
BARRING any last-minute changes, the
Rivers State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Abuja
will start hearing evidence from witnesses today.
The All Progressives Congress (APC) and
its candidate, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, are challenging the declaration of
Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) Nyesom Wike as the governor.
Peterside and his party want the tribunal to call for a re-run on the basis
that there was no proper election in the state.
Wike and PDP insist the election was free, fair and credible and should stand.
About 1,100 witnesses are expected to be called.
The APC and Peterside will call 200
witnesses and tender material evidence to prove its case. INEC intends
to call 400 witnesses; although Wike was reluctant to attach a number to
his intended witnesses, the tribunal has ordered him to call only 300
witnesses within the 10 days allotted to him to conduct his case. The
PDP intends to call 200 witnesses also.
The tribunal has also specified the time
each witness will spend. A star witness has been allotted 85 minutes –
examination-in-chief, 30 minutes; cross-examination, 40 minutes and
re-examination, 15 minutes. Ordinary witness is expected to spend on 20
minutes – examination-in-chief, 5 minutes; cross-examination, 10 minutes
and re-examination, 5 minutes.
The tribunal has said it will sit at 10am every day, including weekends, if necessary.
The legal teams of the two parties are
optimistic of carrying the day. While exiting the tribunal’s sitting
venue on August 28, lawyers representing the disputants, on being told
that the tribunal intends to commence trial today, expressed their
readiness for the next phase in the tribunal’s proceedings.
Akinlolu Olujinmi (SAN) leads the
petitioners’ legal team, while Emmanuel Ukala (SAN) leads Wike’s legal
team. Wole Olanipekun (SAN), who leads the team of the petitioners – APC
and its candidate, Umana Umana – at the Akwa Ibom State governorship
tribunal, is leading PDP’s team at the Rivers State governorship
tribunal, with Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN) as head of the INEC team.
As the tribunal opens trial in the
petition, a lot of issues will be revealed, which will determine the
eventual decision of the tribunal at the end of the day, the major being
the quality of evidence led by parties.
Although the petitioners have, so far,
survived all land mines thrown their way by the defendants, they have
also had rulings given against them on some vital applications.
On many occasions, the tribunal headed
by Justice Mu’azu Pindiga, refused moves by the respondents to truncate
the hearing of the petition.
First, they challenged the relocation of
the tribunal to Abuja from Port Harcourt for security reasons and
demanded its return to the Rivers State Capital. They had insisted that
it was wrong, by virtue of the 2005 decision of the Supreme Court in the
case of Ogboru against INEC, it was wrong for a tribunal to sit outside
a state where election was held to decide a dispute from such election.
The tribunal resolved the issue against them by holding that the tribunal’s relocation to Abuja on security ground was in order.
Second, the respondents challenged the
constitution of the tribunal and its jurisdiction to hear the petition.
Their argument was to the effect that the tribunal, having wrongly
constituted, lacked the powers to hear the petition by APC and
Peterside.
At a point too, the respondents also challenged Peterside’s locus standi (right
to sue), arguing that he was not validly elected a candidate of his
party. It was their contention that the APC did not serve INEC the
mandatory notice of its primary 21 days before the primary was held.
The tribunal resolved this set of issues
raised by the respondents against them, following which the petitioners
applied for the issuance of prehearing session notices on parties.
Again, the respondents raised objection,
faulting the petitioners’ application for prehearing session notices.
The respondents argued that the petitioners failed to pay the requisite
fee for its application.
The petitioners, in a counter-argument,
insisted that no fee was required for such application, a position the
tribunal upheld and dismissed the respondents’ objection.
It has not all been victory for the
petitioners as the tribunal had, on some occasions, refused the requests
by the APC and Peterside. The tribunal turned down the petitioners’
request to direct INEC to move materials used for the election to Abuja
to allow ease of inspection.
The petitioners had complained that the
respondent had consistently frustrated their (petitioners’) effort to
inspect the materials and obtained certified-true-copies (CTC) in line
with the leave granted them on June 11, 2015 by the tribunal. There were
allegations to the effect that INEC officials, working with thugs’
influenced by the PDP and Wike, had on some occasions, attacked
petitioners’ officials and experts, who were at INEC’s office to inspect
election materials.
The last request by the petitioners was for an order compelling INEC to allow them scan, photocopy the election materials.
The tribunal, in a ruling on August 28,
held that granting the petitioners’ request will amount to it varying
its subsisting order for inspection made on June 11.
Now that parties have been able to
streamline issues at the pre-hearing session, the picture of what the
trial process will look like is now fairly clear.
The petitioners have formulated three issues for the tribunal’s determination in deciding their petition. They are as follows:
*Whether, from the pleadings and
evidence led in the petition, the governorship election held on April
11 this year ought to be invalidated and a fresh election ordered, for
reasons of various acts of non-compliance with the provisions of the
Electoral Act 2010, the INEC manual for election officials 2015 as well
as INEC guidelines and regulations for the conduct of the election.
*Whether, from the pleadings and
evidence led by the petitioners, the governorship election for Rivers
State held on April 11 this year ought not to be invalidated by the
tribunal and a fresh election ordered for reasons of various acts of
corrupt practices that marred the conduct of the election.
*Whether, on account of the first two
issues, the petitioners have established that the 2nd respondent (Wike)
did not score the majority of lawful votes cast in the election to be
declared winner by the 1st respondent (INEC).
INEC, on its part, raised three issues
also. They are: Whether the petitioners have established that the 2nd
respondent was not duly elected by majority of the lawful votes cast at
the election; whether the petitioners have established that the election
was invalidated by issues of non-compliance with the Electoral Act,
which substantially affected the result of the election, and whether the
petitioners have established that the election was invalid by issues of
corrupt practices.
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