The commission was
reacting to the calls by the All Progressives Congress, Labour
Party and their candidates for a total cancellation of
the controversial governorship election in Anambra State on Saturday.
It said since the Chief
Returning Officer, Prof. James Epoke, had announced most of the results,
INEC had no power to do anything contrary.
“By law, those results are now beyond
the purview of INEC to invalidate. Only the courts have that power now to do
so,” Mr. Kayode Idowu, the Chief Press Secretary to the
INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, said in Abuja.
Idowu added that with the
inclusive nature of the election as declared by Onukogu, all that “the
commission can do is to conduct a supplementary election so that the CRO
can make a return.”
He explained that INEC
was “ awaiting the return of field officers, who went for the
election so that every report obtained ,
especially concerning logistical issues, could be painstakingly
scrutinised.”
It is after this, he said, that Jega
and his national commissioners would meet to fix a date for the
supplementary election.
The APC
candidate, Chris Ngige; his PDP and LP
counterparts, Tony Nwoye and Mr. Ifeanyi Uba, had on Sunday
jointly called for a total cancellation of the poll.
They told INEC
to conduct a fresh election before the March, 2014 handover date by
the incumbent Governor, Peter Obi.
Epoke had in Awka on
Monday morning that the election was declared
inconclusive because it did not meet certain requirements of
the Electoral Act.
He said that the Act
required that for a winner to be declared in an election, the
difference in the total voting population of the areas where the
exercise was cancelled should be less than the difference between the
votes scored by the candidate with the highest votes and the votes of the
candidate with the second highest votes.
He said in the case of Anambra
State, the total voting population of the areas in which election was
cancelled was 113,113.
The figure, according to him,
is higher than the 79,754 difference between the leading candidate’s votes and
the second highest candidate’s votes.
With this, the CRO said,
INEC had no choice but to declare the election inconclusive.
Epoke added, “The rule guiding
this election is that for a winner to emerge, he must have majority of votes
cast and the required spread of 25 per cent of votes in two-thirds of the local
government areas.
“We observed that due to many
reasons, there were a lot of cancelled votes that made it difficult
for a winner to emerge.”
The CRO said the winner
of the election would be only be declared after election had been
conducted in the areas where the exercise was cancelled.
He also explained that
election was cancelled in some polling units because of
snatching of ballot materials; delivering of coded ballot materials to wrong
collation centres and the non-arrival of election materials at
polling units.
In the election result received
and released by INEC, Chief Willie Obiano of the All Progressives Grand
Alliance led with 174,710 votes.
The Peoples Democratic Party
candidate, Mr. Tony Nwoye, was second with 94,956 votes while the All
Progressives Congress candidate, Dr. Chris Ngige, was third
with 92,300 votes.
The Labour Party candidate,
Ifeanyi Ubah, came fourth with 37,446 votes and the
Progressives Peoples Alliance candidate, Mr. Godwin Ezeemo, was
fifth with 5,056 votes.
The total valid votes cast in the
election were 413,005.
INEC announced that
the supplementary election would take place in 15 local government
areas, where 113,113 voters were denied the right to vote because election was
cancelled in their polling units.
Most of the cancelled polling
units(160) are in Idemilli North LGA where 89,997 voters were
disenfranchised.
Also affected are Idemili
South with one polling unit and 636 voters ;
Ekwusigo, three polling units with 884 voters; Ayamelum,
three polling units with 1,247 voters; Anambra East, one polling
unit with 250 voters; Anambra West, six polling units with 2,000 voters;
Anaocha, one polling unit with 276 voters ; and Awka
North, two polling units with 1,366 voters.
The rest
are Awka South, one polling unit with 249
voters; Nnewi South, two polling units with 376 voters ; Onitsha North,
one polling unit with 484 voters; Onitsha South, 17 polling units with
12,279 voters ; Orumba North, four polling units with 588
voters; and Oyi four polling units with 1,202 voters.
The failure of INEC to fix a
date for the supplementary election created some confusion
especially among the poll monitors and journalists.
Many waited till Monday
afternoon before moving out of their hotel rooms when it
became obvious to them that INEC had not decided on a date for the
supplementary poll.
On Monday evening, the
riot policemen deployed in INEC office in Awka were also seen
moving out after some ceremonies.
Tags
Politics
This issue of Anambra state is getting worse. I don't no what will happen in 2015 election. One state problem can not be solved what of the remaining 35? I guess that Democracy is not suit for nigerians let us find anther solution somewhere else. Christians should adopt what is in the Bible, Muslims should adopt the Sharia and the traditionalist should adopt their culture.
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