The three-member Ondo Governorship
Election Petition Tribunal on Friday upheld the declaration of Governor
Olusegun Mimiko as the winner of the October 2012 governorship election in the
state.
The Independent National Electoral
Commission had on October 21, 2012, announced Mimiko as the winner of the poll,
which was widely adjudged as free, fair and very credible by local and foreign
election observers and monitors.
Chairman of the tribunal, Justice
Andovar Kaka’an dismissed the petitions of Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu of the Action
Congress of Nigeria and Chief Olusola Oke of the Peoples Democratic Party for
lacking in merit.
Kaka’an added that the petitioners
and their witnesses failed to prove beyond reasonable doubts, allegations of
irregularities, violence and non-compliance with the Electoral Act pleaded in
the suits.
Kaka’an also ruled that the issue of
illegal injection of voter register allegedly carried out by the Independent
National Electoral Commission was a pre-election matter that should have been
challenged at a high court before the October 20, 2012 election.
He said since INEC had supplied soft
copies of the voter register 30 days before the poll to all parties in the
election, anyone who discovered any form of irregularity should have approached
a high court to complain.
The panel also dismissed the reports
of the expert witnesses of the petitioners, because apart from the fact that
their submissions were discovered not to be factual, they confessed during
cross-examination that their services were not at the instance of the court.
Kaka’an further held that there was
no evidence supplied either by the petitioners or their witnesses to justify
the fact that the 164,072 names allegedly injected into the 2012 register by
INEC was done in collaboration with the Labour Party, whose candidate won the
poll.
He added that there was no proof to
show that either Mimiko, who won the poll, or his party benefited from the
alleged injection of the register with illegal voters.
He said the expert witnesses
confessed during cross-examination by counsel to the defendants that they
carried out their assignments for financial considerations and that their
clients needed their report to substantiate claims in their petitions.
He declared that all the submissions
of Akeredolu and Oke in their petitions and the evidences of their witnesses
were “bundles of primary and secondary hearsay, which failed woefully to
substantiate their claims.
The panel chairman said the
petitioners were inconsistent and failed to substantiate their allegations with
adequate proofs.
He said, “The petitioners failed
woefully to prove their allegations of crimes allegedly perpetrated during the
poll by the defendants beyond any reasonable doubts.
“No single witness testified that he
or she did not vote or that the votes were taken away to unauthorised places
after the election while no police report, which indicated violence during the
election, was tendered by any of the parties.
“The issues relating to the voter
register are pre-election matters which the tribunal has no jurisdiction to
entertain.”
The tribunal also carpeted the
petitioners for their failure to extend pleadings to all the polling units in
the state while none of them brought a single voter card or ballot box to the
court to prove their allegations of non-compliance with the Electoral Act 2010.
He stated that none of the witnesses
called by the petitioners actually witnessed the commission of crimes during
the election by the defendants but relied substantially on information from
their friends and party members.
He, therefore, dismissed both suits
for lacking in merit and their inability to prove all allegations raised beyond
reasonable doubts.
However, both Akeredolu and Oke had
said their legal teams had been directed to start a fresh process to appeal the
judgment.
Oke said, “The ruling fell short of
the expectation of the Ondo State people and we shall challenge it at the Court
of Appeal.
“The party is not surprised as we had
earlier reported the compromising attitude of this panel, when it erroneously
struck out the name of our party and vital paragraphs of our petition, which we
challenged at the Appeal Court and our prayers were upheld.
“We are consulting as a party with
our candidate, Chief Olusola Oke and the national leadership of the party and
our legion of counsel on the next step we are going to take.”
Akeredolu, through a statement by the
Publicity Secretary of the ACN in the state, Mr. Rotimi Agbede, also expressed
his resolve to head for the appellate court.
He said, “It is rather unfortunate
that the trial judges chose to close their eyes on the overwhelming oral and
documentary evidences presented by the petitioners even when INEC principally
refused to defend itself at the tribunal.
“The ruling of the tribunal, no
doubt, had put the judiciary on trial in the open court of the people who
relied heavily on the courts to dispense justice without fair or favour.”
But Mimiko said the verdict had
confirmed that the Nigerian judiciary was living up to its role as the final
impartial arbiter in all contentious matters.
He said, “We, as government, are
mindful of the onerous task of meeting the development challenges of our
people; we know that the fostering of understanding between the government and
the people will engender a more conducive environment for the deepening of the
dividends of good governance.”
Tags
Politics
Leave guvnor mimiko alone CAN and PDP. Let peace reign in ONDO state. U people no get shame. Yeye people.
ReplyDelete