The candidate of the All Progressives
Grand Alliance, Mr. Willie Obiano, has been declared the winner in the
Anambra State governorship election.
Obiano scored 180,178 to beat the
Peoples Democratic Party candidate, Mr. Tony Nwoye, to the second
position with 97,700 votes and Senator Chris Ngige of the All
Progressives Congress, who came third with 95,963.
The Labour Party candidate, Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah, came fourth with 37,495.
The formal declaration was made by the
Chief Returning Officer, Prof. James Epoke, who is also the
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar around 1 am on Sunday.
The declaration of the winner brought to
an end a long-running and controversial process of electing a new
governor for Anambra State.
The entire process of electing the new
governor was dogged by controversy as three of the major political
parties that fielded candidates called for its cancellation and vowed to
boycott the supplementary election.
The Chairman of the Independent National
Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega, who admitted the errors
committed in the election, apologized to the nation but said the errors
were not substantial enough to warrant the cancellation of the entire
exercise.
The supplementary election was
eventually held on Saturday but was characterised by low turnout. The
Agbaja Polling Unit 22 in Abatete, Idemili North Local Government Area,
which has a voting population of 739, for instance, had only 24
candidates accredited and 20 of them voting in the supplementary
election.
The main election, which held on
November 16, could not be concluded on the same day and INEC announced
that election in 65 polling units in Obosi ward in Idemili North Local
Government Area would be repeated.
The Chief Returning Officer said the
voting population in the areas where election did not take place was
large enough to make the second or third person defeat the leading
candidate. He, therefore, declared the election inconclusive.
Following the development, INEC
declared that supplementary election would in 210 polling units, where
113,113 voters could not vote on November 16. The areas affected cut
across 15 local government areas and most of them (160)were in Idemili
North.
Epoke said the Electoral Act required
that for a winner to be declared in an election, the difference in the
total voting population of the areas where election was cancelled should
be less than the difference between the votes scored by the candidate
with the highest votes and the votes of the candidate with the second
highest votes.
The returning officer had reported that
the total voting population in the areas where election was cancelled
was 113,113, which was higher than the 79,754 difference between the
leading candidate’s votes and the second highest candidate’s votes,
saying the commission had no choice but to declare the election
inconclusive.
“The rule guiding this election is that
for a winner to emerge, he must have majority of votes cast and the
required spread of 25 per cent of votes in two thirds of the local
government areas.
“We observed that due to many reasons,
there were a lot of cancelled votes that made it difficult for a winner
to emerge,” Epoke said.
He said the winner of the election would
be declared only after election has been conducted in areas where the
election was cancelled.
In declaring Obiano winner, Epoke said
the APGA candidate did not only win the majority of the votes cast, but
also fulfilled the requirement that the winner should score 25 per cent
of the total votes cast in two thirds of the local governments in the
state, in Anambra’s case 14 local government areas.
Meanwhile, the Independent National
Electoral Commission Resident Commissioner in Rivers State, Mr Aniedi
Ikoiwak, has commended the people of Anambra for coming out to vote in
Saturday’s supplementary governorship election.
The electoral commissioner, who
supervised the election in Onitsha South and Onitsha North council
areas, spoke at Okija hall, where voting took place in four polling
units.
“The important thing here is that for so
many places where I have visited, the party agents were there,
especially those of the major parties.
“It is a clear indication that there had not been any boycott of the election by any of the parties.
“The people were interested in
completing this exercise so that at the end of the day, their governor
would be announced to them,’’ he said.
Ikoiwak said NEC directed its poll
officers to display the Form 60E on the day of the exercise, which would
show that the election had been completed peacefully.
“You cannot display that form if you do not have a conducive environment.
“And that form would display the result
in each unit for members of the public to copy and know what happened in
the unit,’’ he said.
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