Tag: INEC

Peter Obi

Labour Party loses against INEC on transmission of results: Court Papers reveal

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About a month to the presidential election, the Labour Party lost a legal bid to compel the Independent National Electoral Commission to transmit results of the 2023 elections electronically, court papers revealed.

The judgment by Justice Emeka Nwite was not publicised. And INEC was not represented.

Nwite of the Federal High Court, quoting the relevant provisions of the Electoral Act dismissed Labour Party’s case on 23 January.

He held that Section 52(2) of the Electoral Act, 2022, cited by counsel to the party, Monday Mawah, provided for voting and transmission of results in accordance with the procedure to be determined by INEC.

According to him, this means the commission is at liberty to prescribe or choose the manner in which election results shall be transmitted.

A copy of the judgment was made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) today, coinciding with the renewed commotion by Labour and the Peoples Democratic Party over electronic transmission of results.

They have based their assaults, in the main, on the integrity of the 25 February election on this issue.

The Labour Party, through its lawyer, had, on Aug 22, 2022, filed the originating summons marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1454/2022 to sue INEC as sole respondent.

The party asked the court to determine whether having regards to combined effect of Sections 47 (2), 50 (2), 60(4), 60 (5) and 62 (1)(2) and other relevant provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022 the commission can still insist on manual collation of results in the general elections.

The LP sought two injunctive reliefs in the event that the question was resolved in its favour.

These include: “A declaration that the respondent has no power to opt for manual method other than the electronic method provided for by the relevant provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022.

“An order of this honourable court directing/compelling the respondent to comply with the Electoral Act, 2022 on electronic transmission of result in the forthcoming general elections. ”

However, INEC neither responded nor filed any process in the suit.

Mawah, in his argument submitted that in view of the provisions of the law, manual collation of result was unknown to the Electoral Act, 2022 and therefore must be rejected or disallowed by the court.

Delivering the judgment, Justice Nwite said: “it is indeed a trite law that the function of the court is no more than interpreting the law.

“In interpreting the law, the court is enjoined to interpret the status as they are without going outside them to bring in what the court would think was intended,” citing previous case to back his ruling.

According to him, the functions, roles and duties of the court in interpretation of statute is to give meaning and effect to clear and unambiguous word of the statute.

The judge said from the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel, the bone of contention or the sections that sought for interpretation were Sections 50(2) 60(5) and 62(2) of the Electoral Act, 2022.

He said Section 47(2) as cited by the lawyer only dealt with accreditation of voters using a Smart Card Reader but not collation or transmission of result as postulated by him.

“The provision of Section 60(5) of the Electoral Act, 2022 as cited above has provided for the transfer of election result including the total number of the accredited voters from the polling unit.

“Section 62(2) on the other hand provides for compilation, maintenance and continuous update of the register of election result as distinct database for all polling units’ results as collated in all elections conducted by the commission.

“The said Section 62(2) has mandated that such register of election results shall be kept in an electronic format by the commission at its national headquarters.

“Now a close reading of Section 50(2) has provided for voting and transmission of result to be done in accordance with the procedure to be determined by the commission.

“This is to say that the commission is at liberty to prescribe or choose the manner in which election results shall be transmitted,” he said.

Nwite equally held that Section 60(5) empowered the polling unit’s presiding officer to transfer the election results including the total number of accredited voters and results of the ballot in a manner to be prescribed by INEC.

“This is also to say the commission is again at liberty to prescribe to the Polling Units’ Presiding Officers the manner in which to collate and transfer the election results as well as the accredited number of voters in an election under the Act.

“In view of the foregoing, can the act of the defendant (INEC) in collating and transferring election results manually in the forthcoming 2023 general elections be said to be contrary to the relevant provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022?

“The answer can only be in the negative as there is no wherein the above cited sections where the commission or any of its agents is mandated to only use an electronic means in collating or transferring of election result.

“If any, the commission is only mandated to collate and transfer election results and number of accredited voters in a way or manner deemed fit by it.

“In view of the above, I find that by the provisions of Sections 50(2) and 60(5) of the Electoral Act, 2022, the correct interpretation of the said statutes is that the defendant (Independent National Electoral Commission) is at liberty to prescribe the manner in which election results could be transmitted and I so hold,” he said.

The judge consequently dismissed the suit.

INEC chairman Mahmood Yakubu receives Ekiti state result

INEC declares collation officer ‘persona non grata’ in Kebbi

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Kebbi State, on Monday, declared collation officer for Marafa ward in Birnin Kebbi Local Government Area of Kebbi State, Mr Yusuf Isa-Yahaya as ‘persona non-grata’.

The INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner in the state, Alhaji Ahmed Bello-Mahmud said on Monday in Birnin Kebbi that the commission would, however, not be deterred by this development.

He said the commission had no option than to declare him missing following series of meetings on the issue in accordance with the law, adding that a new competent collation officer had been appointed to carry on with the job.

Bello-Mahmud assured that the newly appointed officer would continue from where the missing officer stopped and possibly make announcement today.

Tension was high at INEC office in Birnin Kebbi in view of the strong contest between the two political giants in the state, Governor Atiku Bagudu and Sen. Adamu Aliero.

This led to security beef up at the commission’s office.

Bagudu is contesting the Kebbi Central Senatorial District seat on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC) while Aliero is contesting on the platform of People’s Democratic party (PDP).

Results from eight Local Government Areas of Kebbi Central Senatorial District had arrived but the absence of Marafa ward results delayed the announcement of the winner.

Also speaking, Aliero advised his supporters to remain calm, adding that the decision of the commission was in line with the laws of the land.

He lamented that his people had spent two days awaiting the announcement of the result but to no avail.

He appealed to the commission to hasten efforts to do the needful within the confine of the law to announce the result.

“Therefore, I urge all our supporters to be law abiding, mature and ensure that they maintain the relative peace being enjoyed for the good and progress of the state and the nation at large,” he said.

Arise TV logo

Tinubu: Arise TV admits broadcasting fake news, apologises

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Arise TV has admitted broadcasting fake news against the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

It has thereafter issued an apology to Tinubu.

The TV station admitted the gaffe after it claimed the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has commenced a forfeiture investigation against Tinubu.

But in a retraction on Sunday morning, the Management of Arise TV apologised over the fake report after INEC publicly dismissed it as fake.

The station said: “Of criminal forfeiture of funds, linked to narcotics, smuggling conspiracy and money laundering against the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress Bola Ahmed Tinubu, we Arise News that carried the news, which is now been denied by after the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC and we apologise most sincerely to the APC presidential candidate Bola Ahmed Tinubu for the earlier broadcast.”

INEC in a statement by its National Commissioner and Chairman, Information and Voter Education Committee, Festus Okoye, in Abuja on Saturday, described the report as the handiwork of mischief makers.

“A press release purported to have been issued by the Commission has been trending online since yesterday Friday Nov. 11, 2022.

“It claims that the commission has commenced investigation into a case of criminal forfeiture against one of the Presidential candidates in the forthcoming general election and is liaising with a Court in the United States of America in pursuit of same to determine possible violation of our guidelines or the Electoral Act 2022.

“We wish to state categorically that the said press release did not emanate from the commission nor is it pursuing the purported course of action. It is the handiwork of mischief makers and utterly fake.”

Okoye said statements from the INEC are uploaded to the INEC Press Corps platform and simultaneously disseminated through the commission’s website and official social media handles.

Reported by The Nation

Tinubu

INEC denies probing Asiwaju Tinubu [Full statement]

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The Independent National Electoral Commission on Saturday night debunked a fake statement, which credited it with instituting a probe on a 30 year-old forfeiture of $460,000 to the U.S. government by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

The fake statement, bearing a forged signature of INEC National Commissioner, Festus Okoye, claimed that INEC had contacted the court in the U.S. state of Illinois, where an out-of-court settlement was reached in 1993.

“We are currently liaising with the Northern Illinois District Court in order to
establish more facts about the case before taking a decision.

“We are also studying the judgment in order to determine whether offences
which contradict the INEC guidelines and Electoral Act 2022 has been
committed.

“We endeavour to expedite the process and shall communicate the results of
our findings together with our decision to the general public within ten
working dates from today’s date”, the fake statement said.

It went viral and was used by many media, including Arise TV, Newspot.com, thenicheng.com and bloggers sympathetic to either Atiku Abubakar of the PDP or Peter Obi of Labour Party.

But hours after the fake news had spread like wild fire, INEC issued a statement, totally disowning it and its content.

Festus Okoye, whose signature was cloned in the earlier fake statement, issued the rebuttal:

A Press Release purported to have been issued by the Commission has been
trending online since yesterday Friday 11th November 2022. It claims that the
Commission has commenced investigation into a case of criminal forfeiture
against one of the Presidential candidates in the forthcoming General Election
and is liaising with a Court in the United States of America in pursuit of same to
determine possible violation of our guidelines or the Electoral Act 2022.

“We wish to state categorically that the said Press Release did not emanate from
the Commission nor is it pursuing the purported course of action. It is the
handiwork of mischief makers and utterly fake.

“Press Releases from the Commission are uploaded to the INC Press Corps
platform and simultaneously disseminated through our website and official
social media handles.

“The public is advised to ignore the Press Release.

Read the fake statement and the rebuttal:

Fake statement of INEC on Asiwaju

INEC rebuttal

To be sure, Asiwaju Tinubu has no case to answer in the United States. The court documents being circulated had long been in the public realm since 2003, ten years after the U.S. investigators found Tinubu non-indictable over the allegation of drug dealing.

There was no trial, no indictment, no charge.

Here is a further explanation from the campaigns FAQs:

One of the unconscionable and wicked lies peddled by political opponents about Bola Ahmed Tinubu was to paint him erroneously as a drug baron.

The accusation arose out of an investigation by FBI agent Kevin Moss of Tinubu and Compass Investment and Finance accounts at First Heritage Bank and Citi- Bank in the U.S.

On January 10, 1992, Mr Kevin Moss requested and obtained a court order to freeze the accounts.
On January 13, 1992, Mr Moss telephoned Tinubu in Nigeria to justify the amounts in the accounts, running into $1.4 million. Part of the money was said to have been deposited by two Nigerians, being investigated for drug offences.

After the telephone conversation, Tinubu instructed his lawyer in the US to file
a lawsuit against the order freezing his accounts.

This dragged on till 15 September 1993, when an agreement was reached for an out of court settlement. Judge John A Nordberg, of the US district court for the Northern District of Illinois, read out the agreement reached by the two parties. Part of the funds, $460,000 was seized by the government.

The FBI never charged Tinubu with any drug offence; the case did not go on trial. Tinubu was never convicted. And he was never barred from entering the United States.

In 2003, ten years after, when the PDP opponents wanted to use the shuttered allegation to disqualify Tinubu from running for a second term in Lagos, the Inspector General of Police, Tafa Balogun made an enquiry with the American Consulate on Tinubu’s status.

The Consulate gave Tinubu a clean bill in a reply by the Legal Attache, Michael H. Bonner.
The letter read:

“Our sincerest greetings to you and all of the law enforcement personnel in the Nigeria Police Force, whose continued assistance is very much appreciated. In relation to your letter, dated February 3, 2003, reference number SR. 3000/IGPSEC/ABJ/VOL. 24/287, regarding Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a records check of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) National Crime Information Centre (NCIC) was conducted.
“The results of the checks were negative for any criminal arrest records, wants,
or warrants for Bola Ahmed Tinubu (DOB 29 March 1952). For information of your department, NCIC is a very centralised information centre that maintains the records of every criminal arrest and conviction within the United States and its territories.”

Almost thirty years after the allegation was discharged and the case declared dead, Tinubu’s opponents keep waking up its corpse, in futile efforts to malign him.

*Culled from Tinubu-Shettima Presidential Campaign: FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

About

Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a man of many traditional honours across the country, from north to south, west to east. The array of titles he has garnered was only comparable to that of Chief Moshood Abiola, winner of the 1993 Presidential election.

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