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Inside The Massive Extrajudicial Killings In Nigeria’s South-East

Wounded IPOB supporter

*This report by PREMIUM TIMES is published here with the newspaper’s permission


By Emmanuel Maya

It happened in quick successions. The day was December 17, 2015. News had just come over the radio of a court ruling in favour of the release of Nnamdi Kanu, the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

Jubilant crowds poured out into the streets of Onitsha, the commercial capital of Anambra State. A group of soldiers stationed at the Head Bridge Market opened fire on one of the crowds.

By the time the smoke cleared, three people laid dead with over a dozen sprawled on the ground with gunshot wounds. The soldiers fled the scene but not without taking with them the three corpses.

Later in the afternoon, five more bodies were discovered meters away from the scene bringing to eight the number of people killed on the spot. Of wounded victims taken to hospitals, four later died, bringing to 12 the total number of victims who perished in the fatal shooting.

Three of the dead men were identified as Michael Nweke, 37; Peter Chukwuma Nwankwo, 26; and Mathew Ndukwe Kanu, 25. PREMIUM TIMES gathered that until his death in the hands of soldiers, Michael Nweke was a private security guard employed by the Catholic Reverend Sisters’ Convent at Nkpor in Idemili North local government area of Anambra State. He was a native of Aguekka Village in Ekka Community of Ezza North LGA of Ebonyi State.

Peter Chukwuma Nwankwo, an Onitsha-based trader, was a resident of Ezenwankwo Street in Ugwuagba Layout, Obosi. He hailed from Amaokpo in Nssakra Omege Community of Ezza South LGA of Ebonyi State. The third victim Mathew Ndukwe Kanu was an artisan in Onitsha and a resident of Obosi. He was a native of Ndiodo Community in Akanu-Ohafia LGA of Abia State.

Anxious family members went from police stations to mortuaries in search of missing or dead relatives. The search continued into the New Year. Leaving no stone unturned, the search party that included members of IPOB and a human rights organization, Intersociety for Civil Liberties & Rule of Law, hired divers to search the River Niger fearing the corpses might have been dumped in there.

On February 15, 2016, two months after the killings, 31-year old Sunday Nweke, younger brother to Michael Nweke, received a phone call directing him to hurry to the Onitsha General Hospital with a photograph of his late brother. There he met some IPOB members who led him to a mortuary attendant. Sunday identified the body of his late brother. The attendant, whose identity was not revealed, disclosed that some soldiers of the Onitsha Army Barracks, accompanied by some police personnel from the Onitsha Central Police Station, deposited the bodies on December 21, 2015. The attendant claimed he and his colleagues were warned not to say anything or release the corpses to anyone.

Similarly, Frank Chijioke Nwankwo and Grace Onyinyechi Kanu, relations of Peter Chukwuma Nwankwo and Mathew Ndukwe Kanu respectively, received phone calls to come over to the Onitsha General Hospital. They too were able to identify the bodies of their brothers killed two months before.

Traders at the Onitsha Head Bridge Market told PREMIUM TIMES that the ill-fated crowd shot by the soldiers were neither armed nor protesting. Azu Okwuashi, a trader at the market, said there was nothing provocative about the activities of the crowd.

“They were mostly young men who ran out into the street to jubilate when they heard a court had ruled in favour of the release of Nnamdi Kanu. They were not protesting. Why would they protest what for them was a good news?” Mr. Okwuashi said.

Nnamdi Kanu, director of London-based Radio Biafra and leader of separatist Biafran organization, IPOB, was arrested in October 2015 by the State Security Service. The news of his arrest generated mass protests across parts of Enugu State, Delta, Imo, Abia, Cross River, Anambra, Akwa Ibom and Rivers State.

Despite meeting bail conditions, Mr. Kanu is still held, a situation that has continued to agitate his supporters within and outside the IPOB.

Prior to the Onitsha killings, PREMIUM TIMES had on December 2, 2015 reported the Inspector General of Police ordering his anti-riot force to ‘maximally’ restrain pro-Biafran protesters.

Earlier, on November 16, 2015 the General Officer Commanding 3 Division of the Nigerian Army, Major General Hassan Umaru, at a press conference in Maxwell Kobe Cantonment, Rukuba, Plateau State, warned “all those threatening and agitating for the dismemberment of the country that we shall apply the ROE (Rule of Engagement) to the fullest”.

From Onitsha to Aba, Enugu to Umuahia, activists say, ‘maximum force’ has been the operational code for the unprecedented police and military brutality that has led to the extrajudicial killings of an unknown number defenceless civilians across the zone.

Human Rights organisations like the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO), the Intersociety for Civil Liberties & Rule of Law, Amnesty International, Center for Human Rights & Peace Advocacy (CHRPA), and Forum for Justice have for years been documenting cases of extra-judicial killings in the South East, including what has been termed the murderous excesses of the special police unit called the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), stationed in Awkuzu, Anambra State.

Between August 2015 and February 2016, about 170 “unarmed citizens” were shot dead or critically injured while about 400 others were arrested, charged or detained without trial. The right groups allege “torture, inhuman and degrading treatments in the hands of personnel of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF)”.

There are scores of reported cases of disappearances, abductions and pretrial killings of suspected members of IPOB or MASSOB (Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra).

Statistics made available to PREMIUM TIMES by the rights groups show for example that four people were killed in Awka and Onitsha on August 30, 2015; 13 killed in Onitsha on December 2, 2015; 12 killed in Onitsha on 17th December 17, 2015; eight killed in Aba on January 18, 2016; six killed in Aba on January 29, 2016 and 22 killed in Aba on February 9, 2016.

Among the four citizens killed in Onitsha and Awka on August 30, 2015 were Ebuka Nnolum, a native of Enuguabo-Ufuma in Anambra State; and Obasi Maduka of Oshiri in Ebonyi State. Of the 13 citizens killed in Onitsha on December 2, 2015 were Anthonia Nkiruka Ikeanyionwu (Anambra State), Kenneth Ogadinma (Abia State), Chima Onoh (Enugu State), Angus Chikwado (Anambra State) and Felicia Egwuatu (Anambra State).

And of the four citizens who later died in hospital after being shot by soldiers on December 17, 2015 for jubilating Nnamdi Kanu’s court victory, only one had his identity revealed as Okwu Friday. The identities of the three others were not made public as requested by their respective families.

Emeka Umeagbalasi, Head of Intersociety for Civil Liberties & Rule of Law told PREMIUM TIMES that human rights groups were not always able to detect and capture every case of extra-judicial killings or torture by policemen or soldiers in the South East.

“Some of the victims’ families are too afraid to come forward to report to us even when they know the identities of the policemen or soldiers that took their sons away,” Mr. Umeagbalasi said.

Massacre in school compound

What nobody was afraid to talk about was the mass killings by soldiers and policemen on February 9, 2016 of 22 IPOB members during a prayer session in a school compound in Aba, Abia State.

Human rights activists have called it an execution.

Emma Nmezu, IPOB spokesman, said to avoid unprovoked attacks of the type witnessed on December 2015 at the Onitsha Head Bridge, members of IPOB were advised to keep their activities off the road. Following this advice, over 100 IPOB supporters had on the fateful day assembled for a prayer meeting at the National High School, along Port Harcourt Road, Aba.

Survivors said that about 30 minutes later, at noon, the group was singing when a detachment of soldiers, policemen and naval personnel from a joint task force stormed the school compound and without much altercation began to shoot into the crowd.

Twenty-two people were shot dead on the spot. Over 30 others were left with various degrees of gunshot wounds. Among the 22 victims of the massacre were Uche Friday (30), from Asa in Abia State); Emeka Ekpemandu (35), from Owerre Nkwoji in Imo State; Chiavoghi Chibuikem, from Obingwa in Abia State; Nzubechi Onwumere (from Orlu in Imo State); Peter Chinemerem Ukasoanya (27), from Isialangwa North in Abia State; Chigozie Cyril Nwoye (23), from Umuna in Ezeagu, Enugu State; Chukwudi Onyekwere (26), from Aboh Mbaise in Imo State; and Chibuzor Maduagwu (28), from Amauzari in Mbano, Imo State.

Survivors’ accounts also had it that 12 of the 22 dead bodies were taken away by the soldiers who came in Hilux vans. The killer soldiers were said to have come from the 144 Battalion of the Nigerian Army, located at Asa in Ukwa West Local Government Area of Abia. At the time of the massacre, the 144 Battalion was commanded by Lt Col Kasim Umar Sidi.

The soldiers were joined by men of the Abia State Police Command as well as naval ratings from the Finance & Logistics Command of the Nigerian Navy, stationed in Owerre-Nta, Abia State. The Abia State Police Command was headed by Commissioner of Police Habila Hosea of service. The Area Commander was an Assistant Commissioner of Police, Peter Nwagbara.

The two officials declined to comment for this story. While Mr. Hosea did not answer or return calls, Mr. Nwagbara insisted all questions on the matter should be directed to the public relations officer of the command.

The Abia State Police Command publicly admitted to shooting and killing two IPOB members “for disturbing students of the National High School in Aba”.

Among the survivors of that shooting incident were Ikechukwu Ugwuoha, Amos Ezekiel, Okechukwu Nnebedum Nkume, Abia State Zonal Coordinator, Donatus Okeke and Joseph Okolie who had come for the IPOB meeting from Port Harcourt. They were arrested by the police, arraigned for “treasonable felony” along 15 other IPOB members and are currently remanded in Aba Prisons.

Bodies found in borrow pits

Four days after the killings at National High School, scavengers on February 13, 2016 raised the alarm upon finding 13 dead bodies in a borrow pit located along Aba Port Harcourt Road.

The borrow pit was months earlier converted to a refuse dump by the government of Abia State. IPOB claimed the bodies in the pit included those of its members arrested and taken away by soldiers who stormed the prayer meeting in the school premises. The dead men were obvious victims of extra-judicial killings.

Photographs seen by PREMIUM TIMES revealed that the men were lying face down with pieces of clothes tied over their eyes. The bodies were dumped in a group of eight, three and two respectively.

Eight of the dead men had their hands tied behind their backs with Biafra flags said to have been among personal items taken away by the soldiers after the school compound shooting days earlier. An amateur photograph earlier taken with a mobile phone captures some soldiers and other unidentified persons dumping fresh corpses from a van into a mass grave. The 144 Battalion military barracks is about 10 kilometers away from the Borrow Pit.

Concerned members of IPOB and the human rights organization, Intersociety for Civil Liberties & Rule of Law, were among the first people to visit the borrow pit on Sunday, February 14, 2016. As words spread, representatives of Amnesty International came to the site on Thursday, February 18, 2016.

Three more corpses were discovered in another borrow pit behind a mosque located between the Timber Market and the Arewa Onions Market, near Uratta Junction, along Aba-Port Harcourt Road. The three corpses were covered with leaves after being doused with chemical substances suspected to be acid and embalmment fluid. The choice of chemicals was probably to shrink the corpses to the bones, make victims’ identification difficult while keeping the bodies odourless.

Amnesty research group, led by Justine Ijeomah, was reported to have said they were “investigating the strong allegations of excessive application of force by the Nigerian security forces against peaceful and nonviolent IPOB protesters during their protests in Anambra, Enugu and Abia States”.

The Amnesty team had on that Thursday, February 18, when they first visited the burrow pit, taken photograph and video evidences. However when the team returned on Wednesday, March 2, they were shocked to find that the 13 corpses had been set on fire and were smouldering. Obviously, someone was determined to destroy the evidence. Amnesty International has video recordings of the burning skulls and skeletons.

Petitions to UN Rights Commission

Following the discovery of burning corpses, human rights groups working in South East Nigeria have petitioned the National Security Adviser, Chief Justice of Nigeria, the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, United Nations Chief Repertoire on Extra Judicial Killings, the European Union, among others.

Following expressions of concern by international bodies of extra-judicial activities against indigenous groups in the South East, the Nigerian Army announced on February 21 that it had dispatched an investigative team to Aba to ascertain claims of massacre of 22 IPOB members. The announcement was made by the Provost Marshal, Nigerian Army, Brig-Gen. Ayuba Tedman Hamman, during the commissioning of the newly established Human Rights Desk, Department of Civil-Military Affairs, Army Headquarters, Abuja.

“I want to say that since COAS (Chief of Army Staff) was appointed I have been inundated with complaints of human rights reports,” Mr. Hamman said. “I think there is a lot of gap, and that’s why this desk was established…

“We have sent an investigative team to ascertain the issue in Abia State about the complaint that our men shot some people involved in peaceful protests. I have confidence in our team and I know this was a joint operation but since we are part of it, we still need to verify. We investigate and at the end of the day prosecute the culprits.”

Over three months after, the outcome of the military investigation is yet to be made public. Human rights observers say the military investigation was dead on arrival given that three days before Mr. Hamman’s public assurances, the Nigerian Army had announced it had temporarily relocated the tactical headquarters of its 14 Brigade headquarters from Ohafia to Aba in an effort to curb the activities of IPOB and MASSOB.

The Commanding Officer, 14 Brigade Ohafia, Brigadier General Lawrence Fejoku, told newsmen he was in Aba to put in check the menace of pro-Biafra agitators and other violent crimes.

Mr. Fejoku also used that opportunity to deny that the military shot and killed 22 unarmed pro-Biafran supporters during a prayer session in Aba.

The killing continues

The Nigerian Army and the police on May 30 admitted killing no fewer than five persons when members of IPOB and MASSOB trooped out across the South-East states in marches to commemorate the 49th anniversary of the declaration of the defunct Biafra Republic by late warlord, Odumegwu Ojukwu.

Activists said the crowds were unarmed and that many more people were killed than the security agencies are ready to admit.

But the army claimed that in killing the pro-Biafra activists and wounding several others, its troops acted in self-defence as well as in defence of lives and property of peace-loving Nigerians.

The Nigerian government is yet to investigate the killings.

 

Police Smashes Kaduna Killer Gang

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Force PRO, Olabisi Kolawole
Force PRO, Olabisi Kolawole

Four suspects in the kidnapping and murder of an army colonel, Samaila Yunusa, have been arrested by the police during an operation conducted by the Inspector General of Police Intelligence Response Team, IRT, and the Kaduna State Command SIB operatives.

Yunusa was abducted and subsequently murdered in Kaduna on March 27, and his corpse was dumped along the road.

A statement signed by Olabisi Kolawole, an Assistant Commissioner of Police and Force Public Relations Officer, said the arrest was as a result of intelligence which led to the arrest of a Prison Warder named Abdullahi Adamu, a close associate of one of the prime suspects who was using the mobile phone stolen from the slain Colonel.

“Further investigation led to the arrest of two (2) of the prime suspects, namely: Ibrahim Kabiru ‘m’, 23, (aka uztaz) and Ebele Precious ‘m’, 41 (aka pastor), while the gang leader Emeka Okeke Cyprain ‘m’, 44, and one other member of the syndicate, Chijioke Ugwuanyi, ‘m’, 42 (aka CJ) were later arrested,” she stated

Items recovered by the Police from the gang, which specialised in car snatching and truck hijacking in the State, include one AK 47 rifle, two magnum pistols, one Nissan Pathfinder Jeep and documents of six houses located in Anambra State.

While commending the IGP IRT and operatives of the Kaduna State SIB detectives for their commitment, diligence and professionalism which led to the breakthrough and subsequent recovery of the weapons and a stolen Jeep, the Inspector-General of Police, IGP Solomon E. Arase, fdc, enjoined the citizens to continue to support the Police with relevant information.

Meanwhile, all the four suspects arrested in connection with the crime are presently in custody of the police and would soon be arraigned before the court.

Kolawole said efforts were on to arrest the other members of the gang.

FG Admits Buhari, Three Ministers Are Sick

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President Buhari
President Buhari

Babachir Lawal, Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF, has said President Muhammadu Buhari, who is on a 10 day medical vacation in the United Kingdom, is indeed sick.

Lawal made the disclosure at the Federal Executive Council meeting today.

He also revealed that three of Buhari’s ministers are also very ill. The ministers are Aisha Alhassan, Minister of Women Affairs, Adamu Adamu, Minister of Education and Ibrahim Jibril, Minister of State for Environment.

The SGF said Alhassan, popularly called “Mama Taraba” had been down and had to undergo a surgery in the United States.

Lawal prayed for their quick recovery.

There have been media reports indicating that Buhari may be suffering from ear and brain cancer, but there has not been any official corroboration.

Femi Adeshina, spokesman of the president, had denied reports that Buhari was sick and told reporters that he was only going for medical vacation.

 

Jonathan’s Cousin Gets Bail

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Azibaola Robert
Azibaola Robert

A Federal high Court sitting in Abuja has granted bail to Robert Azibaola, a cousin to former President Jonathan, to the tune of N500 million.

Azibaola, his wife Stella and their company, Oneplus Holdings limited were arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crime Commission for allegedly collecting the sum of $40 million from Sambo Dasuki, former National Security Adviser.

Trial judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba also ordered him to provide two sureties in like sum, and who must have landed property in Asokoro or Maitama Districts of Abuja. The sureties must also provide evidence of payment of income tax for the past three years.

However, the accused will remain in prison custody pending when he is able to meet his bail conditions.

Navy Arrests Pipeline Bomber

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Navy-Ship-

The Nigerian Navy on Tuesday paraded one Michael John, suspected to be the main coordinator of the bomb attacks on oil and gas infrastructure in the state.

John, who is suspected to be a member of the gang that killed three soldiers at Jones Creek three months ago, was paraded with his face covered, at the Naval base in Warri, Delta State.

His arrest came as the federal government is offering the militants an option of dialogue in order to end the ongoing crisis.

Commander of the Nigerian Navy Ship, NNS Delta, Ramie Mohammed, refused to comment on whether the suspect was a member of the Niger Delta Avengers but said he was arrested in connection with an attack on an onshore pipeline in Forcados.

“This arrest came after several weeks of trailing and arrest of several of his foots soldiers. The suspect is also deeply involved in pipeline vandalism to steal crude oil. He steals crude from abandoned oil well heads and pipelines in Okpoko and Obodo, Warri South-West Local Government Area, Delta State. Navy believes with his arrest, attacks on Chevron/NNPC oil and gas facilities will abate,” he said.

The Navy also paraded a suspect arrested on May 29 in connection with the killing of a soldier, police officer and one other victim.

The Navy commander said the suspects’ identities were shielded so as not to compromise ongoing investigations which could possibly lead to the arrest of other members of their respective gangs.

Militants Rejects Dialogue, Blow Up Another Pipeline In Delta State

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Pipeline-Explosion

The Niger Delta Avengers, NDA, on Wednesday said it is not interested in negotiations with the federal government.

Early on Wednesday, the militant group tweeted that any group that is negotiating with any committee formed by the government was doing so on its own.

The tweet also announced that the group has blown up oil well RMP 20 belonging to Chevron.

The affected oil facility is said to be between Opia and Dagbolo villages in Warri North, Delta State.

The recent attack is coming despite the two-week ceasefire declared by the federal government on Monday to create room for dialogue with the militants and leaders from the region.

Professor Yami Osinbajo, who is Nigeria’s acting President in the absence of President Muhammadu Buhari, had on Tuesday in Abuja, met with Governors of the Niger Delta states, Service Chiefs, Minister of Defence, Dan Ali, Minister of State for Petroleum, Ibe Kachikwu, Special Adviser to the President on Amnesty, Paul Boro, among other stakeholders, and it was agreed that military operations in the state be halted pending the outcome of the negotiations.


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Stephen Keshi, Nigerian Football Legend Is Dead

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Stephen Keshi

Stephen Keshi

Former captain and coach of the Super Eagles of Nigeria, Stephen Keshi has been confirmed dead.

Aged 54, the Big Boss, as he was fondly called by many people, reportedly suffered a heart attack on Wednesday.

Keshi was one of only two men to win the Africa Cup of Nations both as a player and a coach.

He was captain of the Super Eagles team that won the 1994 Nations Cup in South Africa and narrowly missed out on a World Cup quarter-final place the same year.

He then led the Nigerian national team to the 2013 Nations Cup title in South Africa and the last 16 at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

He was sacked for a final time in July 2015 following series of disagreements with the Nigerian Football Federation, NFF.

Keshi had coached the Malian and Togolese national teams. But he made history in Togo when he led the country to its first ever FIFA World Cup in Germany in 2006.

Keshi’s playing career included a spell for Belgian club side Anderlecht.

It would be recalled that Keshi lost his wife to cancer in December 2015 and family members said he never got over that tragic incident.

House Of Reps. Summons Governor Bello

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Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello

Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello

Governor of Kogi State, Yahaya Bello, and the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, are to appear before a panel of the Federal House of Representatives Tuesday over the persistent leadership crisis rocking the State House of Assembly.

The panel created by Speaker Yakubu Dogara will be chaired by House Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila.

The Governor is accused of encouraging five members of the 25-man Kogi State assembly to continue to sit and carry out legislative functions despite a resolution of the National Assembly to the contrary.

Kogi State Assembly had been ‘on fire’ following the impeachment of the Speaker by only five members. The impeachment was later nullified by a federal High Court in Abuja on May 19, but Governor Bello has continued to recognize the five-man legislator.

He presented the State’s 2016 budget and his cabinet nominees to the five member house, an action the federal lawmakers say was illegal.

Following the crisis the National assembly had taken over the functions of the Kogi State assembly, directing the Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase to seal up the Assembly premises pending the resolution of the crisis.

Meanwhile, the Army Chief, Buratai was dragged into the case because Governor Bello had allegedly used soldiers to give protection to the five members to continue to sit in defiance of court orders and the resolution of the House of Representatives.

The federal lawmakers threatened that if the Governor refuses to appear before the panel, they will have no other option than to commence impeachment processes against him.

Bayelsa Doctors Threaten Strike 

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Nigerian-Medical-Association

The Nigeria Medical Association, NMA, Bayelsa State branch, on Tuesday threatened to begin an industrial action if the state government refuses to pay the over 5-month salary arrears owed its members.

Israel Jeremiah, state chairman of the association, announced at a news conference at the association’s secretariat in Yenagoa,  that the NMA has issued a 21-day ultimatum to the government to pay up or face a strike action.

According to Jeremiah, three affiliates of NMA in the state, namely the Association of Resident Doctors in Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital, Okolobiri; Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria and National Association of Government General Medical and Dental Practitioners, will be taking part in the strike

He noted that House Officers, who are the most vulnerable in the medical profession, are currently faced with untold hardship as they can no longer meet their obligations.

“Despite the untold hardship occasioned by this nonpayment of salaries for five months now, our members have kept faith with our Hippocratic Oath and continued to render services to ensure that Bayelsa people enjoy adequate healthcare. The continued non-payment of salary has adversely affected healthcare delivery in the state. Hospital attendance has markedly reduced, patients can no longer procure drugs, pay for tests, settle bills on discharge and in the worst case scenario, opt to die at home,” Jeremiah said.

The NMA said it was not part of the agreement reached with organised labour that workers in the state would take 50 per cent salary pending the improvement of the state’s revenue.

The association said since it was excluded from the meetings where the agreement was reached, its members would not be bound by the agreement, hence they will insist on full payment of their salaries.

The NMA however urged the Speaker of Bayelsa state House of Assembly, Konbowei Benson, Royal fathers, and all well-meaning people in the state to intervene in order to avoid the impending strike and the attendant consequences.

Court Dismisses Wada’s Petition Against Kogi Governor

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Idris Wada
Idris Wada

The Kogi State Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal has dismissed the petition filed by Idris Wada,  candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the November 21 Governorship election in the state, against the nomination of  Yahaya Bello as governorship candidate of the All Progressive Congress, APC, for lack of merit.

The tribunal led by Justice Hamima Mohammed said Wada lacked the locus standi to challenge Bello’s nomination.

It held that the nomination and sponsorship of Bello by the APC as its candidate in the election following the death of the original candidate, Abubakar Audu, was purely a domestic affair of the party and neither the PDP nor the tribunal nor any other person who did not participate in the process had the legal capacity to it.

The tribunal however said it was still considering the merit of the petition jointly filed by Wada and his running mate, Sunday Awoniyi and the PDP, asking the tribunal to return Wada as winner of the election since he polled higher number of votes than Bello.

Wada posited that Bello polled only 6,805 votes in the December 5 supplementary election and could not possibly inherit the over 240,000 votes polled by Audu, the initial candidate of the APC.

Wada asked the tribunal to declare him winner of the election and the validly elected governor of Kogi state, having garnered a total of 204,867 votes in the elections.

But Justice Mohammed ruled that the votes recorded in the November 21 election belonged to the various political parties as had been established in various rulings of the Supreme Court.

It added that INEC was right to have collated the 240,857 votes polled by the APC through the the late Audu, and merged them with the 6,885 votes recorded by the party in the supplementary poll.

On whether Bello should be disqualified because he had no running mate, the tribunal held that the issue was not part of conditions of qualification to contest as governor under section 177 of the Constitution.

The tribunal held that James Faleke was still the deputy governorship candidate of the APC in the supplementary election since he did not withdraw his candidacy as spelt out under section 35 of the Electoral Act which required him to give 45 days’ notice to his party before the election and his party would in turn notify INEC.

The tribunal had dismissed the petition by James Faleke, late Audu’s running mate, yesterday for lack of merit as the tribunal held that he had no locus standi to challenge the process.