ALTHOUGH the All Progressives Congress (APC) was yesterday declared the
winner of the Kogi State governorship election that was concluded at the
weekend, intra-party wrangling is apparently dampening the celebration
that should follow the electoral victory.
The running mate to the
late Abubakar Audu, the APC candidate in the November 21 governorship
election and deputy governor-elect James Abiodun Faleke, yesterday
insisted that he would not be deputy to the governor-elect, Yahaya
Bello.
Bello, who replaced the late Audu, for last Saturday’s
supplementary election held in 91 polling units, was in the early hours
of yesterday declared winner of the polls by the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC).
Basking in the euphoria of victory,
Bello explained his acceptance to replace Audu as an act of obedience to
party supremacy. He insisted that Falake remained his deputy since his
position as running mate was not affected.
Bello who spoke to
reporters in reaction to his victory as the winner of the supplementary
election said Faleke remained the deputy-governor elect as the position
was never vacant.
His words: “The former candidate of the party died.
INEC requested the party to substitute, and I was chosen to fill the
gap. The space of the running mate was never vacant. So if I respond to
run on that platform, I don’t think I have any choice but to respect the
decision of the party.”
Bello who was dressed in an all white
traditional garb called agbada said his reaction to the results was that
of ecstasy. However, he said the jubilation was low-keyed because of
the death of Abubakar Audu who he described as their great leader.
Meanwhile,
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has described as a waste of time and
scarce national resources and a ridiculous shadow-chasing, the action
of INEC in declaring Bello the governor-elect.
The PDP said INEC,
in the bid to satisfy the President Muhammadu Buhari-led APC Federal
Government, succeeded only in making a mockery of itself and the entire
electoral process, by trying to illegally install an individual who,
apart from not being a valid candidate, scored, under his name, a paltry
6,885 vote in the so-called supplementary election as
against the 204,877 votes polled by the PDP candidate, Governor Idris Wada in the overall election.
PDP
National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, in a statement on
Sunday said that “the action of INEC in trying to transfer the votes
earlier garnered by the dead APC candidate, Prince Audu Abubakar to
another
individual is completely impractical and alien to the nation’s Constitution and the Electoral Act.”
Faleke
had sued the INEC and others for declaring the November 21 polls
inconclusive and sought to stop the supplementary election but lost the
case on Friday when the Federal High Court, Abuja Division insisted that
only election tribunals had jurisdiction on such matters.
He
insisted that, as the running mate of the late Audu, he was the
authentic winner of the said election, as Bello could not inherit votes
from an election he did not participate in.
In declaring Bello
winner, INEC yesterday said he polled a total of 247,752 to beat the
incumbent governor and candidate of the PDP, Wada, who scored 204,877,
out of the total accredited voters of 526,389.
The returning officer,
Prof. Emmanuel Kucha, who is the Vice Chancellor of the Federal
University, Makurdi, said: “Alh. Yahaya Bello having scored the highest
number of votes and satisfied the law is hereby declared winner and
returned elected.”
Faleke who spoke through his media aide,
Duro Meseko, maintained that no one could force him to be the deputy to
Bello, adding that he was ready to pursue his case to a logical
conclusion.
“That somebody is a member of a party does not mean that
you cannot fight for your rights, if they are trampled upon. The result
of Saturday’s supplementary election has further confirmed my earlier
position that we won the election of Saturday November 21st. My position
is that I have appealed the case and nobody can force me to be deputy
governor-elect to Yahaya Bello.
“I have taken the position that I am
the winner of the election and even the election declared yesterday with
the total votes cast which was a little above 12, 000 has vindicated
the Audu/ Faleke campaign organisation that they should have been
declared winner in the first place and that there was no need for the
supplementary election,” he said.
On the way forward towards
addressing some of the issues thrown up by the controversial
circumstances surrounding his emergence as APC candidate, Bello said he
was embarking on a quick reconciliatory move towards the immediate
family and the political family of the late Audu.
He said he
would also reach out to other leaders of the party and even outside the
party towards true reconciliation. On those who might refer to him as a
“governor-elect of a supplementary election” he said as a party man who
was chosen by the party, “all votes cast in the election are for the
party. So I cannot be said to be a governor of a supplementary
election.”
He said he had a blueprint in line with the party’s
manifesto to put the state on developmental map, adding that he would
“make sure that there is justice, fairness and equity in the
distribution of resources across the state.”
On the likelihood of
litigations, he said that was usually expected after elections. “ But I
don’t think there will be so much litigation as the issues are within
the party and the party is going to handle it well.”
In a related
development, Faleke has appealed to the people of the state to remain
calm in the wake of Bello’s emergence as governor-elect. Sources who
spoke to The Guardian at Faleke’s house in Ekinrinade, Ijumu Local
Council said the appeal became necessary in order to calm the frayed
nerves of his supporters.
The atmosphere in the compound located
along Omuo road was sombre as many of those who were gathered there
discussed the development in hushed tones.
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