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Election Tribunal 2023 | Zikoko!
  • The Presidential Election Tribunal: What You Should Know

    On March 1, 2023, the Independent Nigeria Electoral Commission (INEC) announced the results of the keenly-contested February 25 presidential election, declaring Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the new Nigerian President. Subsequently, he was sworn in as President on May 29, 2023.

    But this didn’t mark the end of the election process. 

    What happened?

    Nigerian elections are usually fierce contests, but no election since the country’s return to democracy in 1999 was as close as the 2023 cycle. Three favourites emerged in the months leading to the polls: Peter Obi of the Labour Party, Atiku Abubakar of the People’s Democratic Party and eventual winner, Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the APC. 

    While Tinubu’s 8,794 726 votes were enough to be victorious at the polls, it was the smallest win margin by any Nigerian President since 1999. Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi followed relatively closely at 6,984 520 and 6,101 533 votes, respectively. 

    This wasn’t the most significant bone of contention, though. The election was also allegedly marred by violence, voter intimidation, harassment and other irregularities, begging one question: Can the legitimacy of the results be trusted?

    Following INEC’s declaration, various calls emerged to invalidate the results, accusing the electoral body of multiple electoral irregularities. Since May 2023, three political parties — Labour Party (LP), People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and Allied People’s Movement (APM) — have contested the INEC results that declared Tinubu president, basically telling the tribunal to evict Tinubu from Aso Rock. 

    Here’s what to know about the petitions

    On March 21, 2023, four presidential candidates from four political parties lodged different suits with the election tribunal, seeking to nullify the results. 

    Labour Party (LP)

    The party believes the new President and vice were not qualified to contest the election, referencing Tinubu’s alleged involvement in narcotics and his running mate, Shettima’s nomination, while being the Borno Central constituency’s senatorial candidate. Also, President Tinubu didn’t get 25% of the votes in the FCT, which according to the Labour Party, should have stopped INEC from declaring him the election winner. 

    The petition prays the tribunal to order a return to the polls where Tinubu and Shetimma will not participate. 

    People’s Democratic Party (PDP)

    PDP’s petition also asked the tribunal to dismiss the results of the presidential elections. They argue the invalidity of the results based on electoral irregularities during the process. 

    Allied People’s Movement (APM)

    The petition noted that Shettima’s double nomination is against the provisions of the Nigerian constitution and electoral act.

    Action Alliance (AA)

    The party asked the tribunal to annul the election results because its candidate, Hamza Al-Mustapha, wasn’t allowed to contest by INEC.

    AA subsequently withdrew its petition. 

    What will the tribunal ruling mean?

    The tribunal announced it’ll deliver its ruling in Abuja on September 6, 2023. One of two things will happen: uphold the election results and confirm Tinubu as President, or cancel the election and order a rerun. 

    If the former happens, the petitioners can seek out the Supreme Court and appeal the judgement. According to the law, an appeal should be concluded within 60 days from the date of the tribunal judgement.

    Whatever the Supreme Court decides is the final judgement. There is no other place to go from there. 

    Highlights From the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal Judgement

    Allied Peoples Movement (APM)

    Petition: The party noted that Tinubu’s running mate, Kashim Shettima, was a senatorial candidate at the time of his nomination, which, according to the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution and Electoral Act, is a case of double nomination.

    The party asked the tribunal to void all the votes scored by the APC and announce PDP’s Atiku as the authentic winner of the election.

    Judgement: Justice Haruna Tsammani cited the petition as “incompetent” and noted that the issues raised were pre-election matters outside the tribunal’s ruling. The election petition tribunal dismissed the APM’s case, noting that the party had no legal standing to file the motion.

    Labour Party (LP)

    Petition: The party’s candidate, Mr Peter Obi, sought to have Tinubu disqualified on the basis of an alleged pre-existing drug case in the U.S., making him unqualified to contest for the election. 

    The petition challenged his vice, Kashim Shettima’s nomination while being the Borno Central constituency’s senatorial candidate.

    The petition also noted that Tinubu failed to secure 25% of votes in the FCT, so he shouldn’t have been declared the winner.

    Judgement: Justice Abba-Bello Mohammed read the court’s judgement, throwing out Peter Obi’s petition to disqualify Tinubu based on a U.S. drug case. According to the court, the U.S. court fine, which led to a civil forfeiture of $460k, did not disqualify Tinubu from running for president of Nigeria.

    The tribunal has also held that President Bola Tinubu and Vice President Kashim Shettima were qualified to have contested the last presidential election.

    Peter Obi’s motion to cancel the election result based on manual transmission has also been dismissed. According to the tribunal, INEC can transmit election results how they see fit.

     Obi’s last two motions to cancel the election results on allegations of overvoting and corrupt practices and the failure of Tinubu to secure 25% of votes in the FCT have also been dismissed by the tribunal.

    All of Peter Obi’s motions have been dismissed in favour of Tinubu.

    People’s Democratic Party (PDP)

    Petition: The party sought the tribunal to dismiss the election results based on electoral irregularities, as well as allegations of Tinubu’s dual citizenship.

    Judgement: Justice Boloukuoromo Ugo read the court’s judgement, throwing out all the motions filed in favour of Tinubu.

    The tribunal made a unanimous decision

    All five judge-members of the presidential election tribunal have unanimously affirmed Bola Tinubu as Nigeria’s validly-elected president. Justice Haruna Tsammani, in the lead judgement, held that none of the three petitioners was able to prove their allegations as contained in the petitions. They claimed the petitioners failed to provide credible evidence.

    According to Justice Mistura Bolaji-Yusuf, “It is clear from the outset that the petitioners were engaging in wild goose chase and an inquisitorial adventure.”

    Most of the exhibits and testimonies tendered by the petitioners were rejected based on “procedural blunders” and “technicalities”. The entire judgement ran for over 12 hours.

    Is this the end of the road for the petitioners?

    Far from it. The petitioners have the opportunity to file an appeal to the Supreme Court within 14 days to counter the tribunal’s judgement. It’ll likely be a long road ahead.

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  • What’s Going On With Nigeria’s 2023 Election Tribunal?

    When discussing his plans for security when he gets into power, Tinubu once said, “To start chaos is easy”, but ensuring peace is a struggle. Given the events that have unfolded since he was declared the winner of the 2023 presidential election, we can all acknowledge the challenge of maintaining peace with other political parties.

    President Tinubu. [BBC Africa/Twitter]

    From a controversial election win to swiftly dishing out mouth-gaping policies as president, Tinubu has been making different moves in his first days as president, and he doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon.

    Many people are no longer following up on efforts to challenge Tinubu’s victory, but let’s revisit the purpose and significance of an election tribunal.

    The Recap

    • An election tribunal is a place where a sole judge can determine the contests or petitions alleged against a candidate during an election by all candidates.
    • On March 21, 2023, four presidential candidates, Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP), Solomon Okangbuan of Action Alliance (AA) and Chichi Ojei of the Allied People’s Movement (APM) filed petitions at the Presidential Elections Tribunal in Abuja, seeking to nullify INEC’s declaration of Bola Tinubu as the winner of the 2023 presidential elections.

    The petitions claim that the presidential election results should be annulled for the following reasons:

    • At the time of the elections, Tinubu wasn’t qualified to contest, which would infer that he received “wasted votes”.
    • Kasim Shettima had a double nomination, one as APC’s vice-presidential candidate and the other for a senatorial seat in the National Assembly, contrary to what’s permitted based on Section 35 of the Electoral Act.
    • Tinubu failed to get 25% of the votes in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and engaged in corrupt practices that were non-compliant with the Electoral Act.

    The last time we covered the election tribunals, they had just begun court proceedings, with the AA withdrawing their petitions and backing out of the race. But so much more has happened since then. Let’s fill you in:

    Read: What Nigerian Lawyers and Analysts Are Saying About the Election Tribunal

    A tussle over live broadcasting of court proceedings 

    In May 2023, Atiku and Obi had been pleading with the court to grant a live broadcast of events due to the “national import” or importance of the case. But the APC wasn’t having that at all. 

    Tinubu’s counsel, Wole Olanipekun, says they are there for “serious business, not a parade ground”. Thus, there was no real reason for the proceedings to be televised. 

    On May 23, 2023, the presidential election court ended the dispute by rejecting the applications.

    Hot arguments started over INEC Chair dodging subpoenas

    Things began to get hot on June 14, when LP lead counsel Livy Uzoukwu accused INEC Chairman Mahmoud Yakubu of dodging subpoenas for the production of documents. 

    Kemi Pinero, in defense said that they have responded to all subpoenas (including PDP’s) and that the LP counsel only wants to “stall the case”. She also said this had been a pattern of the LP for the last two weeks.

    LP then tendered 18,000 blurred result sheets

    On June 15, LP’s fourth witness, Eric Ofoedu, a mathematics professor who was commissioned to analyse election data in Rivers and Benue, claimed that INEC had uploaded 18 pages of unreadable data.

    However, Mahmoud denied the claim. He added that the witness had sent in his statements only a few minutes before court proceedings for that day started.

    How Ofoedu must have felt when his claims were dismissed

    “There was no technical glitch as claimed by INEC”

    Technical difficulties were a key reason voters could not view election results on the IReV (INEC Results Viewing Portal). That is, until LP’s seventh witness, Clarita Ogar, spoke on June 20.

    Ogar is a cloud engineer with Amazon Web Services Incorporated (AWS), a firm INEC engaged in providing technical support. She claimed that AWS Cloud did not record any technical glitches in the country on February 25. Ogar brought six reports showing the status of the AWS dashboard of cloud services in 33 regions and certificates of compliance to back up her claims.

    Tinubu’s legal team strongly disagreed with the allegation. They went to reference instances where the AWS software glitched in the past, e.g., MTN’s payment service bank in 2021.

    APM has refused to back down

    The Allied Peoples Movement (APM) refused to discontinue its petition challenging the election of Bola Tinubu as Nigeria’s president.

    Gideon Idiagbonya, APM counsel, said the party had analysed the judgement and intends to continue with the petition.

    There was no objection from the court, as the panel noted that everyone is free to fight for their rights.

    The PDP plans to wrap up by Friday

    The PDP and Atiku have indicated they will close their case at the tribunal by Friday. But according to Chris Uche, his team had lost two of the 21 days allotted to them, with one being a public holiday,

    The PDP legal team now has an extension of court. This means we should expect PDP presence for two more days. 

    Meanwhile, Obi is under pressure to give up the fight

    A House of Representatives Member, Amobi Ogah, has asked Peter Obi and other parties’ candidates to support President Bola Tinubu.

    According to him, “the election has come and gone. Now it is about governance. And whoever God has given that mandate to represent the people, you must respect that institution.”

    But will Obi give up? Will shocking new evidence be uncovered? Let’s wait and see.

    Download the Citizen Election Report: Navigating Nigeria’s Political Journey