The Rivers State Governorship Election Tribunal has dismissed the petition filed by the defeated Governorship Candidate of Action Democratic Party (ADP), Mr. Victor Fingesi against the re-election of Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike.
The Tribunal
described the petition as an adventure to discover the Non-Existent. It declared that in the end, nothing was
discovered by the petitioner.
In a
judgment read by the Tribunal Chairman, Justice K.A. Orjiako on Saturday, the
Tribunal ruled that Mr. Victor Fingesi of the ADP lacks the locus standi to
file the petition.
The Tribunal
held that inconsistent facts contained in the petition filed by the ADP
Governorship Candidate makes it incompetent.
According to the Tribunal, the petitioner in his own petition, wrote that he was challenging the election of the first petitioner.
The Tribunal
noted that an election petition must challenge the person returned as winner
and not the petitioner.
Justice
Orjiako stated that the Tribunal had earlier struck out the petition on the
premise and the petitioner went on appeal.
The court noted that the Court of Appeal affirmed that the petitioner
lacks locus standi in view of the paragraphs of his own petition.
He ruled: “This petition is hereby struck out.
The petitioner lacks the locus standi to file the petition.”
Determining the petition on its merit, the Tribunal declared that the petitioner failed woefully to prove that Governor Wike did not score the highest number of lawful votes during the March 9, 2019 Governorship election.
Justice
Orjiako declared that the petitioner’s complaint is vague and merely
speculative.
The Tribunal stated that the first petitioner did not know the number of registered voters in the state. The Tribunal further noted that the Petitioner under cross examination said he had no knowledge of the number of registered voters in his own polling unit in Okrika LGA.
The Tribunal
declared an allegation that the winner did not score the highest number of
votes is an invitation to compare figures. The Tribunal held that the
petitioner ought to plead his own results and that of the winner for the court
to cross check.
Justice
Orjiako noted that there was no evidence of any alleged inflation of results, as
the evidence remains vague.
The Tribunal
held that the burden of proof is strictly on the petitioner and not on any
weakness of the defence of the respondents.
The Tribunal
agreed with INEC that election was conducted in substantial compliance with the
Electoral Act.
The Tribunal
examined the testimonies of the witnesses of the ADP were mere hearsay, since
most of them were not at the respective polling units where elections took
place.
The Tribunal
described most of the witnesses of ADP as impostors who capitulated in the face
of cross examination.
The Tribunal examined the testimonies on a local Government by Local Government basis.
According to
the Tribunal, despite the litany of documents pleaded by the petitioner, he
could only tender Newspaper Reports.
The Tribunal
said that INEC has the power to suspend an election, in line with Section 26
(1) of the Electoral Act 2010 as amended.
The Tribunal further stated there is no evidence that after the suspension of the election, the petitioners refused to participate in the process. The Court declared that the petitioners have failed to adduce evidence to impugn the election of Governor Wike.