Mobolaji Michael
The Ogun State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal has fixed Saturday 30th September 2023 for judgment in the petition filed by the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ladi Adebutu against Governor Dapo Abiodun of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
Eighteen-Eleven Media recalls that the tribunal had on Monday 4 September 2023 reserved judgment in the petition as counsel to all the parties moved their final written addresses.
The Chairman of the three-man tribunal, Justice Hamidu Kunaza, had told the counsel that the judgment date would be communicated to all the parties. Eighteen-Eleven Media gathered that parties have been communicated as to the readiness of the tribunal to proceed with the delivery of its judgment.
Adebutu had approached the tribunal to challenge the declaration of Prince Abiodun as the winner of the governorship election conducted on 18 March by INEC, pointing out that the election was marred with corrupt practices and non-compliance with the Electoral Act.
In their separate submissions however, counsel to the 1st Respondent (INEC), Mr Remi Olatubora (SAN); 2nd Respondent (Dapo Abiodun), Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN); and the 3rd Respondent (APC), Mr Tayo Oyetibo (SAN), told the tribunal that the Petitioners failed to prove their case beyond reasonable doubt.
Counsel to INEC, Olatubora prayed the tribunal to dismiss the petition for being absolutely unmeritorious and a waste of the tribunal’s precious time.
He said that allegations of corrupt practices, non-compliance, multiple thumb printing of ballot papers, ballot stuffing, and forgery as alleged by the Petitioners were not proved beyond any reasonable doubt.
He described the testimony of the witnesses brought by the Petitioners as hearsay, which is not admissible in law.
Counsel to Prince Dapo Abiodun, Chief Wole Olanipekun, (SAN) in his final address, described Adebutu’s petition as a mere academic exercise.
He noted that the petition was not duly signed and stamped and, therefore, lacked merit and was unfit to be adjudicated upon and therefore should be struck out.
“The document is not signed, not dated, no heading, no title, no identity, no signature, no stamp. The CTC has no signature,” he said.
However, in his counter-argument, counsel to Adebutu, Chris Uche, SAN, told the tribunal that all documents presented by the petitioners were obtained from INEC.
He urged the tribunal to declare Adebutu the winner of the governorship election or, in the alternative, order a rerun of the election in 99 polling units where he alleged that there were disruptions.
Counsel to APC, Tayo Oyetubo, who spoke to journalists shortly after the adjournment of the sitting, said the Respondents have presented a good case, even as he expressed confidence that the judgment would be in their favour.
He said: “All parties have addressed the court on the case before the court, and the matter has been adjourned for judgment. The case that was brought to the tribunal was attacked on different grounds in terms of competence, in terms of substance, and in terms of the quality of the witnesses that were brought, all of those issues have been adequately canvassed before the court and in a nutshell, the Respondents are confident that they’ve done a good job and winning the case.”
It would be recalled that APC and Prince Abiodun had described Adebutu and PDP’s petition as a wild goose chase.
Abiodun and APC, in their final written submissions earlier reported, argued that the Petitioners did an awful job and failed to prove their case.
This, they said, was because Adebutu and PDP presented tutored and unreliable witnesses, relied on documents that contradicted their witnesses’ case, and presented experts whose testimonies and documents lacked probative value.
They argued that Adebutu and PDP, who are accused of vote-buying with credible evidence, have unclean hands and could not receive equity with those unclean hands.
Eighteen-Eleven Media