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Ex-Governor Idris Wada Says He Won Kogi Governorship Election

Claimants of the governorship seat in the central Nigerian state of Kogi are now two.

After Abiodun Falake, the latest claimant is former Gov. Idris Wada .

Wada’s witness today told the State Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Abuja that Wada won the 2015 governorship election.

The former governor contested the election on the platform of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

Wada spoke through one of his witnesses, Mr Joe Agada, the PDP Chief Agent at INEC collation centre in Lokoja, while opening his defence.

The witness was led in evidence by Mr Chris Uche (SAN), counsel to Wada.

Agada said Wada won the election with 204, 877 votes against 6,885 scored by Gov. Yahaya Bello of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

He said Bello could not inherit vote scored by late Audu Abubakar, who was until his death, the governorship candidate of APC in the election.

Agada said late Audu scored 240, 867 on Nov. 21 governorship election but died 7.45 a.m. on Nov. 22, 2015 before the election could be concluded.

The witness further stated that the APC had no valid candidate for the supplementary election because at the time Bello was substituted, the statutory time allowed for substitution had elapsed.

Wada scored 199, 514 on Nov. 2, 2015 election, while he polled 5,363 in the supplementary election on Dec. 5, 2015.

In the Nov. 21, late Audu scored 240, 867, while Bello who substituted him received 6,885 vote in the Dec. 5 election.

Agada said that with the figure polled by Bello, he could not be said to have won the election.

The witness, under cross examination, also maintained that the vote cast for late Abubakar Audu remained void after he died.

Agada further argued that Bello did not participate in the Nov. 21 governorship election as he had no permanent voter card.

According to him, none of the candidates won at the time the election was declared inconclusive by INEC.

Meanwhile, the tribunal admitted as exhibits, Agada’s statement on oath, result sheets from the 2,548 polling units in the state, voter register and PDP’s protest letter to INEC.

Other documents admitted by the tribunal were the witness’s party membership card, voter card and letter of his appointment as PDP chief agent at INEC coalition centre.

Another witness, Mr Samuel Oduntan, testified that he carried out a forensic analysis of the election material and discovered that there was over voting.

He, however, said that he could not remember the numbers of ballot papers he scanned, adding that he was the team leader of the forensic expert, who signed report presented to the court.

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