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The Rivers State Governorship
Election Petitions Tribunal sitting in Abuja has dismissed four out of the five
petitions filed to challenge the election of Chief Nyesom Wike of the Peoples
Democratic Party as the governor of the state. The
only surviving petition challenging the declaration of Wike as the winner of
the April 11 election is the one filed by the All Progressives Congress and its
governorship candidate, Dr. Dakuku Peterside. Though,
one of the four petitions marked EPT/RV/GOV/05/2015 was voluntarily withdrawn
by the petitioner, Kemka Elenwo, who was KOWA Party’s governorship candidate in
the election, the three others were dismissed on technical grounds based on the
application by Wike and the PDP.
The
Justice Mu’azu Pindiga-led tribunal on Wednesday dismissed the fourth petition
marked EPT/RV/GOV/03/2015 which was filed by Minaibim Harry of the Social Democratic
Party on the grounds that the petition was incompetent.
The Punch report continues:
The
tribunal held that it lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the petition since
the two grounds on which it was anchored were defective because they were not
in strict compliance with the provisions of Section 138(1) (a) to (d) of the
Electoral Act.
The
said provision of the Electoral Act prescribes the grounds on which an election
petition can be filed.
Other
petitions that have been dismissed by the tribunal include the one filed by the
Labour Party (EPT/RV/GOV/01/2015) and another by the All Progressive Grand
Alliance and its candidate, Charles Harry, (EPT/RV/GOV/02/2015).
In
its ruling on July 31, Justice Pindiga, who dismissed the petition by the
Labour Party which fielded Tonye Princewill in the April 11 election, held that
the party did not have a candidate for the election having not complied with
the requirement under Section 85(1) of the Electoral Act (EA) 2010.
It
noted that the notice given by the petitioner to INEC of its intention to
conduct a primary election from which the petitioner’s candidate purportedly
emerged “is less than the mandatory 21 days required by Section 85(1) of the
Electoral Act.
“By
implication, the effect of this non-compliance, is that no valid primary
election was conducted and held by the petitioner and its purported candidate.”
The
tribunal also found that the petitioner did not comply with the required
procedure for applying for the issuance of pre-hearing notice, a default which
rendered the petition inconsequential.
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