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Delta Guber: PDP, INEC Lawyers Rattle LP, Ogboru’s Witnesses 

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…you are not  witnesses  of truth –respondent lawyers insist 
The three-man- panel of the Delta State Governorship Election Petition was yesterday shocked when the petitioners’ star witnesses reeled out bundles of contradictions, inconsistencies and outright misinformation during cross.
The Labour Party (LP) and its gubernatorial candidate in the April   11 governorship election in Delta State, Chief Great Ogboru are challenging the election victory of Governor   Ifeanyi  Okowa at the polls .
 
At the resumed hearing of the matter yesterday in Asaba, counsel to LP and Ogboru, Mr. Dele Adesina (SAN)   opened his cases with a parade of eight witnesses who testified in the open court in the bid to proof their cases.
 
Soon after Adesina concluded   his examination of the witnesses, which was limited to just the adoption of the witness deposition statements on oath, counsels to Okowa, PDP and INEC ; Mr. Ken Mozia (SAN), Mr. Timothy Kehinde (SAN) and Dr. Onyechi  Ikpeazu (SAN) commenced vigorous cross examination of the witnesses. 
 
Specifically, the petitioner witness number five (PW5), one Mr. Hero Inetiabor who claim to be LP local government election agent and supervisor confirmed under cross examination that he agreed with all the depositions  in his witness statement on oath as a polling  unit agent.
 
He said he felt disappointed that LP and Ogboru did not mention in their petition that ballot boxes were stuffed   with papers.
 
He said as a party agent, he saw people carrying ballot papers in their pocket but could not clarify whether they were   PDP agents who were stuffing ballot papers into ballot boxes.
Inetiabor said during the governorship election , that   accreditation  and voting  took place within the time allotted by INEC, although, that he left his polling unit after  he voted , as such could not give account of what transpired while he was away.
 
He said on the day of the election that he was moving from one ward to other even when he acknowledged that  fact that there was a  restriction order by the police and INEC that voters should  not move outside their voting environment, except accredited party agents, yet he told the court that he was  not accredited by INEC as his name was not submitted by his party. 
 
Inetiabor  told the court that some PDP thugs attacked the polling unit were he was , but that  did not lodge the complain to the police or the INEC  office, even when his party LP engaged in campaigns  while election was on going because other parties in the election were also campaigning.
He said as a party agent, he could not remember the number of voters that were accredited for voting for the lection in his polling unit, saying that it will be surprising to him to know that 361 voters were accredited.
 
He told the tribunal that the polling unit under his control  is located at Asaba Girls Grammar  School,     but when confronted with the court records, he reverted it to Anglican Girls Grammar School. 
 
The 5th petitioner  witness and  LP  chairman in Ika South local government area,  Mr.  Victor Akpeye told the tribunal that he did not know if  LP sent  names of accredited party agents to INEC  for the  conduct of the election, even when the party did  not  appoint him as a polling unit agent.
 
He told the tribunal that he does not know whether the LP forwarded his name  as a party agent , even when the party did  appoint him  as an agent  to polling  unit in the local government, yet he said he was not allowed entrance into INEC  vote collation  center, were he was to represent the party, adding that he could not remember the number of the polling units  he visited.
 
Under further cross examination, Akpeye told the tribunal that he was in charge of all the other agents in the local government, yet his name was missing from the INEC accredited  list for agents.
Another petitioners witness (PW6) Mr. David Utomi told the court that he did not report the rigging of the election to INEC and the police, yet he prepared a report on the development which he submitted to his party.
 
He said he visited the words 4,6 and 9  of Anio-Obodo primary school , in Ubulu-uku,  during the election , but the records when he was confronted with the showed that the correct name of the word is Ashaba Ubulu primary school.
He further told the tribunal that he was a collation agent but the tribunal showed that  he was polling  unit officer.
 

The 7th petitioner’s witness, Mr. Ochuko  Alaba who identified himself as a lecturer in  Delta state University told the tribunal that he  will not give a yes or no answer to the respondents’ question as to whether he signed under duress or not, but the tribunal records showed that he signed and did not state whether it was done under duress.
 
Alaba graciously declined most of the question put to him by the lawyers which resulted into series of altercation between him and the counsels which prompted the intervention of the tribunal chairman that he should answer directly question put to him.
 
When confronted with the section of the law that prohibits public officers from holding positions as party agent, Alaba faulted the law , saying it does not apply   in his case as he was a civil servant.
 
 
 

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