Edo guber poll: Witnesses allege electoral fraud
More witnesses on Tuesday testified before the Justice Ahmed Badamasi-led three-member election petition tribunal, insisting that the Sept. 28 Edo governorship election was fraught with fraud in some wards in Ovia North East Local Government Area.
Led in evidence by Mr Roland Otaru, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, the witnesses, who were agents in the local council during the poll, testified for the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) and Osagie Ize-Iyamu, its governorship candidate.
The petitioners are challenging the declaration by the Independent National Election Commission(INEC) of Mr Godwin Obaseki as winner of the election.
The petitioners had named the INEC, Obaseki and the APC as first, second and third respondents respectively in the petition.
INEC had declared Obaseki winner of the Edo governorship election after he polled 319,483 votes to defeat Ize-Iyamu, his closest rival, who scored a total of over 250,000 votes.
At the resumed hearing on Tuesday, the witnesses, who adopted their Oct.19, 2016 deposition statements on oath as their pieces of evidence at the tribunal, insisted that there were cases of over voting, non-accreditation of voters, multiple voting or wrongful collation of results.
Mr Osarenren Edomwandagbn, a PDP polling agent at Igioshodinikpemagba in Oghode ward, Ovia North East Local Government, said “I insist as in my deposition statement that there were over voting and non accreditation of voters before voting.’’
Under cross examination, the witness said “I testify that even my junior sister’s name on the voter register was ticked to have been voted in that election even when she was never around but abroad during election.’’
Mr Omorogieva Osayemwenre, another PDP agent in Oghode Ward in Obaretin village in the same council area, stated that “everything I said in my deposition is as correct as I made it.’’
“I stated that there were either no accreditation, over voting and wrongful collation of results,’’ he said.
The other witnesses , who testified before the tribunal went on recess, included Mr Jonah Osazuwa, Johnbull Idehen, Omorogieva Osayemwenre, Stanly Osazumwande, Alohan Osakpamwan and Ekhator Peter.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that only eight witnesses had testified before the tribunal proceeded on its three-hour recess.
NAN reports that witnesses who had so far testified for the petitioners came to 79 out of the more than 1,000 expected to appear.