Friday, December 4, 2015

Entertainment: 2Shotz's Wife Opens Up. Check Out Here

In the open letter, Precious Jones, 2 Shotz's wife, who is a medical anatomist wrote that she feels like she failed as a mother.

2Shotz with wife Precious Jones

After revealing that her husband and Nigerian rap star 2Shotz allegedly physically assaulted and threatened her when they were together in Nigeria, Precious Jones has now written an open letter to her children. She wrote the letter yesterday, Thursday, December 3, 2015.

Precious Jones had a son from a previous relationship, before giving birth to 2Shotz’s daughter Ariella Chidiebube in March this year.

In the open letter, Precious Jones who is a medical anatomist wrote that she feels like she failed as a mother.
She shared the emotional open letter about her trying to create the perfect home on her Instagram.

Below are what she wrote...
 

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Bayelsa Politics: How the election will be won and lost 0



SHORTLY after the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) released the time-table for the Bayelsa governorship election and scheduled it for this Saturday, December 5th, Governor Henry Seriake Dickson of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was tipped to emerge the flag bearer of his party and the candidate to beat in the election. His chances were fur­ther boosted in September when the All Progressive Congress (APC) had a rancorous governorship primaries, a situation which made many Bayel­sans believed the party was not ready to rule the state.

However between September and now, with Bayelsans preparing to file out in two days time and vote for the next governor of the state, Dickson and former governor Timipre Sylva who emerged the APC candidate in the rescheduled governorship primaries are now running neck to neck in the race for the governorship seat. The two candidates enjoy a robust cam­paign organisation headed by tested politicians. Hon Fred Agbedi, mem­ber representing Sagbama/ Ekeremor Federal constituency in the House of Representatives as Director- General of the Bayelsa Restoration Campaign Organisation (BYRCO) for the PDP while Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development is the Director- General of the Sylva/ Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO).

Beyond the effective campaign organisation which has projected their candidates as the favourite, in an unprecedented campaign in a governorship election, Dickson and Sylva have traversed the length and breadth of Bayelsa state wooing vot­ers ahead of Saturday’s governor­ship election . They have done it better than Moses Siloko Siasia of the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM) and the remaining nine can­didates. The PDP has campaigned on three major planks in its quest to neutralise the rampaging APC whose ranks continue to swell day after day . Even political appointees, and aides of Dickson have helped in nudging up APC as some have dumped the PDP for the opposition party.

Bayelsa-election-dickson-sylva

The PDP has not left anything to chance . The first leg of its cam­paign has been the performance of its candidate and the incumbent Gov­ernor whom it has praised for the infrastructural development in the state and the enthroning of a sound security network that members in­sist has created the enabling environ­ment. According to the party since the creation of Bayelsa state in 1999, no administration has performed bet­ter than Dickson in the dualization of roads, investment in education and construction of the first flyover bridge.

Former governor of Kano state and former minister of Educa­tion, Mallam Ibrahim Skekarau was to capture the performance rating of Dickson during one of the campaign trips to Kolokuma/Opokuma this way:
“It is evident that the contri­man governor is well loved by his people and going by what I have seen here today, he will win the Decem­ber 5 election. I believe it will just be a formality. I must thank you all for believing in your governor and standing firm behind him in his re-election bid. I want to admonish you to remain steadfast. The PDP will no doubt carry the day come December 5th. I am really impressed. This is not just a campaign, it is a carnival. It is a celebration of victory and I am so happy to experience this open show of love first hand. Of course, your governor has led well and with per­formance”.

The second leg of its campaign has been the branding of the PDP as an Ijaw party which gave a son of Bayelsa state in the person of Dr Goodluck Jonathan the chance of becoming the President of Nigeria. According to the argument, the APC with the Yoruba and the Hausa/ Fu­lani in an alliance forcibly took power from an Ijaw son. Therefore in con­tinuation of its narration, Bayelsans must rally round the PDP and prevent the APC from taking over Bayelsa because the Ijawland has never been a conquered zone. For them the goal of APC is to win Bayelsa and finally humiliate Jonathan after losing at the centre using the likes of Sylva. They have therefore implored the people to reject APC which it described as an enemy that wants to overrun the Ijaw nation.

The third plank of PDP campaign has been what they described as the image deficit of Sylva as the APC candidate. According to their argu­ment, Sylva’s alleged dismal perfor­mance between 2007 and 2011 in all indices automatically disqualifies him from contesting as governor. They listed the corruption allega­tion; the use of a special security outfit code named Operation Famuo Tangbe and huge debts as factors that should make Bayelsans reject Sylva to return to the Government House. Dickson has argued continuously that Sylva has no business being a gov­ernor of Bayelsa because he has no vision for the state.

APC has its own message and strategies. It has also campaigned on three major strands which it believes would convince Bayelsa that the party remains the best choice before it on Saturday to produce the Gover­nor. Coincidentally the quashing of the corruption charges against Sylva by an Abuja Federal High Court has boosted his electoral fortunes . APC had consistently argued that PDP has been all out to demonise him in its bid to hoodwinked Bayelsans that he was a failure as governor between 2007 and 2011. In fact Sylva insists the PDP destroyed all his legacies af­ter he was forcefully removed from office by the PDD using Federal might.

Hear him “I was governor be­tween 2007 and 2012. It was a very turbulent tenure. But then we were able to achieve a bit. When I came there was near absence of internal roads in Yenagoa and we built quite a lot of them. We gave the contracts to some Bayelsans because I believe Bayelsa money must circulate within Bayelsa. Yes some of the contrac­tors did not deliver well but many of them deliver quality projects. We completed the peace park so that Bayelsans can have a nice place to relax. The Melford Okilo hospital which we reduced from 500- bed to 350 was billed for commissioning in May 2012, if I had not been removed from office. All the equipments have been bought and they allowed all of it to rot. Even the Diete Koki which was a world class hospital we built was also allowed to rot, all because they wanted to vilify me that I did not do anything. In order to paint me as failure, they punished Bayelsans in the process”
Its second selling point has been that unlike Dickson which it main­tained has not paid attention to the welfare of Bayelsans especially civil servants, pensioners and students, Sylva during his tenure did not un­necessarily imposed taxes on the civil servants; was paying pension­ers, local government workers were not owed and students were enjoying their bursary. Its argument has been stretched further that the local econ­omy was booming with the people having the purchasing power. Sylva has promised the people that the APC government would not impose taxes on them to punish them and would ensure that the civil service is allowed to function with over head, allowances and promotion exercise restored.
The APC has campaigned vigourously against the branding of the PDP as an Ijaw party noting that the only Ijaw party known in history was the National Solidarity Move­ment (NSM) founded by late Chief Melford Okilo. To strengthen their argument that Bayelsa state cannot afford to remain in the PDP which is now in the opposition, Sylva’s hench­men contended that Okilo realising that the NSM would be in the minor­ity decided to align with the majority PDP so that the Ijaw people would not be left behind in the quest for de­velopment.
Perhaps in a bid to put it a proper perspective Sylva said those label­ling PDP as an Ijaw party are doing so for selfish reasons in their desper­ate attempt to deny Bayelsa and the Ijaw people the opportunity of join­ing the mainstream politics which he contended is the only sure avenue to attract development to the state . He argued that this has become more im­perative given that the PDP has been dislodged by the APC at the centre .

Undoubtedly the race is between Sylva and Dickson with Siasia not expected to pull any surprises, while the other candidates would just add up the figure. In line with constitu­tional provisions Section 179, aside having the highest number of votes, the winner must also secured at least one quarter of votes cast in two-thirds of the eight local government areas in the state namely Yenagoa, Southern Ijaw, Ekeremor, Sagbama, Nembe, Brass, Ogbia and Kolokuma/ Opo­kuma.

If the crowd at the different rallies and campaigns grounds are anything to go by, then it is safe to assume that Bayelsans are really interested in the governorship election . The extent of enthusiasm by the people was further demonstrated by the huge turn out in in the continuous voters’ registration and the collection of the Permanent Voters Card (PVCs). There are however genuine fears of violence which might cause voters apathy. The political parties and their candidates have signed a peace ac­cord but the threats being issued by ex-militant leaders against one anoth­er is a source of concern which might discourage the voters from coming out to vote. The Police and other security agencies said they have put necessary machineries in motion to create an enabling environment for INEC to conduct the election. The In­spector- General of Police, Solomon Arase has said 14,000 Policemen are to be deployed for the election to en­sure that Bayelsans are allowed to vote freely for the candidate of their choice.

Another issue of concern is the allegation by the PDP that the APC is boasting of using Federal Might to rig out its candidate. They have fingered INEC, and some top gov­ernment officials in the plot to install Sylva as the Governor. The APC has insisted that it does not need the so-called federal might because the rat­ing of Dickson has plummeted to an all time low that it does not need any assistance to defeat him the polls.

Dickson voiced out his fears in a stakeholders meeting which had in attendance the IGP, INEC manage­ment team led by its Chairman Prof Mahmood Yakubu and other stake­holders.

“Now on INEC there are concerns arising from what some parties and their candidates are posting that they don’t need the votes of the people and that they have resolved to just write and announce results. These are things that whether true of false, go to colour the atmosphere under which an election is held”
Yakubu has allayed his fears that INEC would not be party to the ma­nipulation of the Saturday election.

“Our commitment to the people of Bayelsa state is to deliver a peaceful election in line with the Commission mission statement of providing cred­ible electoral services consistent with the principles of equity, justice and fair play. All our plans and prepara­tions have been geared towards this outcome. And let me say that nobody can determine who the next governor of Bayelsa becomes, not even the commission but only the people of Bayelsa state”

By Sunday evening when results from far flung local governments would have been collated, an in­kling of the side the pendulum would swing to would be on hand . For now, it is all about conjectures and predic­tions .

Sun

Entertainment: Singer becomes becomes 1st Nigeria Police Youth Ambassador

Mavin Records singer Korede Bello is ending the year 2015 on a high note.
After the success of his single 'Godwin' Korede Bello is wrapping up 2015 by becoming the first Nigeria Police Youth Ambassador.
The good news was revealed by Mavin Records executive Bizzle. Korede Bello has not made any statement concerning his latest endorsement.
korede Bello korede Bello
(thenet)

Last month Korede Bello announced that he was going back to school to complete his education.
The Mavin Records singer took to his official Instagram page to share a photo of himself in his Matriculation outfit.
"Going back for my HND #StayEducated Matric No. M3GA."
Korede Bello, Emir of Kano Korede Bello, Emir of Kano
(Instagram )

The singer recently met with the  Emir of Kano state, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
Last month, Bello won 'The Song of the Year’ at the 4th Annual Golden Icons Academy Movie Awards (GIAMA) that held in Houston, Texas.


Pulse

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Why NLC Should Present New Minimum Wage Proposal Soon

Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Ayuba Wabba has said a new minimum wage will soon be presented to the government.

Speaking at the delegate conference of the Non Academic Staff Union (NASU), Wabba said since the five- year period stipulated for the review of the minimum wage had lapsed, the NLC was working in collaboration with the Trade Union Congress (TUC) to arrive at a figure to be presented to government.

He said the recent announcement by governors under the Nigeria Governors Forum that they could not continue to pay the N18,000 minimum wage was part of a ploy to frustrate the demand for an upward review.

He vowed that the congress would make the states ungovernable for any governor that tinker with the current minimum wage, pointing out that the leadership of the labour movement in the country was committed to a review.

While admitting the challenges in the economy, Comrade Wabba said “the fact that there is challenge in the economy does not mean that only the workers  should suffer the consequence.
“We will ensure that any governor that they to reduce the N18,000 minimum wage will not have rest in his domain until the right thing is done. Reducing the minimum wage is something that cannot be defended. If political office holders still collect the same salaries nationwide, there is justification for anybody to be thinking of tinkering with the minimum wage.

“I want to assure us that the issue of review of the minimum wage, the leadership stands on that. We are only trying to consult with the TUC to ensure that they don’t divide our rank and come up with a figure that we will make public before we make our demand. I think it is defensive for them to say that they cannot continue to pay the minimum wage. I also think that they are saying so because they know that the review is due”
Comrade Wabba also called for a review of Privatisation policy of the government saying it has not yeilded the desired result especially in the power sector which he said has resulted into more darkness rather than leading to improved power supply.

The outgoing President of NASU, Comrade Ladi Iliya admitted that President Muhammadu Buhari has said that the nation’s economy was in crisis, with industries daily winding up, jobs being lost, while galloping inflation is being experienced .

According to her, “these are all indications of an economy in crisis. We call for the diversification of the economy to bring back on board agriculture, manufacturing and mining of the solid mineral”.

She said further that it was unfortunate that only public service workers are the real tax payers, saying “it is doubtful whether the rich in the society do pay tax and if they do, the question is, do they pay correct tax”.

She reminded Buhari that he was elected by Nigerians based on his anti corruption posture and appealed to the government to follow due process in the anti corruption war of the government so that the culprits will not escape Justice.
 
 
The Nation

Do only the poor go to jail in Nigeria?

Nigeria’s criminal justice system has often been criticised and ridiculed for its inability to secure convictions, particularly for offences perpetuated by high profile individuals. Yet, one recalls the case of a young man, Kelvin Ighodalo, who was sentenced to 45 years in prison for stealing Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s N50,000 Sony Ericsson phone.

Our justice system is inherently flawed but the current debate over reform efforts is lacking in substance as it focuses mostly on efforts to bring corrupt public officials to heel (which is definitely needed, corruption kills Nigerians let’s never forget it) but the brunt of the system’s injustice and unfairness is actually experienced by the poor masses who spend years in jail awaiting trial, while the rich accused of worse crimes, simply make bail and then wait it out while the case is adjourned till it is forgotten.
Nigerian lawyers have become experts at exploiting the system’s weaknesses and there is as of yet, no real punishment for counsels who frustrate trials or undermine the law’s processes. It is only in Nigeria that the accused can refuse to appear in court and where one can be a sitting governor or senator and still have fraud charges to answer to, making a mockery of our country’s laws and the universal ethics and best practices which would call for one to clear one’s name in court before returning to public office.

Terminal illness
Interestingly, every politically connected person accused of corruption always suddenly and mysteriously develops cancer, or some other terminal illness, but the poor rotting away without access to legal aid are not allowed their own gripping theatrics.
Nobody is ever guilty of corruption in Nigeria but the poor; they are always guilty, sometimes of such paltry offences as stealing bread or pepper after which, if they are not lynched by a mob or beaten by the police; they languish in jail, for much longer than the legally allotted time, where they are raped and beaten again, contracting diseases, lucky to escape with their lives.
So tell me, whose human rights are compromised? Photographs of purportedly ill, wealthy Nigerians rumoured to have made away with the gross earnings of a small country, do not prove innocence, rather they prey on our ignorance and short term memory while the many incarcerated Nigerians who often don’t even know what crime they are being held for do not receive either our pity or the loathsome “witch hunt” defence which Olisa Metuh and the PDP popularised. On the subject of Mr Metuh who recently celebrated his 50th birthday in an IDP camp, I wonder what long term strategies he has either considered or proposed to lessen their suffering beyond sharing his landmark celebration with them.
Nigeria is plagued by surface charity and opportunistic gestures which the media feeds citizens as righteous, all part of an elaborate scheme keeping us grateful for crumbs, never daring to demand our rights be respected or enforced. Let us make no mistake if there is a witch hunt in Nigeria, it has always been the poor who have been persecuted simply for being poor and not having the resources to subvert the law. However, beyond updating our laws, we must tackle the social vicissitudes enabling crime in the first place, be it white-collar crime and corruption or organised crime and kidnappings.
Seventy per cent of the Nigerian population is deprived or living outside the laws or rules which normally apply in most societies, fending for themselves by whatever means. It is in this environment that many, if not most, of our future leaders are raised. The Social Justice Policy group, a UK based think-tank, recognises six paths to poverty: family breakdown, educational failure, addictions, economic dependence and personal debt.
The link between social breakdown, poverty and crime isn’t new yet it is ignored if not denied in Nigeria. From the Niger Delta insurgency, to Boko Haram in the North, the solutions cannot simply be based on the military. The dysfunctionality of the Nigerian society breeds insurgency and criminality. Yet, few government policies work towards strengthening families: so many children, or youth feel condemned to a life of poverty and grow up without feeling they are part of something, whether a family or a community that cares for them and empowers them, by either encouraging them or providing them with the tools to make a better life possible. So they are easily led, fed the wrong ideas and fight with weapons, ironically the only accessible tools, for causes they don’t fully understand.
Many of our politicians are victims of our broken country and society where inadequate parenting, abuse, exposure to violence from a young age and to a volatile existence, make it that a boy who grew up without shoes couldn’t see the exceptional opportunity he had before him to liberate this country from those who oppose its greatness: he simply wasn’t prepared to be a leader because our society trains young people for banditry and ethnic opportunism, but not for selfless leadership.

Selfless leadership
Many of our politicians are incapable of empathy for the suffering of their constituents because our society does not breed sensitive, thoughtful individuals: the average Nigerian is so hardened, deadened by suffering that by the time (if he is lucky) he reaches any position of responsibility, all he wants to do is to make up for lost time.
For any real justice reform to work, we must look beyond seeing justice as punishment for wrongdoing (although crime and punishment must follow to act as a deterrent). We must fight social exclusion by creating interconnected communities with strong families, which teach life skills and the value of personal responsibility.
As parents, employees, citizens, dereliction of duty, abandoning our tasks and duties to others, is too frequent, we must take charge of our destinies. Government, to support us, must fix our education system so that poverty ceases to be a death sentence and crime or corruption are no longer the only way one can exist or succeed in society.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
The former Minister of Finance (there is no more coordinating Minister of the Economy as the title usurps the functions of the Vice-President) says about $500 million recovered from Gen.Sani Abacha was spent in the 2004-2005 federal budgets on roads, electricity, education, water and health.
It is interesting then that the majority of federal owned roads remain in an embarrassing state of disrepair and that we have neither electricity, water nor a real health care system. As for education, it would be ludicrous to imagine that the much celebrated (by the PDP) Almajiri schools which are nothing more than edifices without much content would gulp such amounts.
The World Banksays it wasn’t in charge of monitoring how the funds were spent, implying that was up to the government in place at the time. The former Finance Minister, in company of her former colleagues in health, education, etc, should indeed explain, why after such a colossal investment, Nigerians remain so devoid of such basic government services.
Then, the Ministry of Information, could provide Nigerians with infographics explaining just how much   $500 million can transform a country, what it could be used to do. Then perhaps instead of witch-hunting, we’ll talk about public outrage.

Mustapha Audu
A BLOGGER released a story alleging she was raped by the former governor of Kogi’s son, Mustapha, his brothers and friends. Years after the fact, with a grossly inadequate penal code and a police force with neither the will to question high profile suspects or accused, nor the capacity to do so, will we ever know the truth?


Vanguard

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Key figures in Nigeria’s new cabinet

Here are some of the key figures in Nigeria’s new cabinet, which was announced yesterday, Wednesday, more than five months after President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office as The Grand Commander in Chief, Federal Republic of Nigeria:

– Kemi Adeosun (finance) –

The 48-year-old was born and raised in London, where she studied economics and public financial management, going on to become a senior manager at PricewaterhouseCoopers.
A trained accountant, she was until recently finance commissioner in the southwest Nigerian state of Ogun, where she was credited with turning around public finances.
Before that she was managing director at Nigerian investment bank Chapel Hill Denham, according to her LinkedIn profile.
She lacks the high profile of her predecessor, former World Bank executiveNgozi Okonjo-Iweala, but is said to be a reformist and high on integrity — a key quality Buhari is trying to push.

– Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu (petroleum resources) –

Kachikwu, 58, was appointed in August as the group managing director of theNigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and immediately tasked with overhauling the notoriously opaque firm.
The lawyer and former ExxonMobil executive was seen as a shoe-in for the junior oil minister’s post after Buhari announced he would take personal charge of the oil portfolio.
He has already brought dramatic changes to the corruption-ridden NNPC, ordering a forensic audit of its accounts and the publication of oil receipts for the first time.
He has pledged to bring transparency and accountability to the state-run NNPC’soperations and trimmed senior management positions.
“Things have been done wrongly and things need to be done differently,” he said recently.

– Muhammad Mansur Dan-Ali (defence) –

Retired Brigadier-General Muhammad Mansur Dan-Ali, from Zamfara state in northwest Nigeria, is a career soldier who rose through the ranks to hold several posts, including artillery commander.
The 56-year-old also commanded a Nigerian battalion as part of a UN mission inSudan as well as being an instructor at the Nigerian Defence Academy in Abuja.
Dan-Ali, who retired from military service in 2013, takes over the defence portfolio as troops seek to rout Boko Haram by year end.
Six years of Islamist violence has left at least 17,000 dead in Nigeria‘s northeast and made more than 2.5 million people homeless, while under the previous administration military morale was dented.

– Abdulrahman Dambazau (interior) –

Retired Lieutenant-General Abdulrahman Bello Dambazau, 61, was chief of army staff under former president Umaru Yar’Adua from 2008 to 2010 and had been tipped for the defence portfolio.
But the US-trained former soldier, who holds degrees in criminal justice, international relations and criminology can bring a wealth of expertise and experience to the role.
He was a part-time criminology lecturer at the law faculty of Ahmadu Bello University in Zaria, Kaduna, and has authored several books both on the military and criminal law.
Dambazau was on active service when Buhari was military ruler in the 1980s and headed the security committee of the now-defunct Congress for Progressive Change when Buhari was its presidential candidate in 2011.
He was also head of intelligence and security for the All Progressives Congress(APC), which now governs Nigeria at federal level.

– Geoffrey Onyeama (foreign affairs) –

The 59-year-old graduated in political science from Columbia University in New York in 1977, and also has degrees in law from the London School of Economics and from Cambridge.
Between 1986 and 1996, Onyeama, a qualified barrister in Britain and Nigeria, was an intellectual property specialist who has worked extensively with theUnited Nations on development in Africa.
 
 
 
Vanguard

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Nigerian News: Why tribunal sacked Taraba governor

It is not the best of times for the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, ‎as the ‎Taraba State Election Petition Tribunal, yesterday, ‎sacked Governor Darius Ishaku, its candidate in the April 11 gubernatorial poll, from office.‎‎

‎The tribunal, ‎which sat at the Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal, in a unanimous judgment by a three-man panel of judges, ‎yesterday, declared Senator Aisha Jumai Alhassan‎ of the ‎All Progressives Congress, APC, ‎as the winner of the poll.
In the meantime, Aisha Alhassan is one of the 37 ministers-designate expected to be sworn-in by President Muhammadu Buhari next week.
The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, had concluded the Taraba State governorship election on ‎April 25, after the initial poll was declared inconclusive.‎
In its judgment, the Justice Musa Danladi Abubakar-led tribunal said it was satisfied that Ishaku was not validly nominated by the PDP to contest the election.

The tribunal maintained that there was overwhelming evidence that the PDP in Taraba sidelined the provisions of the Electoral Act 2010, and the 1999‎ Constitution, as amended, when it decided to hold the primary election that produced Ishaku as its candidate in Abuja instead of Jalingo, the state capital.
 It held that the purported nomination of the governor for the election, without a valid primary election monitored by INEC, was in breach of Sections 85, 87 and 138(1) of the Electoral Act 2010, as well as Section 177 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended.
The tribunal stressed that the governorship primary election, the PDP held at its National Headquarters in Abuja, on December 11, 2014, was not known to the law and was, therefore, invalid.

Besides, the panel held that the PDP failed to give cogent and verifiable reason why it decided to hold the said primary election in Abuja without the consent of  INEC.
According to the tribunal, it is a fundamental law in Nigeria that a candidate for an elective position must be duly nominated and sponsored by a registered political party before the candidature of such person could be deemed to be legally valid.

Ishaku-AlhassanIt said that the proof of evidence, adduced before it by all the parties, showed that the PDP did not conduct a valid primary election that could have led to the emergence of anybody as its sponsored candidate for the governorship contest.
Besides, the tribunal noted that INEC ‎confirmed that it was not part of the primary election that produced Ishaku as the PDP candidate, saying Section 85 of the Electoral Act made it mandatory that PDP must give the electoral body 21 days notice before it could hold a convention or primary to nominate its governorship candidate.
 Consequently, the tribunal held that, in view of the fact that Ishaku was not sponsored by any known registered political party in Nigeria, he could not lay claim to votes cast for any political party at the April 11 election nor could he claim that he took part in the poll as an independent candidate.
Declaring all the votes Ishaku secured at the election as invalid, the tribunal, ordered that the APC candidate, Alhassan, having scored the second highest votes at the poll, be sworn-in as the winner of the governorship election in Taraba State.‎
It directed INEC to immediately withdraw the certificate of return it issued to Ishaku and issue a fresh one to Alhassan.
The tribunal said it was not unaware of the portion of the law that forbade it from directing the governor to vacate his seat. However, it said that, in the instant case, it had the power ‎to remove the PDP governor on the grounds of his non-qualification to participate in the poll.‎
Earlier, the tribunal dismissed the allegation by the APC and its candidate that the Taraba governorship election was marred by over-voting.
The petitioners had contended that the number of votes recorded during the election far exceeded the number of voters accredited by the card reader machines.
It was the position of the tribunal that mere reliance on data captured by the card readers was not sufficient for the petitioners to prove that there was over voting.

Likewise, the tribunal dismissed four separate preliminary objections that challenged it’s jurisdiction to entertain the petition as well as the locus standi of the petitioners to file same.
The APC and its candidate, Alhassan, had gone before the tribunal to challenge the victory of Ishaku of the PDP at the polls.
The petitioners prayed the tribunal to void the governorship poll for corrupt practices and substantial non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act 2010, as amended.
They also urged the tribunal to disqualify the 1st respondent, Ishaku, and hold that all votes credited to him during the election were “wasted and thrown away votes”.
The petitioners through their lead counsel, Mr. Abiodun Owonikoko, SAN, told the tribunal: “Contrary to the provisions of Section 85 of the Electoral Act, which requires the service of at least 21 days to INEC before the holding of congress for the conduct of primary election, the 2nd respondent (PDP) only delivered their notice to INEC on December 11, 2014, at exactly 6:04pm and held the purported primaries on the same day. This was apparently after they has conducted the said primary.
“That in defiance of the requirement of Section 87 of the Electoral Act, the 2nd respondent held the purported primary at Abuja as against Jalingo, Taraba State capital.
“That relying on their earlier notice to INEC for the holding of the primary at the Taraba State capital, INEC (3rd respondent) sent their monitoring team to observe the primary election on December 8, 2014, but the congress did not hold without any explanation from the party.
“That in flagrant disregard to the demand of the Electoral Act 2010, the 1st and 2nd respondents held their primary in Abuja without approval from INEC.
“That by reason of paragraphs i, ii, iii, and iv above, the 1st respondent was not duly sponsored by his political party as required under section 177(c) of the 1999 constitution nor duly sponsored, the 1st respondent is/was not qualified to have contested the gubernatorial election that held in Taraba State on April 11 and 25, 2015”.

Ishaku has a maximum of 21 days to appeal the ‎judgment of the tribunal.

PDP blames Buhari
Reacting to the verdict, last night, the PDP leadership described it as a plot by Buhari to use all means, especially the tribunals, to decimate the opposition.
According to the party, the judgment was an evidence of executive interference in the judiciary.

The PDP was, however, optimistic that the Court of Appeal would restore its “mandate”.
In a statement by the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, the party noted that the reason given by the tribunal for arriving at what it described as the bizarre decision was intriguing and further exposes the contradictions and double standards inherent in most tribunal rulings against PDP interests recently.


APC hails verdict
But the National Women Leader of the APC, Hajia Ramatu Aliyu, asked Nigerian women to support the judgment, describing it as a watershed.
Aliyu, in a statement, said the judiciary displayed  boldness and unfettered commitment to the sacred principles of honour, good conscience and truth.
She said: ”It is a clear affirmation that no matter how long it takes, never will the verdict of the people during elections be manipulated against their popular choice as expressed through the ballot box. Indeed, by the ruling, it has been proven that  true democracy, sovereignty ultimately resides with the inviolable will of the people.
”I call on Nigerian women to rally support for the Tribunal’s ruling, especially in the circumstances that it remains a priceless watershed in our political history for our great Party to produce the first elected female Governor in Nigeria as desired and manifestly by the electorate in Taraba State.
”I exhort the Judiciary to remain alive to its avowed commitment to dispensing justice to all, man or woman, rich or poor, without fear or favour especially, in our collective effort to enthrone and sustain an enduring constitutional democracy rooted in free and fair elections.,respect for the rule of law and the wishes of the people.”


Vanguard