Nigeria’s Supreme Court may today remove the Ekiti State Governor Mr. Ayodele Fayose and declare Dr. Kayode Fayemi as governor of the Fountain of Knowledge.
In an appeal filed by the All Progressives Congress against the
victory of Governor Ayodele Fayose in the June 21, 2014 governorship
election, the party stated that the governor is not qualified to run as
he had not vacated his impeachment at the court of law.
However, Fayose, in a state-wide broadcast on Monday, asked
residents to maintain the peace and go about their lawful duties as the
Supreme Court in Abuja prepared to deliver judgment on Tuesday (today).
The governor, who thanked the people for voting overwhelmingly for
all the Peoples Democratic Party’s candidates in the Saturday House of
Assembly elections, said the victory had confirmed that he had a genuine
mandate of the people.
He said that he was sure that he would be vindicated at the end of
the day and triumph over whatever plot being hatched to truncate his
tenure.
A commercial driver, Ade Bamidele, expressed confidence that the governor would win the case, The Paradigm learnt.
A trader, Esther Orji, said the Ekiti people required peace, saying
the judgment would remove the tension associated with the election.
The Paradigm recalls Ekiti Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal
had on December 19, 2014 upheld Fayose’s victory and dismissed the APC
petition for lack of merit.
Dissatisfied, the APC had gone to the appellate court on the
grounds that Fayose was not qualified to stand for the election as a
candidate because of his impeachment on October 16, 2006 during his
first tenure as governor.
The APC also alleged that the governor forged his academic certificates and violated the Code of Conduct rules.
The five- member panel, chaired by Justice Abdul Aboki, in its
judgment on February 16 had upheld the judgment of the Tribunal, which
affirmed Fayose as the winner of the June 21, 2014 poll.
Though the Justice Abdul Aboki-led five-man panel dismissed the
appeal filed by the APC, it found merit in the appellant’s complaints
that the military was used to harass and intimidate its supporters and
leaders during the polls.
Dissatisfied still, the APC had gone to the Supreme Court.
The Independent National Electoral Commission had declared that
Fayose polled 203,090 votes to defeat the then incumbent governor, Dr.
Kayode Fayemi, of the All Progressives Congress, who polled 120,433
votes in the election.
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