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PEPC: Tinubu to defend his election victory, Tuesday

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President Bola Tinubu will, on Tuesday, open his defence at the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) to defend his victory at the February 25 presidential polls.

This is in the petition filed by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its presidential candidate, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku.

Counsel to President Tinubu, Wole Olanipekun, SAN, made this known on Monday after the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) closed its case against Atiku after calling a lone witness.

The electoral umpire opened and closed its case against the petitioners after calling the lone witness, Mr Lawrence Bayode and  tendering some documentary exhibits in evidence.

One of the documents was a letter dated July 6, 2022, which  Vice- President, Kashim Shettima,(the third respondent)  wrote tothe commission, NAN reports.

The letter was the notification of his decision to withdraw his candidature for senate under the platform of the All Progressives Congress, (APC) for the Borno central senatorial seat.

Bayode who was led in evidence by INEC’s lead counsel, Mr Abubakar Mahmoud, SAN, introduced himself as a Deputy Director of ICT for the commission.

Under cross examination by Olanipekun, the witness, asserted that the presidential election was free, fair, credible and conducted in compliance with the Electoral Act, 2022.

The witness, also told the court that the technical glitch that occurred on the election day did not affect the actual scores of the presidential candidates as manually computed by polling officers in the forms EC8As at the different polling units.

According to Bayode, INEC does not have an electronic collation system and results of the presidential election were manually collated and not electronically collated.

For his part, counsel to the APC, Mr Lateef Fagbemi, SAN confronted the witness with a publication in Tribune newspaper where the commission had, a few days to the election said that it would no longer be able to go ahead with the  electronic transmission of results.

The document was admitted in evidence amidst strong opposition from counsel to the petitioners’, Mr Chris Uche, SAN.

Uche, while cross examining the witness asked him if he was aware of the recently released European Union Observer Mission  Report on the Presidential Election.

The witness said that he was aware of the report even though he had not read it.

The respondents opposed the tendering of the document in evidence but reserved their reasons until the final address stage.

The court,however admitted the document in evidence and marked it appropriately.

Uche proceeded to show the witness a certified true  copy of the report and asked him to read a portion of the report where the EU said only 31 per cent of presidential election results uploaded on the IREV were mathematically correct.

They further said that this was evident of the extent of training the commission gave to polling unit staff.

The  witness also read a portion of the report where the EU stated that the 2023 election was not a transparent and inclusive election as had been promised by the commission.

The witness insisted that the technological innovations introduced by the commission into the electoral process were to guarantee transparency and integrity of the results.

Uche, however, insisted that there was no technical glitch on the day of the presidential election and that the only glitch was human glitch or an INEC glitch.

After the witness was discharged from the witness box, counsel to INEC told the court that that was the case of the commission as the had no other witness to call or documents to tender.

Justice Haruna Tsammani, Chairman of the five-member panel of the court adjourned hearing in the petition until Tuesday.

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