DELTA APPEAL COURT RULING: GBAGI ALLAYS FEARS, SAYS OKOWA WILL TRIUMPH OVER OGBORU – National Reformer News Online
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DELTA APPEAL COURT RULING: GBAGI ALLAYS FEARS, SAYS OKOWA WILL TRIUMPH OVER OGBORU

DELTA APPEAL COURT RULING: GBAGI ALLAYS FEARS, SAYS OKOWA WILL TRIUMPH OVER OGBORU

OGHENETEJIRI NYERHOVWO/IGBIVWIE RACHAEL

Ahead of the Appeal Court ruling tomorrow, Friday, November 5, 2019 on the Delta State governorship case between Chief Great Ogboru of the All Progressives Congress(APC)against the March 9 re-election of Governor of Delta State, Senator Ifeanyi Okowa, Olorogun Kennet Gbagi, former Minister of Education has allayed the fears of Deltans saying that Senator Okowa will triumph over Chief Ogboru.

According Olorogun Gbagi who spoke to journalists in Asaba, “I want to allay the fears of Deltans and let them know that tomorrow’s verdict will be resounding because the people in all the nooks and crannies of the state came out and voted for Governor Okowa to do a second term because they believed in him and want him to finish stronger.”

He added, “as a lawyer and criminologist following the matter and who participated in the election that led to Dr. Okowa’s victory, I want to say that he convincingly won and congratulate Deltans for his anticipated victory because the facts of the case are clear. He won. Not surprising to many of us, Senator Okowa has turned out to be the best governor of the state since the democratic experimentation started in 1999 until date.”

The PDP leader, who fought for Okowa’s re-election pointed out, “the entire world knows that Senator Okowa won the last governorship election, Deltans gave him their support and mandate and therefore, there is nothing from what is contained in the judgment of the tribunal that anybody is going to use to upturn his victory in the Appeal Court.”

OlorogunGbagi noted that the APC and its candidate did not even campaign for votes in the last governorship elections, saying, “they were busy quarreling among themselves, even a week to the election.
They had thought that they would rely on hooligans and military, which rejected them, to cow the people on Election Day and finally run to the court to get what do not exist. We should not listen to and indulge those that usually come to the state few months to election to disturb our peace and file action in the court after serial defeats to waste our time and distract governance.”

Olorogun Gbagi said that the governor is a gentleman that has conducted himself in the best tradition and with administrative sagacity and selflessness, he spoke further,”he has also dispelled all fears of agitation and bickering in the state. Let us all support him to finish stronger and better.”

It could be recalled that a five-member panel of the appellate court led by Justice Uzo Ndukwe-Anyanwu reserved judgment on the appeal filed by Chief Ogboru and APC against the verdict of the Delta State Governorship Election Tribunal which upheld Okowa for a second term.

The appellants in a 37- ground of appeal filed by their counsel, Nicholson Ichekor, asked the Court of Appeal to set aside the entire judgment of the tribunal on the grounds that the tribunal erred in law when it dismissed their appeal for lacking in merit.

The three- man panel of the governorship election panel led by Justice Suleiman Belgore, had in September dismissed Ogboru and APC’s petition against the return of Governor Okowa on grounds that the petitioners failed to prove the cases of irregularities and malpractices claimed in their petition.

However, in the appeal against the decision of the tribunal, Ogboru and APC argued that the lower court, among other things, erred in law when it relied on the issue of over voting instead of allocation of votes as canvassed in their petition to dismiss their petition.

The appellants in urging the court to nullify Okowa’s election claimed that in some polling units, the total number of votes cast at the election exceeded the total number of voters accredited to vote, adding that there was non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act in relation to accreditation of voters.

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