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PDP: Crisis Looms As Chieftain Demands NWC  Make Public Income From 2023 Election Nomination Forms

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PDP Secretariat - Wadata Plaza

By Ayodele Oni

A Youth Leader of one of the warring factions of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) from the South-west has called on the National Working Committee, (NWC) of the Party to make public details of funds realized from sale of nomination forms during last year’s general election.

In a letter to the NWC by Bello Muyideen Kolawole, PDP new generation SouthWest Coordinator, stated that “As a believer in transparency, accountability, and good governance, I strongly believe that it is the responsibility of political parties, such as PDP, to ensure that they are not only ethically conducting funds generated from various activities, but also providing detailed reports on the expenditure to the party members and the public.

“I kindly request that the National Working Committee of PDP provides an accurate and comprehensive breakdown of how the money obtained from the sale of forms to aspirants during the last general elections was spent.

“It is essential that all financial transactions be accounted for in order to maintain the trust and integrity that the PDP has always stood for.

“To ensure a transparent and thorough accountability process, I propose the following details to be included in the report: Total amount of funds generated from the sale of forms during the last general elections.

“Clear breakdown of how the funds were allocated and spent. Itemized expenditure report, specifying the purpose and amount spent on various aspects such as campaign logistics, project financing, staff salaries, transportation, polling station operations, and other related costs.

“Audited financial statements or any relevant financial documents that validate the transparency and integrity of the financial processes and transactions.

“I believe that by providing the requested information, PDP will reaffirm its commitment to its members, supporters, and the general public.

“Transparency, accountability, and good governance are not only principles that strengthen a political party, but also demonstrate its credibility and trustworthiness.

“I kindly request that you provide the aforementioned report within 30 days from the receipt of this letter.

“This timeframe allows for sufficient time to compile the necessary information and ensures timely delivery to promote the openness and integrity that our democracy depends upon.

“Please note that this request is made in the interest of promoting transparency, and to ensure that the collective aspirations of the party’s members and the citizens of Nigeria are preserved and upheld.”

No Imposition Of Transition Committees In Enugu LGs, February Election Date Remains – Govt

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Peter Mbah

By Ayodele Oni

The Enugu State Government has assured that the Local Government Election in the State slated for February will hold.

Government’s clarification is coming over mounting tension following rumours that the present Council elected officials are to be sacked to pave way for Caretaker members.

The State Commissioner for Information and Communication, Mr Aka Eze-Aka who spoke in Enugu maintained that Government has no plan to institute Caretaker Committees in the 17 Local Government Councils of the State.

He described as unfortunate, the rumour making the rounds that the state government was planning to impose transition committees in the local government councils, advising politicians to be patient and desist from peddling rumours capable of heating up the state.

“It is just a build-up anxiety and I think the people should have patience. If the election is not going to hold, it will be made known.

“Some people who want to contest the election are becoming too anxious and desperate.

The Enugu State Independent Electoral Commission, (ENSIEC), in October 2023 released the timetable for the election scheduled for Feb. 24, 2024.

However, rumour has been spreading across the state that the election might not hold as scheduled.

Those expressing doubt over the conduct of the poll had argued that there were no signs of preparations by the Commission.

The tenure of current Council Chairmen will expire in March.

OPINION: Tinubu Getting Economy Wrong; 30,000 Wage Not Realistic

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By Farooq Kperogi
IT takes a special kind of partisan bullheadedness— or an acute amnesia of the immediate past— to fail to acknowledge that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has, in the last few weeks, enlivened governance, shown praiseworthy sensitivity to public opinion, and has exerted unaccustomed social, symbolic, and political presence in the country.
But it also requires a severely blind partisan loyalty to not admit that Tinubu’s firing of a corrupt minister caught red handed with her hand in the cookie jar, his responsiveness to legitimate public outcries, and his obvious interest in actual governance have not moved the needle in the real living conditions of the majority of Nigerians who are squirming in profound existential hurt as a direct consequence of the unprecedented economic crunch that the removal of subsidies on petrol has activated. I’ll return to this point later.
I am never shy to publicly admit it when I am wrong. Since January 2022 when it became apparent to me that Tinubu would be president, I was distressed. In a January 12, 2022, social media update, I ventilated this distress when I wrote: “No nation can survive a transition from Buhari’s corrupt, do-nothing, geriatric, and dementia-plagued presidency to a drunken, narcotized, geriatric, and potentially corrupt Tinubu presidency.”
I am not ashamed to concede that I am probably wrong and that the people who insisted that Tinubu would be different from Buhari are right—at least for now. By my training and disposition, I am parsimonious with expressions of commendation for people in positions of power. It’s because I know that the privileges and pressures of power can make people unpredictable or change in a fraction of a moment’s notice. But there is no harm in acknowledging demonstrations of good-faith efforts by people in power.
The swift, no-nonsense suspension of Betta Edu as Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation after irrefutable evidentiary proof of her corruption emerged and public outcry for her ouster grew— and the summoning of the Internal Affairs Minister to explain how a company he is associated with benefitted from Edu’s corruption— has scored the Tinubu administration its most visible reputational mileage in governance yet and has caused many critics to thaw their frigidity toward the administration.
It doesn’t mean there are no other corrupt government officials who are fleecing the nation, but this is the first time an APC administration has fired a minister for corruption. All past examples of ministers who lost their jobs because of corruption have been during PDP administrations. Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Musa Yar’adua, and even Goodluck Jonathan have records of firing ministers who were credibly accused of corrupt enrichment.
Yet, Muhammadu Buhari, who rode to power on the strength of the perception and claims that he was “clean” and was intolerant of corruption, not only never fired a single minister on account of corruption (even though Nigeria lost the most money to corruption during his regime), but he also actually weaponized his symbolic power as president to defend the corruption of his ministers and close associates.
After the alleged corruption of Gen. Tukur Yusuf Buratai, Lt. Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazzau and Babachir David Lawal were published, and it was shown that Rotimi Amaechi bribed judges and Abba Kyari accepted a N500 million naira bribe from MTN to reduce its fine, Buhari’s public response, in December 2016, was, “Terrible and unfounded comments about other people’s integrity are not good. We are not going to spare anybody who soils his hands, but people should please wait till such individuals are indicted.”
But when corrupt people were indicted, he defended them both publicly and privately. For example, when Babachir Lawal was indicted by the Senate for fleecing internally displaced people in the Northeast, Buhari deployed astonishingly bald-faced lies to defend him.
In my January 28, 2017 column titled “Presidential Lying in Defense of Corrupt “Executhieves,” I wrote: “In his letter to the Senate ‘clearing’ Babachir David Lawal of multi-million naira ‘grass cutting’ corruption scandal, the president said the senate didn’t invite Lawal to defend himself. Lie. He WAS invited via a letter, which the permanent secretary attached to his office acknowledged, and via at least three newspaper adverts. But he spurned the invitation and sent a representative.
“The president also said only three senate committee members signed the letter asking for Lawal’s resignation and prosecution. Another lie. Seven senate committee members did.” It was Yemi Osinbajo’s acting presidency that recommended Babachir Lawal’s firing. Left to Buhari, nothing would have happened to him.
We also learned from the Head of Service of the Federation in November 2017 that Buhari was actually aware of, and even countenanced, the scandalous reinstatement and promotion of Abdulrahseed Maina, a former chairman of the Pension Reform Task Force Team who was sacked for stealing 14 billion naira belonging to pensioners. Of course, we all know how he featherbedded Sadiya Umar Farouq who stole way more money than Betta Edu did.
A separate column needs to be written on Buhari’s corruption and how he gave aid and comfort to the worst corruption in Nigeria’s history. It suffices for now to state that Tinubu’s actions would have been mere unremarkable routines in governance had he not been preceded by the worst, most incompetent, and least transparent ruler in Nigeria’s history.
Nonetheless, the praises that the Tinubu administration is receiving from unlikely quarters shouldn’t lull it into a false sense of self-satisfaction to the point of being unmindful of the damaging consequences of its punishingly harsh economic policies.
I was in Nigeria in December 2023 and saw firsthand the extreme, unbearable, and unexampled adversity that the vast majority of people have been thrown into in the aftermath of the removal of petrol subsidies. The level of suffering people are going through now is simply unsustainable. Something will definitely give if nothing is done urgently.
Since the Tinubu administration has so far shown itself to be amenable to be persuaded on issues that matter to the public, I suggest that immediate steps should be taken to halt the drift to hopelessness that’s taking roots in Nigeria.
In Monarchs and Mendicants, Dan Groat warned: “Not interested in scarin’ anybody, but people with good sense are afraid of a man with nothin’ to lose.”
 Lance Conrad reiterated the same sentiment in The Price of Nobility when he said, “Only a fool would underestimate a man with nothing to lose.” Extreme deprivation, such as what most Nigerians are going through now, inspires hopelessness, loss of faith in life itself, and a willingness to bring everything down.
One of the first moves to stop that is to recognize that it’s way past time to increase the national minimum age across the board. N30,000 is no longer even remotely in the realm of a realistic minimum wage in a country where a liter of petrol is more than 600 naira and a bag of rice is more than N50,000.
Second, as a matter of fierce urgency, the government should make Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) readily available and affordable across the country as an alternative to petrol if it’s unwilling to bring down the price of petrol. By affordable, I am suggesting that it should be less than N200 per liter.
The economy is contracting because people aren’t spending, and people aren’t spending because their disposable incomes are being eaten up by the unsustainably high price of petrol.
Third, Nigerians need to see visible signs of the utilization of the money saved from the removal of petrol subsidies in strategic expansion of railways and investment in inter- and intra-state transportation. This would obviate the need for fuel subsidies.
We already know that contrary to what government officials and defenders of subsidy removal had said, money saved from subsidy removal won’t go to education or health. Only 7.9% of this year’s budget is allocated to education, and only 5% is allocated to health. That’s not different from previous years.
There is so much more money for government officials to steal precisely because the removal of fuel subsidies took from the poor. So, firing corrupt officials will only make sense to ordinary folks; it translates to an increase in the quality of their lives

Unity Bank Loyal Customer Wins N1m in CashToken Rewards Promo

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Musa Dayyabu, a customer of Unity Bank Plc has N1 million in the ongoing cash reward Promo by the lender and CashToken Rewards Africa.

CashToken Rewards Africa is a Cash-Reward-as-a-Service company that rewards customers for patronage and loyalty.

Dayyabu, a customer of the Bank from Bello Road Branch, Kano, won the cash prize after he activated his Unity Bank Verve card and having carried out transactions, received CashTokens and qualified for the weekly national consumer draw. It was in this draw, he emerged as the lucky winner of One Million Naira cash.

The Unity Bank and CashToken Rewards promo launched in November 2023, is a cash reward program that offers guaranteed instant cash and a life-changing opportunity designed to reward loyal customers of the Bank who onboard and transact on any of the Bank’s electronic payment platforms, including the Unifi mobile banking application, the *7799# USSD platform.

The program, which will run until the end of February is open to all customers. Each card transaction earns customers CashTokens, which qualifies the customer to enter into the weekly national consumer draw where they stand a chance to win from N5K -N100M Naira.

Presenting the cheque to the winner in Kano on Tuesday, Unity Bank’s Head of E-Business, Eghomware Iyamu congratulated the winner and reiterated the Bank’s commitment to create a sustainable loyalty platform for customer engagement and satisfaction.

Iyamu said, “We celebrate our customers for their loyalty to the Unity Bank and for being part of the ongoing Unity Bank and CashToken Rewards promo. The cash prize being presented today is just the beginning, we, therefore, look forward to having more winners from this programme. Let more and more people get on the Unity Bank’s digital banking, transact on the different platforms and they will equally be rewarded.”

He added, “The collaboration between Unity Bank and CashToken Rewards Africa will continue to create an unmatched customer experience. By tapping into CashToken Reward’s exceptional reward platform, Unity Bank customers can continue to anticipate generous cash rewards, transforming every interaction with the bank into a truly rewarding experience.”

Also commenting on the development, the Chief Business Development officer for CashToken Rewards Africa Africa, Simi Adeoye commended the customers of Unity Bank for the impressive number of onboarding and transactions in the build-up to the weekly draw held in the campaign period, adding that “with opportunities to win life-changing cash of up to N100m, the assurances of the transparent process will constantly be upheld to spread the benefits of the reward scheme to deserving customers”.

“The prospects of having more winners in the ongoing exercise is keeping the steam in the collaboration between the Bank and CashToken Rewards Africa,” Simi said.

Bank Set To Lay Off 20,000 Workers

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Citigroup will lay off 20,000 employees over the next two years, Chief Financial Officer, CFO, Mark Mason said Friday. The reduction comes after the company reported a $1.8 billion net loss for the fourth quarter of 2023, its worst quarter in 15 years.

The bank expects the reduction in headcount to save $2.5 billion over the long-term.

The bank reported a huge earnings loss of $1.16 per share for the fourth quarter, far below estimates of a loss of 11 cents per share, according to FactSet.

Citi said there were several one-time costs that impacted its results. These included a $1.7 billion charge the bank had to pay related to the regional banking crisis last spring, an $880 million loss in Argentina and $800 million in restructuring costs associated with about 7000 layoffs in 2023.

These layoffs are part of Citi CEO Jane Fraser’s years-long effort to cut red tape at the company and boost lagging profits. Fraser called the results “very disappointing” on a call Friday morning, but said that 2024 would be a “turning point year” for the country’s third largest lender.

“Whenever an industry or company goes through these types of reductions, it’s tough on morale,” said Manson on a Friday morning call with reporters. “With that said I would I would point to the fact that we’ve been very clear about the strategy of the firm and very clear about the momentum that we expect.”

In addition to the 20,000 job cuts at the company’s operations, the bank said it will shed 40,000 employees from its Mexican retail unit through an IPO, bringing the total headcount for the company to around 180,000 from 240,000.

Over the next few years, the bank said it expects to pay up to $1 billion in severance pay and reorganization costs related to its planned restructuring.

A spokesperson for the US-based lender said the layoffs would be global in scope and declined to break out numbers by region.

Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser first announced her sweeping restructuring efforts last September. Her plans to rearrange the bank’s leadership, increase accountability and boost the share price, she said, would require a leaner staff.

“We’ll be saying goodbye to some very talented and hard-working colleagues,” Fraser wrote at the time.

Citibank is one of the oldest international banks in Nigeria.

CNN

Dangote Refinery To Load 2900 Trucks Of Diesel, Aviation Fuel Daily

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Dangote Petroleum Refinery says it has the capacity to load 2900 trucks daily from its petrochemical refinery in Lagos.

The company disclosed this on its official X handle on Saturday morning saying full operation has commenced at the refinery.

According to the group, all the products from the multi-billion dollar refinery will conform with international standards.

Already, the refinery has started the production of diesel and aviation fuel after receiving 6 million barrels of crude oil from the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited, NNPCL.

The refinery is planning to “load 2,900 trucks a day at its truck-loading gantries,” one of the series of messages posted on its X handle said.

“The products from the Refinery will conform to Euro V specifications. The refinery design complies with the World Bank, US EPA, European emission norms, and DPR emission/effluent norms,” the group said in another message.

The group expressed appreciation to the federal and Lagos state governments for making the ‘dream’ of Africa’s Richest Man, Aliko Dangote to own one of the biggest refineries in the world come true.

“We thank President Bola Tinubu for his support and for making our dream come true. This production, as witnessed today, would not have been possible without his visionary leadership and prompt attention to details.

“This is a big day for Nigeria. We are delighted to have reached this significant milestone. This is an important achievement for our country as it demonstrates our ability to develop and deliver large capital projects. This is a game changer for our country,” Dangote said.

According to energy experts, the 650,000 barrels per day capacity Dangote refinery have the capacity to meet 100 per cent of Nigeria’s requirement of all refined petroleum products including petrol, diesel, kerosene and jet fuel, and also has a surplus of each of these products for export.

The refinery has yet to start the production of Petroleum Motor Spirit, PMS also known as petrol.

Supreme Court Judgements On Gov. Election Show Independence Of Judiciary – APC, Demands Apology From PDP

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By Ayodele Oni

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has reacted to the Supreme Court Judgements on the 2023 Governorship election in the country, which it said further affirmed independence of the judiciary.

APC stated that it welcomed, with equanimity, the Supreme Court decisions on election petitions challenging the outcome of 2023 governorship elections in eight states.

A statement by Felix Morka, APC spokesman stated that “In Lagos, Ebonyi and Cross River States, the Supreme Court upheld the election of Governorship Candidates of our great Party. However, the appeals on Kano, Zamfara, Bauchi, Plateau and Abia states were decided in favour of other political parties and their candidates.

“While the Apex Court’s decisions will undoubtedly elicit mixed reactions and reviews, the decisions are final and binding on all parties to the legal contests.

“The decisions today provide a strong affirmation of the authority, vibrancy and independence of the Judiciary.

“APC has been consistent in its position that the Judiciary must be left alone to perform its important duty of resolving disputes, including electoral disputes, as constitutionally mandated.

“The decisions today must serve as a rebuke to political opposition figures that vilified and denigrated our courts when judgments were handed against them in these same matters.

“Assuming that it has any spec of decency left, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) must tender unreserved apology to the courts and our judges for the senseless, irresponsible, reckless and unjustified attacks it mounted against the Judiciary throughout this electoral cycle.

“We congratulate the winners, particularly our Governors, Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, Francis Nwifuru of Ebonyi State, and Bassey Otu of Cross River State, and wish them the very best as they continue to serve their states and country.

“We urge everyone to remain calm and continue to maintain the peace.”

Tinubu Tasks APC Governors On Unity, Programmes Of National Interest

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By Ayodele Oni

President Bola Tinubu has reminded Governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) that the major task before the ruling party is unification of Nigeria.

Tinubu who met with the Progressives Governors in Abuja on Friday, implored them to design and implement policies that prioritize all Nigerians and to always consider the national interest above political affiliations.

President Tinubu, said development policies would only find full relevance in people’s lives when there is inclusivity, ownership, and sustainability.

He told the APC governors that one of the biggest challenges the nation faces was divisiveness, but that the governing party must work towards healing and unifying the country by ensuring a collective national vision, and channelling energy and resources into nation-building.

Tinubu pointed out that Nigeria is blessed with human, natural, and material resources to be struggling with a dearth of quality infrastructure, quality education, and world-class health facilities and therefore assured that the entire financial system of the country would be re-engineered for inclusivity, effectiveness, and efficiency.

“We have no reason to be poor. Looking back on where we are coming from, where we have been, why we are facing infrastructural decay, a lack of quality and comprehensive education, as well as a lack of health facilities. We are not a cursed country, but blessed.”

The President tasked the governors to come up with a framework that would make the implementation of the school-feeding programme more comprehensive and successful across all states of the federation, taking into consideration the peculiarities of each locality, but working towards having all children in school.

“We have children of school age who are out of school. The way to promote education is to get all governors, including the opposition governors, involved in the school-feeding programme.

“Please, take it seriously. We should not measure the children as statistics. We should measure their return to classrooms as our achievement. We should see economic growth in terms of value and empowerment. We should set up a committee to look into the methods. I am ready to invest in school feeding.”

On security, Tinubu said the deployment of forest guards was being considered, with better training, modern technological gadgets and weapons to strengthen security, and that the solid mineral and marine economic sectors will also be secured by special police.

“We have a big marine economy, and I do not see why we should not have the marine police. We will have the same in solid minerals to keep the scavengers away.

“I am ready to invest in security. We will buy our own minerals and keep them in reserves, especially gold, which will be effective in our foreign exchange reserve.”

Earlier, Governor of Imo State and Chairman of the Progressive Governors Forum, Hope Uzodinma, thanked the President for involving governors in the design and implementation of policies, as well as for intervening with financial support in the states.

“We will continue to support you as your able ambassadors, willing ambassadors, and capable ambassadors.”

President Tinubu Halts Programmes Under NSIPA For Six Months

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Bola Tinubu

By Ayodele Oni

Following ongoing investigation into their operations, the Federal Government has suspended all programmes of the National Social Investment Programmes Agency (NSIPA).

This was contained in a statement by the Director of Information in the office of Secretary to Government of the Federation, (SGF), Segun Imohiosen.

The suspension, according to the statement, also included the NPower programmes.

The statement reads: “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, has suspended all administered programmes by the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA).

“This is further to the ongoing investigation of alleged malfeasance in the management of the agency and its programmes.

“All four (4) Programmes administered by NSIPA, viz; N- Power Programme, Conditional Cash Transfer Programme, Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme and Home Grown School Feeding Programme (the “Programs”) have been suspended for a period of six (6) weeks in the first instance.

“President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has also raised significant concerns regarding operational lapses and improprieties surrounding payments to the Programs’ beneficiaries.

“He has therefore constituted a ministerial panel to conduct a thorough review of the Agency’s operations with a view to recommending necessary reforms of the NSIPA.

”During the period of this suspension, all NSIPA-related activities, including but not limited to all distributions, events, payments, collaborations and registrations are now frozen.

“The President wishes to assure the stakeholders and all Nigerians that his administration remains committed to a swift and unbiased process that will ensure that, going forward, social intervention programmes will work exactly as intended, to the benefit of the most vulnerable Nigerians.”

This development followed the suspension of Halima Shehu as the chief executive officer (CEO) of the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA) by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Shehu, recently screened and confirmed by the Senate, is accused of financial malfeasance.

Shehu oversaw the Conditional Cash Transfer Programme initiated by former President Muhammadu Buhari to assist vulnerable groups and individuals.

She is reportedly being investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

Zamfara: Wild Jubilation Greets Governor Lawal’s  Supreme Court Victory

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Dauda Lawal - Zamfra State Governor
Governor Dauda Lawal

By Akinwale Kasali

Wild jubilation by supporters and members of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,  greeted the declaration by the Supreme Court of Governor Lawal Dauda as the duly elected Governor of Zamfara State.

Lawal of the People’s Democratic Party, was declared the winner of the March 18 Governorship election. But the then incumbent Governor, Bello Matawalle of the All Progressives Congress, APC, now the Minister of Defence, and Lawal went upto the  Supreme Court for the final verdict.

The Court of Appeal which sat in Abuja had, on November 16, 2023, sacked Dauda following an appeal filed by Matawalle.

Recall that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had after the March 18 governorship poll declared Dauda as the governor-elect, after he garnered 377,726 votes.

The incumbent Governor at the time, Matawalle, secured  311,976 votes.

Bello approached the Zamfara State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal Sokoto, with a petition against Dauda’s election.

Matawalle’s legal team led by Akinlola Kehinde alleged wrongful collation of election results, including those of Maradun LGA.

He also argued that elections were not held in several wards in the state without any reason given by INEC.

But the Tribunal affirmed Dauda’s election and dismissed Matawalle’s appeal for lacking in merit.

After losing his second term bid, Matawalle was appointed as Minister Of State, Defence, by President Bola Tinubu.

But he went on to appeal the verdict of the Tribunal, arguing that Dauda did not score the majority of lawful votes cast during the governorship poll and that the election was inconclusive.

He contended that the Tribunal erroneously struck out evidence tendered by his witnesses including several paragraphs in his petition.

But the PDP countered Matawalle, contending that he failed to prove his petition against Dauda’s election victory.

A three-man panel of the Appeal court led by Justice Oyebisi Folayemi, declared: “It is our view that the order of the Trial Tribunal striking out several paragraphs of the appellants petition was erroneous.”

On the tribunal striking out the evidence (PW1 and PW17) tendered by Matawalle as hearsay, the appellate court held that it was evidently seen from the polling units results used by INEC that the result sheets were not signed by party agents of the appellants.

More so, the Appeal Court held that the evidence of Matawalle’s two witnesses (LG collation agents), contrary to the Tribunal’s position, are linked to the specific aspects of the appellants case.

The Appeal court maintained that in line with the Electoral Act, it shall not be necessary for a party who alleges non compliance with relevant laws, to call oral evidence if their exhibits show the same allegations.

The Appeal Court observed that the documents INEC relied on to declare results in Maradun LGA were mutilated, and as such, the same exhibits tendered by Matawalle before the Tribunal were not hearsay evidence.

“This Court resolves this issue in favour of the appellants.,” the court held.

The Appeal Court further held that the tribunal failed to properly evaluate the evidence brought before it and that the appellants placed credible evidence before the tribunal.

The Court subsequently held that the appellants successfully proved that Dauda was not duly elected, and that the INEC Results Viewing Portal(IREV) cannot be used in collating results as done by the Tribunal.

“This appeal is hereby allowed.

“The March 2023 Governorship election held in Zamfara State is inconclusive and the return of Dauda is set aside.

“INEC is hereby directed to hold fresh elections in Maradun, Birnin Magaji and Bukun Yum LGA,” the appeal court held.

But reading the lead judgment on Friday, Justice Agim Emmanuel, held Matawalle’s legal team never tendered its duplicate copies of the INEC Forms EC8A in dispute, yet the Court of Appeal erroneously held they provided evidence.

He observed that the certified copy of the polling units results in dispute did not show any form of overvoting.

Emmanuel held that the Tribunal was right while the Appeal Court’s decision on the Governor’s election was “perverse”.

The Judge held that polling units and ward results supported the results as declared by INEC.

“The appeal has merit and is hereby allowed,” Emmanuel said while setting aside the judgment of the Appeal Court.