Uduaghan, Osunbor, Indicted For Electoral Fraud

Uduaghan, Osunbor, Indicted For Electoral Fraud

Delta State Governor, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan alongside former governor of Edo State, Oserheimen Osunbor and current governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in Benue State, Terhemen Tazoor have been indicted by the National Human Rights Commission for perpetrating electoral impunity.

The commission also indicted deputy governor of Sokoto State, Mukhtar Shehu Shagari, former Senators Adefemi Kila (Ekiti Central), Tanko Ayuba (Kebbi South), Ayo Arise (Ekiti North), Hosea Ehinlawo (Ondo North), former members of the House of Representatives, Temitayo Fawehinmi (Ondo), Tunde Isiaq (Lagos) and a former Speaker of the Kogi State House of Assembly and several others.

Included in the long list of indicted were Deputy National Legal Adviser of the All Progressives Congress, James Ocholi, and a former National Secretary of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party, Shettima Ali, were also listed.

These were just some of the 131 persons, groups and institutions indicted in the Commission’s final report on the investigation of the election petitions filed at various election petition tribunals across the country’s six geo-political zones between 2007 and 2011.

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The lists also had names from the Independent National Electoral Commission officials in many Nigerian states.

The commission also indicted the PDP, the defunct ANPP and ACN for the same offence in its report.

Last year the commission had released a 146-page interim report in which they indicted the Nigerian Judiciary, the Nigerian Police Force, and INEC for perpetrating impunity in Nigeria’s electoral process.

The report was titled, “An Independent Review of Evidence of Gross Violations of the Rights to Participate in Government to Public Service and to fair trial through the Election Petition Process in Nigeria — 2007 and 2011.”

The report was made by a seven member expert Technical Working Group, TWG, constituted by the NHRC and chaired by Nsongurua Udombana, a professor. The other members are Mohammed Akanbi, Oluyemisi Bamgbose, Ifeoma Enemo, Muhammed Ladan and Solomon Ukhuegbe.

In the new report, which is 284 pages long, they state that the indicted had committed crimes in two ways, which includes theft of the mandate of the people to elect their leaders; and secondly in the inability of the legal process and institutions to ensure effective accountability for such theft.

They said that many cases which they investigated showed that corrupt practices occured before and during elections are the falsification of age and forgery of certificates, use of touts and security men to disrupt elections and facilitate rigging and manipulation of election results.

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They gave an example during the 2007 election  when Mr. Isiaq, a candidate for Ibeju-Lekki Federal Constituency in the South West was indicted by the election tribunal because he falsified his school certificate in order to meet the constitutional requirements for office, but he was not prosecuted.

Another case, this time in Kogi, Mr. Olafemi was unseated from the legislature because the petitioners proved beyond reasonable doubt that he led his men to commit acts of corrupt practices and non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

The commission also explored the case filed by the Delta Democratic Peoples Party governorship candidate Great Ogboru against Mr. Uduaghan of the PDP in which the governor lost.

It quoted the Court of Appeal as saying in its judgement that “the implication of the absence of these constitutive acts that define an election is that the votes which the third respondent returned for the first respondent (Uduaghan) on April 14, 2007 were not obtained through due electoral process….

“The consequence is that since 2007, the aforesaid respondent has been sojourning under the roof of a veritable house of cards, worse still, a house of cards erected on the slippery quicksand of electoral jiggery pockery!

“In the circumstance, we have no choice than to enter an Order dismantling his over three and half years’ illegal occupancy of the very symbol of the peoples’ mandate…”

They said that the action of the governor and Delta Governorship/Legislative Houses Election Petition Tribunal, Asaba, as “administrative/judicial misconduct.”

They also cited the case in which ACN's Adams Oshiomhole assumed office, saying that Osunbor was indicted alongside INEC, its Resident Electoral Commissioner in Edo and the police.

The quoted the tribunal court, which said: “the quandary here is should the proposition including where the evidence of the witness is that police officers were in fact doing the shooting, the thumb-printing or the ballot stuffing.”

The stated that the act of Osunbor and his party, the PDP alongside the police as “criminal and administrative.”

Mr. Terheimen, who emerged governorship candidate, last December was the first Respondent in the petition on the election into the Makurdi North State Constituency in the Benue State House of Assembly.

His party, PDP and INEC were the 2nd and INEC 3rd Respondents.

The Commission quoted the Court of Appeal while delivering the judgement as saying: “The law is that oral evidence is inadmissible to vary, add or to take away from content of a document…The 1st Respondent cannot therefore by oral evidence add to the content of exhibit P.1 or explain it. The failure of the 1st Respondent to tender certified true copy of Form EC8A (i) with three pages is fatal to his claim that he scored votes against the 1st Petition’s 8 votes in Tse-Tsav polling station.

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“By Section 151 (1) of the Electoral Act, all parties to an election petition have access to documents in the custody of the 3rd Respondent. In this case we hold and construe the refusal or failure of the Respondent to tender either the original copy or certified true copy of Form EC8A (i) with the three pages as a deliberate concealment of facts and we invoke the provisions of Section 149 (d) of the Evidence Act against the respondents….”

It also said, “The petitioners have made allegations of arbitrary allocation of votes to the parties/candidates in exhibit P.6 in respect of Tse-tsav polling unit. The only way this can be countered is for the Respondents in this case to tender the various result sheets.

“From all we have stated above, we hold and find that votes were arbitrary allocated to the parties/candidates in serial No. 13 in Exhibit P.6. The submissions of Leaned Counsel for the Respondent that the 1st Respondent was not found or proved to have been responsible is of no moment. The scores/votes allocated to both the petitioners and the 1st and 2nd Respondents by the 3rd Respondent in Exhibit P.6 are unlawful, and we so hold.”

They however stated that this report was not a guilty verdict on those indicted but just information distilled from judicial records aimed at drawing the attention of relevant prosecutorial and other agencies to act.

It stressed, “Persons indicted in the report are presumed innocent until relevant authorities have “commenced further investigations to establish a prima facie case for prosecution or other disciplinary measures.”

The Commission also made recommendations to all relevant institutions in the electoral process.

It, however, stressed that, “No number of recommendations can replace the need for political will on the part of all concerned branches and agencies of the Nigerian State, as well as the INEC, political leaders, political parties and civic organisations.”

Source: Legit.ng

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