The
electoral tussle between Senator Chris Ngige and Prof. Dora Akunyili ended on
March 26 with a verdict of the Court of Appeal, Enugu, which upheld Ngige’s
election, EMMANUEL OBE reports.
Senator
Chris Ngige was in far away United States on March 26 when the Court of Appeal
in Enugu confirmed his election as the person to represent Anambra Central in
the Senate.
But
he came down April 1, to meet with his supporters in Awka, the Anambra State
capital, after the court verdict and celebrate his final victory. The elated
mood of the senator at the Sunday bash betrayed the story of apprehension and
anxiety that hid behind the façade of confidence and grandstanding that he had
exhibited all the while since April last year when the battle for the
senatorial seat started.
To
show how free Ngige now feels, he announced to the equally joyous gathering
that he would now open his constituency offices in the seven local government
areas that make up the senatorial zone, an indication that until he was saved
by the Appeal Court last month, he had not been too sure of his seat in the
Senate Chambers to the point that he could not open a constituency office.
“This
marks a new era in the politics of the state,” Ngige had declared when he got
the news of the Court of Appeal verdict. He praised God for the victory and for
showing that “the truth triumphs over untruth at the end of the day.”
“I
won the senatorial election twice but Akunyili through the instrumentality of
the Anambra State Government decided to take a gamble at the election courts to
see if blackmail and even intimidation could assist them to get what the
electorate denied them in the field,” he lamented.
His
opponent, Prof. Dora Akunyili, did not also have it easy while the struggle to
unseat Ngige raged. Though she has accepted the verdict of the Court of Appeal
as the final judgment in the case, she still rued about the injustice that she
said was done to her by both the electoral commission and the judiciary.
Chiedu
Okoye, a writer and an apparent admirer of Akunyili, had this to say of the
Court of Appeal verdict; “The verdict didn’t serve the cause of justice.
Akunyili was not defeated; the Appeal court and election tribunal didn’t strike
out her case for lack of merit.”
That
is why she has not thought it imperative to congratulate and extend a hand of
fellowship to Ngige, who she once admitted is a family friend.
Akunyili
is pained by the fact that she did not have any opportunity to prove her case
at the tribunal, having claimed to have won the election in the field. Her
petition was determined on technicalities, having failed to be determined
within the 180 days required by the Electoral Act.
She
said, “Aware that the election was rigged in his favour, Dr. Ngige did
everything humanly possible to ensure that my petition would not be heard. His
legal team employed delay tactics, using one crafty argument after another to
frustrate the hearing of my case. Five times we went on appeal and five times
we won, sometimes with fines against Ngige.
“Having
done everything within our power to get justice, we must at this point accept
the reality that our case will never be heard. It is a sad day for justice in
our country because technicality has triumphed over merit.”
Ngige
and Akunyili entered the race with intimidating credentials. Former members of
the all powerful Peoples Democratic Party, which was controlling the Federal
Government and had substantial influence in Anambra State, the two candidates
opted to adopt new platforms to prosecute their ambitions.
The
race indeed turned out to be an epic battle for the two of them. The huge
presence of the candidates from the PDP, the Accord party and other major
parties soon paled into insignificance as Ngige and Akunyili took centre stage.
Ngige,
a former Governor of Anambra State, was backed by a cult following and a
popularity that he achieved during his 33 months as governor of the state
between 2003 and 2006. He joined the race on March 16, 2011, barely three weeks
to the election and changed earlier permutations about the election. His party,
the Action Congress of Nigeria, was built around him in Anambra State and
therefore his hopes were all dependent on how well he could manage his party
and his popularity with the people.
Akunyili
was also very popular. Her gender disadvantage in a society that is patriarchal
did not seem to come up at all as a factor. Flaunting impeccable credentials
she earned when she served as the Director General of the National Agency for
Food and Drug Administration and Control, where she successfully fought
Nigerian drug counterfeit rings, Akunyili relinquished her top flight job as
the Federal Minister of Information and Communications, quit her party, the PDP
that was controlling the Federal Government and opted for the regional All Progressives
Grand Alliance.
Unlike
Ngige, however, Akunyili had the benefit of joining a party that controlled the
state government and had a wider support base. But from every indication, the
two seemed equally matched and the world looked ahead to a fierce but exciting
contest in Anambra Central.
Both
of them well educated and obstinate to a fault, their late entry into the race
pushed aside previous top contenders like the then incumbent Senator, Annie
Okonkwo of the Accord Party, Chief Oguguo Okoye of the PDP, Chief Chudi
Offodile and others.
In
spite of their respective strengths and experience in politics, like gamblers,
Ngige and Akunyili appeared to have staked their political future in that
single race. And that raised the stakes higher; for in addition to Akunyili,
Ngige saw the election as an opportunity to get back at Governor Peter Obi, who
had humiliated him in two previous governorship elections.
Interestingly,
Ngige and Akunyili each had big support bases in their local government area
where it was certain that they would pull their weight to draw for themselves
premium votes in the election. Even the dumb in Anambra State know that Ngige
would not lose any contemporary election in the Idemili North and Idemili South
Local Government Areas, where the effect of his road projects were most felt
when he was governor.
On
the other hand, Akunyili’s grip over Anaocha Local Government Area where she
hails from along with Governor Obi was not in doubt. That left the four other
local government areas of Awka South, Awka North, Njikoka and Dunukofia up for
grabs.
Election
Day finally came on April 9, 2011 and everything seemed to be going smoothly
until the bubble burst when the election results were being collated.
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