POLICEMEN and operatives of the
Department of State Services manning the gates of the headquarters of
the Independent National Electoral Commission on Wednesday assaulted the
governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress in Rivers
State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, and other candidates of the party in the
last general elections.
The security agents fired tear-gas
canisters at Peterside and 47 other APC candidates in the state
elections, who had gone to the head office of INEC to protest an alleged
refusal of the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Rivers State, Mrs.
Gesila Khan, to release electoral materials for inspection by the APC,
in accordance with the ruling of the Rivers State Election Petitions
Tribunal.
A security operative also threatened to shoot a television reporter, who was recording the protest.
The APC candidate is contesting before
the tribunal the victory of Governor Nyesom Wike of the Peoples
Democratic Party in the April 11 election in Rivers.
The tribunal had ordered that the
petitioners be allowed access to the election materials to enable them
to show proof that the polls in the state were rigged.
The candidates, who arrived at the INEC
HQ at about 11:15am, lamented that they had individually submitted
petitions against Khan’s refusal to make the needed documents available.
Peterside, who led the other candidates
during the peaceful protest, wondered why the REC had refused to comply
with the order of the tribunal, complaining that the REC had claimed
that she was working under instruction from the INEC headquarters.
A petition by the candidates, which was
eventually submitted at INEC, read, “It is highly worrisome that the
Independent National Electoral Commission, which ought to assume the
position of an unbiased umpire, has now thrown caution to the wind and
is now hobnobbing with the other respondents in the aforementioned
petitions to frustrate the speedy and efficient determination of the
petitions.
“The foregoing collaboration and
partnership between the commission and other respondents to the petition
is confirmed by the commission’s refusal to allow our expert inspect
electoral materials, refusal to produce properly Certified True Copies
and the series of objections filed by counsel for the commission,
challenging the tribunal’s order for inspection of electoral materials.”
Rivers APC candidates who participated
in the protest at the INEC headquarters included Senator Magnus Abe,
Andrew Uchendu, Otelemaba Amachree, Chidi Lloyd and Victor Amadi, among
others.
Rivers APC Chairman, Denis Ikanya, also accompanied the protesters to the commission’s headquarters.
Trouble had started at the INEC office
when the security operatives refused to allow all the protesting
candidates to personally present their grievances to the acting Chairman
of INEC, Mrs. Amina Zakari.
Zakari was said to have instructed that she would only see three of the protesters.
The candidates, on arrival at the INEC
headquarters, had been accosted by the security operatives at a
checkpoint near the commission’s main entrance.
Our correspondent learnt that Zakari and Khan were inside the INEC premises during the time of the protest.
The Deputy Director of INEC in charge of
security, Mr. Victor Egbun, who had been delegated to meet with the
protesting candidates at the outer checkpoint, had told them to nominate
three persons to represent them at the meeting with the INEC
chairperson.
Egbun told the protesters that it was the standard procedure at the commission.
“I plead with you to cooperate with us. Select three people to follow us to our office,” he had said.
But the candidates refused, arguing that they had different cases and complaints to make.
Abe warned that the candidates were
running out of time at the tribunal, adding that “this chairman should
not be shy to see visitors. We are not up to 50 candidates here; she can
see us.”
The candidates were further miffed when
the deputy director told them that his boss was with the Rivers State
REC and could not see them.
Sensing that they could be denied
audience, the protesting candidates, at 11:45, walked towards the
commission’s main gate but they were accosted by security operatives,
who asked the protesters to turn back.
However, the protesters refused to heed
the security order and started chanting, “Shoot us!” “President Buhari
must hear this.” “We will refuse to leave.”
By 11:49am, however, the security
operatives started firing tear-gas canisters even as the protesting
candidates, journalists and other visitors scampered away to safety.
The Director of Security at INEC,
Shettima Ngiladi, who had rushed out to see what was happening at the
gate, was speaking with the APC state chairman and some candidates when
the incident occurred.
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