Chief Nyesom Wike, Governor
of Rivers State
|
There is palpable tension
in the camp of the Governor of Rivers State, Chief Nyesom Wike, ahead of the
delivery of judgment today in the state’s governorship election filed by the
candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Dakuku Peterside. The Rivers State
Elections Tribunal is led by Justice Mohammed Ambrosa and has been sitting in
Abuja.
The
exchange of addresses by counsel to the petitioners—Peterside and the APC—as
well as the respondents—Wike, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)—took place on Thursday, with
the tribunal adjourning indefinitely for judgment.
Information,
however, filtered out in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital yesterday afternoon
that the tribunal would deliver judgment in the case at 10 a.m. today.
The Nation report continues:
Some
international observers and other stakeholders who monitored the April 11
governorship election in Rivers State, as well as eminent personalities who
testified before the tribunal had described the poll as a sham, saying that it
was characterized by violence, massive rigging, intimidation of voters and
snatching of ballot boxes.
Wike,
a former Minister of State for Education, and the Rivers State Chairman of the
PDP, Chief Felix Obuah, however, maintained that the election was free, fair,
credible, peaceful and violence-free, describing the turnout of the electorate
as impressive, massive and unprecedented.
The
Publicity Secretary of the PDP in Rivers State, Samuel Nwanosike, said
yesterday that he and other members of the PDP in the state were awaiting the
tribunal’s judgment, stressing that the lawyers to the Rivers governor, PDP and
INEC had done a good job.
Asked
what Wike and other members of the PDP in Rivers State would do if the judgment
went in favour of the governorship candidate of the APC, he said that it would
be subjudice to comment on a matter before a court or tribunal.
On his part, the Publicity
Secretary of the APC in Rivers State, Chris Finebone, said he had no comment.”
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