Home Articles & Opinions UZODINMA’S FLAWED 388 POLLING UNITS AND JUDGMENT REVIEW

UZODINMA’S FLAWED 388 POLLING UNITS AND JUDGMENT REVIEW

by Our Reporter

BY AUSTIN UGANWA (PhD)

I strongly feel the pains and anguish of  Imolites whose polling units were among the fabricated  388,  the Supreme Court relied on to award 213,456 votes to Senator Hope Uzodinma and on the basis of that. declared him winner of the 2019 Imo governorship election. More so, for those who religiously undertook their civic responsibility on March 9, 2019 by  going to their polling units to vote for the governor of their choice. The worrisome outcome of their efforts has naturally etched in their minds a lasting devastating impression  which the apex court is fascinatingly set to amend by accepting to review the January 14 ruling rightly  considered by many as a miscarriage of justice

I have made this observation and expressed the concern therefrom because I am involved (not just involved) , I played a leading role during the Imo governorship election and my  polling unit, 014, Umugakwo Hall,   Eziama/Okpala Ward 4 in Ngor Okpala Local Council regrettably constituted one of the 388 unfortunate polling units in Uzodinma’s  net. It is number 75  of the tabulated document he tendered to the Supreme Court where he purportedly  recorded 656 votes  and gave only 7  to Ihedioha.

Evidently, the figures were forged. and therefore lacked credibility given that  both the governorship and House of Assembly elections held the same day were cancelled by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the collation centre at the local government headquarters in Umuneke. This was widely reported by various media organisations.  INEC hinged its action on over voting ( the number of votes recorded being more than the accredited voters)  As such there was no result from our polling unit. The compelling question is; where did the figures emanate from ?

The cancellation was replicated by INEC in the polling units across the state where excessive voting and large scale violence that manifested marred the elections. The affected polling units in the state are the 388 where Uzodinma is today claiming that his votes were excised. Unlawful statistics  that are  over and above INEC authenticated data   being bandied in deceitful push to get the Supreme Court’s final  endorsement . This is after he suffered  woeful failures  at the tribunal and Appeal Court where Ihedioha’s victory was reaffirmed. INEC drove this sacred, and verifiable reality home eloquently when it tendered Form EC40G to both the tribunal and the Appeal Court to demonstrate that elections.in the 388 units were cancelled for various reasons and therefore no results could have emanated from the surreptitious 388 polling units

With more than 40 polling units results cancelled in Ngor Okpala, the  local council was the hardest hit. This  was one key reason why the irate youths set the INEC office on fire.The claim on the 388 polling units and the resultant   fabricated results  to justify the claim   were done in  the most unintelligent and inelegant fashion. First, the minimal votes allocated to Ihedioha  compared with  vast number of votes ceded to Uzodinma contradicted the generally recognised and  unassailable fact that Ngor Okpala is Ihedioha’s strong hold having represented the area with Aboh Mbaise local council in far-reaching effective manner for 12 years with several infrastructural development projects to his credit.

Besides, Uzidinma’s statistical data either outstripped the registered voters and or the PVCs collected .  Instances abound in Central School Eziama  which appeared on the document’s number 66;where Uzodinma was recorded 781 votes with only 663 PVCs collected and Development Primary School Eziama number 67 , he was allocated 600 votes with only 430 collected PVCs

It’s puzzlingly confounding whether in Uzodinma’s 388 polling units those without PVCs and therefore legally unqualified to participate, voted. This underscored  the large scale illegality inherent in the document, making the judgment review compelling, pertinent and downright

This nullity  is evidently a  recurring decimal in  other  388 polling units  in other zones of the state including Okigwe and Orlu.. For instance, Uzodinma was allocated 290 votes as against 232 PVCs collected in Ama Nwokoro Umueriwuala unit at Orsu local council which appeared on number 15 while in Umueze 1 Umuehi Hall unit in Ehime Mbano (number 13(5) out of 437 collected PVCs,  APC candidate was given 450 votes

It’s also imperative for the apex court to use the judgment review slated for  Monday March 2nd 2020 to take a another look at APC’s sponsorship of two candidates  in the same governorship election.as affirmed by the Supreme Court. . The apex court had on December 20, 2019 ruled that Uche Nwosu who was the candidate of Action Alliance was also APC’s flagbearer in the Imo governorship election. It was on account of the affirmed dual nominations his candidature was invalidated by the same Supreme Court on 14 January 2020. But, in  another breath, the apex court equally endorsed Uzodinma as the candidate of the APC. Did the court recognize two candidates for one political party in the same election? To many Nigerians going strictly by the court’s ruling and the disqualification of  Nwosu as a consequence, Uzodinma’s candidature in that election was at best a nullity. This profound realization makes veritable clarifications  during review desirable and judiciously imperative.

Understandably,  Nigerians and indeed members of the  international community  have expressed deep concerns over the Imo governorship  conundrums given its peculiar and unprecedented nature.  This is largely underscored by the country-wide and global protests it has generated. And also wide-ranging comments reportedly credited to various individuals including elder statesmen, diasporans, legal luminaries, religious leaders, scholars, professionals, civil society activists  and even artisans .

The consensus is one,  that the apex court should  leverage  on the  judgment review  to correct the  mistakes of the earlier ruling by ensuring that justice is not only done but seen to have been done. And two, that a new panel be put in place by Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Tanko Mohammed to administer the review outside the Justices that handled it at first.

I align completely with the two submissions .  The first will essentially   enrich the nation’s jurisprudence, show the apex court as  courageous, sagacious and   truly supreme. It will have a far- reaching impact on salvaging the judiciary and democracy  both of which  have been worst hit by the Imo crisis. While the second will help confer greater transparency, fairness and credibility to the outcome of. the review.
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Dr. Uganwa, wrote from Owerri

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