Hon. Emeka Nwaobi, member, Delta state House of Assembly. |
It was another day of victory for Hon. Emeka Nwaobi, of the
Delta State House of Assembly where he represents Delta North State
constituency when on Tuesday, September 17, 2019 he secured a pin fall against
his opponent, Nnabudo Chinye at the tribunal over election matters.
On that day, the National and State House of Assembly Election
Petitions Tribunal sitting in Asaba, Delta State, has affirmed the victory of
Nwaobi, in the election held on Saturday 9th March, 2019.
The Tribunal in a unanimous judgment, held Nnabudo Chinye and
the All Progressives Congress (APC) failed woefully to prove their claims
against Nwaobi.
Therefore, the tribunal held that the election of Aniocha North
state constituency was conducted substantially in compliance with the electoral
Act, and declared accordingly that the petition failed and is hereby dismissed.
It declared that Nwaobi of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, is
the lawful winner of the election, having scored the majority of lawful votes
cast in the election while affirming that the said election substantially
complied with the Electoral act 2010, as amended and the INEC guidelines for
the election.
The three-man panel headed by Justice A. M. Abubakar, held that
the Petitioners which included All Progressive Congress (APC) and Mr. Nnabudo
Chinye, the party's House of Assembly candidate for the Aniocha North House of
Assembly poll, failed woefully on all grounds of the petition brought before
it, having been unable to prove the allegations of non compliance to the
electoral act, corrupt practices, non accreditation of voters, improper
accreditation, over voting and non use of smart card readers in the election.
“The burden of proof for improper accreditation lies on
the shoulders of the petitioners which fact has not shifted until he proves
same, and we found no merit in this allegation, based on the fact that the
petitioners failed to prove same as required by the law.
“We wish to re-emphasize that over-voting in law is determined
by subtracting the total number of votes cast at the election from the totality
of number of registered voters from the area or constituency and not the
formula adopted by the petitioners here”, the tribunal held.
It was also held in the two-hour judgment that over voting
should be based on credible evidences and not on imagination, affirming that
having gone through the evidences provided by the petitioner, they could not
find any credible proof of over voting as alleged by the petitioners in the
eight wards where they alleged incidences of over voting occurred.
Rather, it was their findings that the total number of
registered voters in eight wards of 57,928 fell short of 18, 501 votes from the
said eight wards.
The tribunal in the unanimous judgment also faulted the
petitioners for not complying with the Electoral Act and INEC guidelines by
failing woefully to prove their allegations, polling unit by polling unit; ward
by ward and how it has affected the outcome of the election.
It held also that seeking the nullification of the election and
at the same time praying the tribunal to declare them the winner of the
election is contradictory to the reliefs they are seeking and contrary to the
relevant sections of the first schedule of the Electoral Act 2010 as
amended.
“The Petitioner is duty bound to submit the whole results of the
constituency for the court to determine that the total number is fatal to the
determination of the petition”, they held in the judgment.
Furthermore, the tribunal affirmed that the dumping of voters
register without linking it to over voting, and at the same time failing to
call a vital witness to prove the allegation of non-accreditation, as well
as failing to produce the thumb printed papers or produce an expert, and
therefore held that the evidence produce by the petitioner does not have
probative value.
Other members of the tribunal were Hon Justice F.O Ibiam and Hon
Justice J. M Ayua.
The Petitioners had based their petition on four grounds and
prayed among other reliefs that, the result of the election in eight wards
of Aniocha North State Constituency should be nullified and that the
retention of the second respondent as the member representing Aniocha North
State Constituency in the Delta State House of Assembly be nullified and the
Tribunal should declare him as the duly elected and returned member of the
Delta State House of Assembly, Aniocha North State constituency, having scored
the majority of the lawful votes cast at the said election of 9th of March,
2019.
However, in the lead judgment, the tribunal held that the
petitioners failed on all the grounds of the petition and consequently
dismissed their petition and affirmed Emeka Nwaobi and the PDP as the winners
of the said election for Aniocha North State Constituency.
The Tribunal stated: “The petitioners failed woefully to prove
their claims. We hold that the election of Aniocha North House of Assembly was
conducted substantially in compliance with the electoral Act. The petition
fails and it is hereby dismissed for lack of merit.”
Speaking in an interview with newsmen after the judgment, Barr
John Okoriko who is a counsel to one of the respondents, commended the Judgment
and described it as a demonstration of judicial erudition, saying that it was a
painstaking judgment which attested to the point that the allegation of
non-accreditation, the allegations of over-voting and the alleged issue of non
use of the card reader were all a ruse based on the fact that they were unable
to substantiate the allegation with the required documentary evidences.
Barr Okoriko affirmed that the Judgment was very fair and
transparent, saying that it actually establishes the point that the petitioners
had no case at all in the first place in respect of those allegations relating
to the conduct of the said election in Aniocha North State Constituency.
For the former Chairman of Aniocha North Local Government, Hon.
Jaunty Okwudi, who was also in court, the judgment in favour of Nwaobi is the
Lord’s doing.
Okwudi said: “The devil has a way of trying to do things. The
judgment shows that the petition was a wild goose chase, as it showed that the
petitioner failed to prove that he is more popular.”
Nwaobi said: “From the brief I was given, I heard that the
judgment was very well dissected. I knew from the beginning that the petition
was dead on arrival, and I saw it as the work of wickedness. Yet, it was good
that the judges in their wisdom took the position that the election was well
conducted .I all we give God the glory. I know that my being in the House of Assembly
was designed by God. I thank God for what He has done for me.”
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