Friday 22 November 2013

INEC fixes date for Anambra supplementary election


INEC Chairman, Attahiru Jega Photo Credit:234NEXT
The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has fixed Saturday, November 30, for the supplementary election in Anambra state.
The chairman of the commission, Attahiru Jega, made the announcement at an ongoing  press conference in Abuja.
He said there was no substantial evidence to support cancellation of the November 16 election as demanded by the candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party, the All Progressives Congress and the Labour Party in the election.
Mr. Jega however admitted that INEC did not perform to the expectations of Nigerians in the election.
INEC had on November 18 declared the governorship election in the state inconclusive because no candidate polled the statutory 25 percent of votes in two-third of the 21 local government areas in the state, according to Prof. James Epoke, Returning Officer and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar.
“For a candidate to emerge as the winner, he must have scored not only the highest number of votes cast, but should also garner 25 per cent in two-third of the local government areas in the state,” Prof. Epoke had said.
The commission stated that due to the large number of cancelled votes, 113,113, no candidate scored the required percentage.
Also, the commission said it examined the difference between the total votes of Willie Obiano, the APGA candidate, who polled the highest number of votes and Tony Nwoye, the PDP aspirant, who was the first runner-up.
The difference is less than the figure of the cancelled votes, the commission said. According to INEC, Mr. Obiano got 174,710 to finish tops, Mr. Nwoye polled 94,956.
According to INEC, out of the 1,763,751 voters registered for the election, only 451,826 were accredited.
Total valid votes stood at 413,005, while the invalid ones were 16,544. Total votes cast was 429,549, INEC said.
Idemili North had 89,997 cancelled votes, while 636 were cancelled from Idemili South.
The All Progressives Congress (APC) finished second runner-up with 92,300 votes, while Labour Party (LP) polled 37,446 votes.
23 candidates participated in the election.
The APGA won in 16 of the 21 local government areas; PDP won in two, APC won in two, while LP won one.
But PREMIUM TIMES legal analyst, Jiti Ogunye, has argued here that supplementary elections are unconstitutional and a violation of the Electoral Act.

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