Here's an amateur footage
of the May 24 Nigeria Governors’ Forum election during which Rivers State
Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, was reelected chairman after he defeated his only
challenger, Jonah Jang of Plateau State 19 votes to 16.
PREMIUM TIMES had exclusively reported that a governor in the camp of Mr.
Amaechi did a recording of the voting. With his mobile phone, Governor
Rauf Aregbesola of Osun captured most of the proceedings of an election that
featured intense maneuvering from governors on a clear divide, either in
support or against President Goodluck Jonathan’ candidate, Governor Jonah Jang
of Plateau state.
The president has repeatedly denied
having interest in who becomes the next chairman of the group, but that claim
has been disproved by insiders and governors, and even the president’s body
language. The footage documents how the 35
governors voted, the counting of votes and the declaration of result by
presiding officer, Asishana Okauru, who is also the director general of the
forum. Video after cut:
For mobile users, click here for
video.
At a point during the counting of votes, the arrowhead
of the opposition against Mr. Amaechi, Governor Godswill Akpabio, realized the
election was being taped and he charged angrily at Mr. Aregbesola. But once Mr.
Akpabio turned away, the governor simply resumed his secret recording.
With allegation of fraud now up against Mr. Amaechi’s
victory from governor’s known to be die-hard associates of the president, the
recording is seen as the first documented evidence of a transparent process to
crush that concern.
The outcome of the poll has been rejected by governors
in support of Mr. Jang, and apparently, President Jonathan. The protesting
governors, led by Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom state, said the process
violated key rules, and declared the group’s decision not to recognize Mr.
Amaechi as the winner.
But for all the authority of incumbency and presidential
leverage, Friday’s elections provided a teachable moment on the potency of an
alliance between discontent members of a ruling party, and the opposition
All Progessives Congress – a coalition bonded by common goal to upset and
humiliate the establishment.
Mr. Amaechi, not favoured to win by the pro-Jonathan
team, emerged despite intense strategizing that saw the Peoples Democratic
Party raise a list of supporting governors who agreed Mr. Jang was the rightful
candidate to win the seat. Nineteen PDP governors signed the document before
the polls.
The Northern Governors Forum met early Friday and
prevailed on the Katsina and Bauchi governors, Ibrahim Shema and Isa Yuguda,
respectively, to yield their ambition, for a consensus candidate in the person
of Mr. Jang.
But in the end, at least three governors, who rallied
that support on paper, backed off when afforded the luxury of an unmarked
ballot paper, and a secret voting system. Their votes, alongside the
opposition, apparently went Mr. Amaechi’s way.
After the polls, Mr. Akpabio,
backed by other governors in support of Mr. Jang, said using the unmarked
papers (which should betrayed those who opposed the president’ choice), and the
refusal of Mr. Amaechi to resign first before the poll, nullified the
elections.
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