he succesfully terminated the reign of the warlords – the rival transport unions who see themselves are not only above the nation’s law but would routinely unleash violence and mayhem on innocent Nigerians even without provocation. The other part of the story is the matching of the security infrastructure with current and future needs to ensure that the state does not in fact relapse into the wild era preceding him.

    As he departs, it must be with the firm conviction of leaving the state far better than he met it. Clearly, he has certainly laid the foundation for those coming after him to build upon – something that his famed humanity, or earthiness cannot detract from.

    My friend Abimbola puts it beautifully: “Long after present politics recedes into memory, legacy (Ajimobi’s that is) will emerge from that mist to robustly proclaim his case”.

    I concur.

  • 29 airlines lost 44,712 luggage last year, says report

    At least, 44,712 luggage were declared missing among 29 local and international airlines that operated within and into the nation’s airports last year, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has said.

    In a report, Air France led the pack with 6,175 missing luggage on the international scene. Air Peace led the other eight indigenous carriers on the domestic scene with 66 missing baggage within the period under review.

    While 41,498 of the missing luggage were retrieved by their owners, the others could not.

    A further breakdown of the missing luggage indicated that on the international scene, apart from Air France with the 6,175 missing luggage, other airlines involved in missing luggage were KLM with 5,088, African World Airlines, 308; Air Cote d’Ivoire, 670; Air Namibia, 221; Arik Air, 172; Asky, 1,167; British Airways; 4,273, Cam Air-Co; 109; Cronos Air; one, Delta Air Lines; 3,473, Egypt Air; 2,448, Emirates; 1,725, Ethiopian Air; 1,946, Etihad; 472, Kenya; 1,152 and Lufthansa with 3,750 missing luggage.

    Others were Mediana; 218, Med-View; 25, Middle East; eight, Mid Africa; 112, Qatar Airways; 1,238, Royal Air Maroc; 2,624, RwandAir; 1,234, South African Airways; 762, Turkish Air; 4,348 and Virgin Atlantic had 1,166 missing luggage within the period.

    On the local scene out of the eight local airlines that operated within the period under review, seven out of them except Azman Air had issues of missing baggage in 2018.

    According to the report, Air Peace had 66 missing luggage with 63 of them recovered within the period. Arik Air recorded 59 missing luggage with 55 of them recovered.

    Also, Dana Air had 34 of its passengers missing with 32 recovered between January and last December, Aero Contractors had six missing luggage with all of them recovered within the period.

    Besides, Max Air recorded four missing luggage with all of them recovered. Med-View and Overland Airways also had two luggage of their passengers missing within the period, but were later recovered.

    In all, last year, 173 luggage were declared missing, but 164 of them were recovered with nine not returned to their owners, according to the report.

    The report further revealed that last year, there were at least 15,645 flights operated on international routes, another 59,818 flights were operated on the domestic routes.

    Besides, the report indicated that last year, no fewer than 734 flights were cancelled by airlines on international and local routes. Of these figures, 190 were cancelled on the international scene, and 544 occurred within the local airlines.

    In all, there were 85 air returns last year; 25 among international carriers and 60 among the local  airlines.

    According to NCAA, the  airlines recorded 70 overbookings between January and December, last year with international airlines recording 11; 59 of such occurred among the eight local carriers.

    The report further stated that air travellers on local and international scenes experienced 92 luggage pilfering across the airports with 63 of such recorded on the international scene and the others on the local scene.

    The regulatory agency’s report emphasised that in the past year, all the international airports in the country recorded a total 1,994,099 in-bound passengers and 2,084,980 out-bound passengers, bringing the number of international passengers to 4,079,079.

    On the local scene, there were 10,092,643 were in-bound and out-bound passengers. Of these numbers, 5,033,669 were in-bound passengers, and the others out-bound passengers.

    The record showed that all the airports recorded 14,171,722 passengers in the past year.

    NCAA stated that its Consumer Protection Directorate (CPD) received 161 complaints from air travellers last year with 99 of such complaints resolved by the directorate.

    The breakdown indicated that the CPD received 74 complaints on the international scene and resolved 36. Of the 87 complaints received from the local  airlines, 63 were resolved.

  • Our grounds of appeal, by Oyetola, APC

    Osun State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola and the All Progressives Congress (APC) have appealed the Tribunal’s judgment which nullified their victory. ERIC IKHILAE examines the grounds.

    It was a divided house on March 22 when the three-man panel of the Osun State Governorship Election Tribunal disagreed on how to resolve the dispute over the September 22, 2018 inconclusive election. The poll was concluded with a rerun on September 27, 2018 by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Two members upheld the petition filed against the election; its chairman dismissed it for being unmeritorious.

    The majority upheld the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate Senator Ademola Adeleke.

    Justices Peter Obiorah and Adegboye Gbolagunte gave the majority decision, which replaced Oyetola and APC with Adeleke and PDP as winners of the election, on two main grounds.

    The first, according to Justices Obiorah and Gbolagunte, was that the petitioners established irregularities to prove substantial non-compliance with Electoral Act in 17 out of the 3010 polling units in which election was conducted in the state.

    They proceeded to cancel the results from the 17 polling units, deducted the cancelled results from the scores of the APC and PDP and declared Adeleke the eventual winner.

    Read also: UPDATED Osun gov, Oyetola asks Appeal Court to reverse tribunal’s decision

    The second reason for upholding the petition, both judges said, was that the petitioners proved that the Returning Officer, who cancelled the election in seven polling units (in four Local Governments where the rerun election held on September 27, 2018), lacked such powers to cancel election and order a rerun.

    They proceeded to void the rerun election, deducted votes from the 17 polling units, which they had cancelled from both parties’ scores and declared Adeleke and PDP winners.

    But in his dissenting judgment/minority decision, tribunal Chairman, Justice Muhammad Sirajo held otherwise.

    He dismissed the petition by Adeleke and PDP on the grounds that the petitioners failed to prove their claims.

    Oyetola and the APC, on March 26 and 27, lodged separate notices of appeal before the Court of Appeal in Abuja.

    On March 26, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) led a team of lawyers to file Oyetola’s 39-ground notice of appeal, while Akin Olujinmi (SAN), on March 27, led the legal team of the APC to file the party’s notice of appeal of 25 grounds.

    The appeal grounds

    The appellants, in their notices of appeal, ripped the majority judgment apart, insisting that “it is perverse, replete with contradictions and against the weight of evidence.”

    They are praying the Court of Appeal to uphold their appeals, set aside the majority judgment and dismiss the October 16, 2018 petition by Adeleke and the PDP.

    Oyetola and the APC said they were contesting the entire majority judgment, except where it held that it lacked jurisdiction to set aside the INEC Guidelines used for the election; that the allegation of over voting was not proved; that the petitioners did not prove voided votes, and other parts of the judgment where it agreed with their arguments.

    They queried the validity of the judgment, which was authored and delivered by Justice Obiorah, who they noted, did not participate in all the sittings of the tribunal during trial.

    The appellants are of the view that the entire of the majority judgment is a nullity, because it was written and delivered by Justice Obiorah “who did not participate in all the proceedings of the tribunal and who was not present when all the witnesses gave evidence.”

    They noted that Justice Obiorah was absent on February 6, 2019  when the respondents witnesses (RWs) 12 and 13 – Ayoola Soji and Oladejo Kazeem – testified and tendered exhibits, which the tribunal admitted in evidence.

    The appellants are contending that, having not attended the tribunal’s siting on February 6, 2019, Justice Obiorah did not see the two witnesses and was unable to examine their demeanour, as required, and therefore, it was unlawful for the judge to have authored a judgment in which he reviewed the evidence given by the witnesses.

    In the notice of appeal filed by Olanipekun, it was contended that: “The writing of and or the participation of the Honourable Justice P. C. Obiorah in the writing of the judgment of the lower tribunal of 22nd March 2019 and delivery of same, vitiates the entire judgment.”

    Oyetola and the APC faulted the decision of the tribunal, in the majority judgment, to declare the rerun election unlawful and proceeded to set it aside.

    They also faulted the tribunal’s finding that the respondents did not deny the claim by the petitions, through PW74, that the Returning Officer cancelled election in the seven polling units and ordered a rerun.

    The appellants said: “The first and third respondents (INEC and APC), in their pleadings, did not admit that it was the Returning Officer that cancelled the result of the election in the seven polling units, but rather, that it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the seven units as distinct from the units’ results.

    “Indeed, as pleaded at paragraphs 24, 25, 27 and 29 of the petition, it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the seven units for the reasons alleged by the petitioners.

    “The tribunal ought to have held the petitioners bound by their pleadings that it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the units and the fact that the 3rd respondent also pleaded that it was the 1sy respondent that cancelled the election in the units.”

    They argued that even if it was any of the electoral officials that announced the cancellation and rerun election, in law, they acted as INEC’s agents of the fst respondent (INEC).

    The appellants noted that the petitioners did not only fail to tender results from the seven polling units to support their claim that election actually held in the polling units and the results were cancelled;  they also failed to exhibit the votes scored  by the parties that participated in the election, if actually their was an election.

    Oyetayo and APC argued that, rather than holding against the petitioners, for not supplying the necessary evidence, the tribunal wrongly relied on the evidence of PW74, which it had earlier expunged from the record for being hearsay.

    They argued that, in the absence of vital evidence, “the tribunal ought to have held that the petitioners did not make out the case that there was any election in the seven polling units and that the Returning Officer cancelled the results of the election in the seven units.”

    Appellants fault voiding of results

    The appellants equally faulted the reason for which the tribunal voided the results in 17 polling units, in relation to the election held on September 22, 2018.

    They argued that the tribunal did not only contradict itself, it exceeded its powers in engaging in the computation of votes by the disputing parties and proceeding to declare a winner based on its computed figures.

    The appellants also faulted the finding of the tribunal in pages 193 and 196 of the majority judgment, where it said: “It is our considered opinion that the non-recording of the columns in the result sheets, which we regard as the check-list or control columns, is an act of non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    “The argument of the respondents that the non-compliance did not affect the result of the parties, because the petitioners’ witnesses testified that they have no quarrel with the scores credited to the parties, is not tenable. Thus is because a party does not have to quarrel with the scores of an election in order to establish electoral malpractices

    “The effect of our finding on the non-recording of the necessary columns in the identified EC8C forms means that the votes from the affected 17 polling units are invalid. The votes are: APC 2,029 and PDP 1,246.”

    To the appellants the tribunal, by the above quoted findings, did not only engage in doublespeak, but also betrayed the many contradictions inherent in its reasoning.

    They argued that, as against the tribunal’s position, the essence of an election petition is to challenge the scores of the party that won.

    Oyetola and the APC  queried the merit of the tribunal’s finding that the non-filling of some portions of forms EC8A in 17 out of 3010 polling units, where election was held through out the state, amounted to substantial non-compliance.

    They argued that since all the petitioners’ witnesses agreed that the non-filling of the forms EC8A did not affect the scores of parties at the election, it was wrong for the tribunal to have held otherwise.

    According to them, “the tribunal erred in law and acted without or in excess of jurisdiction when it set up it own table to collate and deduct results of 17 polling units on alleged non-filling of columns of EC8A in spite of evidence of petitioners witnesses, all admitting that the non-filling of the columns did not affect the result of the election.”

    They added that the tribunal’s decision to decide the petition in respect of an election held in over 3000 polling units on alleged non-filling of columns in 17 units is misconceived and amounted to a wrongful exercise of judicial power.

    ‘Tribunal acted outside powers’

    The appellants argued that the tribunal acted ultra vires (outside) its powers when it held that the rerun election of September 27 was illegal, without taking into account the Supreme Court’s decision in Faleke v. INEC (2016) 18 NWLR part 1543 at page 61 as it relates to INEC’s powers to order a rerun election.

    They noted that the tribunal contradicted itself in its conclusion, in page 191 of the majority judgment, when it said the information omitted in the Forms EC8A in relation to the 17 polling units, were essential to proving over-voting, when it earlier held that over voting could not be proved without voters’ register.

    The appellants argued that, having earlier found that accreditation is not done on Form EC8A and that same (accreditation) cannot be proved without voters’ register, the tribunal was without jurisdiction to overrule itself.

    They accused the tribunal of acting without jurisdiction when it “embarked on deducting the votes of parties and declaring its own winner in the name of imaginary non-compliance of failure to fill columns of forms EC8A which has no effect whatsoever, on the result of the election, thereby arriving at a decision that is null and void.

    “The tribunal has no power to make deductions in votes and declare its owner winner not being a Collation or Returning Officer. The decision of the tribunal is not supported by law and evidence on record.”

    The appellants also faulted the tribunal for allegedly amending the petitioners’ claims and proceeding to grant reliefs not sought by them.

    For instance, they noted that the petitioners claimed to have won the September 22, 2018 election and sought to be declared so, but the tribunal based its decision to uphold the petition and set aside the return of the appellants on the basis of allegation of non-compliance with the Electoral Act, in relation to the September 22 governorship election.

    The appellants equally noted that nowhere in the entire petition did Adeleke and the PDP complain about non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act in relation to the September 22, 2018 election.

    They added that the only ground, in the petition, alleging non-compliance with the provision of the Electoral Act was in relation to the rerun election held on September 27, 2018.

    The appellants argued that the tribunal was wrong to have declared Adeleke winner of the election, held on September 22 and 27, 2018 on ground of non-compliance rather than ordering a rerun election.

    They noted that, not only did the decision disenfranchise the electorate in the affected polling units, it breached the provision of Section 140(2) of the Electoral Act.

    The appellants argued that having admitted to have benefited from INEC’s alleged non-compliance with the Electoral Act by not filling some portions of the Forms EC8A and asked that the results from those polling units be cancelled, the petitioners could not have asked the tribunal to declare them winners of the same elections.

    Faulting the tribunal’s cancellation of election in the 17 poling units, the appellants added: “The lower tribunal wrongly disenfranchised the electorate in the said polling units after casting their votes and without any challenge to the scores generated from the voting exercise.”

    The appellants contended that the tribunal was in error when it held that the petition was not statute barred having been filed outside the stipulated 21 days after the election was held.

    The particulars of errors, the appellants noted, exist in the fact that while the petitioners’ claims were directed strictly at the election of September 22, 2018, they did not file their petition until October 16, 2018.

    They noted that the petitioners’ contention was that the election had been concluded as at September 22, 2018 and that they ought to have been declared winner of the election.

    The appellants further noted that Adeleke and the PDP “did not reckon with and in fact, denounced and rejected the rerun election held on 27th September 2018 and sought an order to invalidate the rerun election.

    “Based on the foregoing, it was wrong for the tribunal to hold that the petition was not statute barred as at the time it was filed on 16th October 2018.”

    The appellants are praying the Court of Appeal to dismiss the petition by Adeleke and PDP for being unmeritorious and set aside the majority decision of the tribunal, which they argued, “is against the weight of evidence.”

  • April 5 for ruling on PDP’s joinder application

    A Federal High Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has adjourned till April 5, judgment on whether or not the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will be allowed to join a suit by the governorship candidate of Social Democratic Party (SDP), Precious Elekima, against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Elekima is protesting his exclusion from the alleged pre-result collation suspension meeting between INEC and other parties that participated in the March 9 elections.

    He prayed the court to invite INEC to explain why he and his party were excluded from the meeting.

    The candidate is also asking the court to make an interlocutory order stopping INEC from further action on the process pending the determination of the substantive suit before it.

    PDP, at the last sitting, indicated interest to be joined in the suit, filing applications.

    The party said it fielded candidates’ governorship and legislative elections, and so will be affected by the judgment.

    Read also: Obasanjo to PDP: purge yourselves of bad eggs ahead of 2023

    But the plaintiff opposed PDP’s application, insisting that the matter is against INEC and so nothing concerns any other party.

    Justice Henry Oshoma, however, adjourned till yesterday for hearing.

    At the resumed sitting yesterday, PDP’s lawyer Mark Agwu urged the court to dismiss SDP’s rejection of PDP’s request to join, insisting that the outcome of the matter will affect the party.

    SDP, however, maintained its ground that the suit had nothing to do with who wins the elections, but is only concerned that the election was postponed by INEC by the exercise of its power on section 16 of the electoral act.

    “The plaintiffs are only seeking a fair hearing in the matter they brought before the court, and no form of allegation was made against the party seeking to join, for which its attention will be required in the suit,” Agwu submitted.

    Justice Oshoma, in his judgment, said: “Having listened to the argument and counter argument from both parties, I have decided to adjourn the matter till April 5 for ruling.”