Olisa Metuh |
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has
kicked against an advice by the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mr.
Abubakar Malami, to the All Progressives Congress (APC) that the party can substitute
its late candidate in the Kogi State Governorship Election.
The opposition party also asked Mr. Malami
to “immediately vacate his office for harrying and misleading the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) into arriving at the decision”.
In a statement by party’s spokesman, Olisa
Metuh, the party said it was shocked that “INEC, a supposedly independent
electoral umpire, could allow itself to succumb to the antics of the APC by
following the unlawful directive of an obviously partisan AGF to substitute a
candidate in the middle of the ballot process”.
Also making comments about the situation
on Monday, Mr. Malami said that the APC could substitute its candidate in the
Kogi State Governorship Election, who died a day after the November 21
election.
But the PDP is kicking against the
statements, saying they were attacks on Nigeria’s democracy.
The party claimed that the clear
implication of this action of the AGF and INEC was that the APC would be
fielding two different governorship candidates in the on-going Kogi election, a
situation it said meant that INEC would be transferring votes cast for late Prince
Abubakar Audu to another candidate.
According to the opposition party, the
scenarios had no place in the Nigerian Constitution.
The opposition party further said:
“Whereas the PDP, in honour of the sanctity of human life and respect for the
dead, had since Sunday refrained from making comments on the conduct of the
election, we can no longer maintain such in the face of the barefaced attack on
our democracy.
“This INEC, under the leadership of
Professor Mahmood Yakubu, has shown itself as partisan, morally bankrupt and
obviously incapable of conducting a credible election within our laws”.
It also demanded for the resignation of
the INEC Chairman, as claimed that the nation’s democracy could not afford to
be left in the hands of an electoral umpire that could not exert its
independence and the sanctity of the electoral process.
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