
News
Tribunal: Atiku, Obi head to Supreme Court, say verdict very strange, we got judgement, not justice
• Atiku, Obi’s rigging allegations not proved, e-transmission of result, 25% in FCT not compulsory, says PEPT
• It is victory for democracy, Tinubu, APC hail judgment
The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, and his Labour Party counterpart, Peter Obi, have rejected Wednesday’s judgment of the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal affirming the election of President Bola Tinubu.
The Legal Adviser to the Labour Party, Kehinde Edun, vowed to challenge the judgment at the Supreme Court.
Also, Atiku’s Lead Counsel, Chris Uche, SAN, said he had received instructions from his client to file an appeal at the Supreme Court.
He said “The judgment has been delivered but we have not received justice. Luckily, the law has given us leverage to go on appeal to the Supreme Court. We have instructions from our clients to go to the Supreme Court. The struggle continues.”
The PEPT which began sitting at 9.40am at the Court of Appeal, Abuja, ruled that the petition filed by Atiku and Obi and their parties had no merit and unanimously upheld Tinubu’s electoral victory in the February 25 presidential election.
The five-member panel took turns to dismiss the petitions presented by Atiku and Obi against the declaration of Tinubu as the winner of the presidential election by the Independent National Electoral Commission on March 1, 2023.

The judgment was delivered by the Chairman of the tribunal, Justice Haruna Tsammani, assisted by other members of the panel-Justices Stephen Adah, Monsurat Bolaji-Yusuf, Moses Ugo and Abba Mohammed.
Delivering the death knell to Atiku’s petition on Wednesday night, Tsammani stated, “This petition accordingly lacks merit. I affirm the return of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the duly elected President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The parties are to bear their cost.”
The National Legal Adviser of the LP, Edun, expressed disappointment with the judgment, stressing that the tribunal was unfair to reject 10 of their 13 witnesses, adding that the decision weakened their case.
Edun said, “We already had a premonition that this might happen. For example, where the court was saying the statements of some key witnesses should have been filed along with the petitions. How can that be? Subpoena is an order of court by which the court has compelled a witness to come and give evidence before or as of the time you are filing the petition.
‘’This is because I have not assumed jurisdiction, the tribunal has also not assumed jurisdiction. We are just filing. It is only after filing that the court assumes jurisdiction, not before. So how can you file a witness statement at the time of filing the petition? It is when the court signs the subpoena.”
He explained, ‘’That subpoena is an invitation to the person indicating that the court has given him an order to come and give evidence. So, if the court has not ordered the person, how can he give any statement?
‘’This is why I said the judgment is so strange. And it is on the basis that they knocked out the evidence of 10 of our 13 witnesses, which inevitably weakened our case. It is a strange judgment.”
On the next point of action for the party, the legal adviser disclosed that the apex court will be the final arbiter.
“There are some filings that are unacceptable to us. So we need to see what the apex court has to say to this. We have to address this, not only for today, but for the sake of our jurisprudence. We want to see what the judges at the Supreme Court will say about all these. It is so important to do this for the sake of tomorrow.”
Delivering judgment earlier on Obi and LP’s petition marked CA/PEPC/03/2023, Tsammani said the petitioners failed to prove the allegations in their petition as required by the law and went ahead to knock off the planks of the case one after the other.
The tribunal held that although the petitioners alleged that the election was marred by irregularities, they, however, failed to give specific details of where the alleged infractions took place.
The court noted that whereas Obi and the LP insisted that the election was rigged in 18, 088 polling units across the federation, they were unable to state the locations of the said polling units.
In the verdict that was read for five hours, the tribunal further held that Obi’s allegation that fictitious results were recorded for the Tinubu and the All Progressives Congress by the Independent National Electoral Commission was not proved.
Moreso, it pointed out that the petitioners were unable to state the figures they claimed were reduced from the election results they garnered in different states of the federation, especially in Ondo, Oyo, Rivers, Yobe, Borno, Tabara, Osun and Lagos States.
It added that the petitioners equally failed to state the polling units where over-voting occurred or the exact figures of unlawful votes that were credited to Tinubu by the INEC.
It stressed that though Obi and LP said they would rely on spreadsheets as well as forensic reports and expert analysis of their expert witnesses, they failed to attach the documents to the petition or serve the same on the respondents as required by the law.
The court stated that though the petition contained serious allegations that bordered on violence, non-voting, suppression of votes, fictitious entry of election results and corrupt practices, Obi and his party, however, failed to give particulars of specific polling units where the incidents took place.
It held that several portions of the petition that contained the allegations were “vague, imprecise, nebulous and bereft of particular materials.”
Therefore, the court struck out paragraphs 9, 60, 61, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 76, 77, 78, 83 and 89 of the petition.
“They failed to state the number of votes affected and the number of people disenfranchised. The determination of the election is about figures,” Justice Mohammed declared.
He further stated, “It is unimaginable that a petitioner will allege widespread rigging in 176,000 polling units, over 8,000 wards, 774 LGAs, 36 states and FCT without stating the specific place where the alleged irregularities occur.
“The law is very clear that where someone alleged irregularities in a particular polling unit, such person must prove the particular irregularities in that polling unit for him to succeed in his petition.
“Labour Party made generic allegations of irregularities and said they would rely on spreadsheets, inspection reports, and forensic analysis but the documents promised by the petitioners were not attached to the petition.”
Obi nomination validated
Nevertheless, the court dismissed the contention of the respondents-Tinubu and the APC-that Obi was not validly nominated by the LP to contest the presidential election.
It noted that the respondents had argued that Obi left the PDP on May 24, 2022 and joined the LP on May 27, 2022.
The respondents in its petition claimed that as of May 30, 2022, Obi was not a valid member of the LP and could not have duly participated in its presidential primary election.
They insisted that his name could not have been contained in the membership register of the LP, which ought to be submitted to INEC 30 days before the primary election was held.
However, the court held that the issue of membership is an internal affair of a political party, which is not justiciable.
It maintained that only the LP has the prerogative of determining its members, adding that the respondents were bereft of the legal authority to query Obi’s membership of the LP.
Likewise, the court held that contrary to contention by Tinubu and the APC, the petitioners were not under any obligation to join Atiku who came second in the election or his party, the PDP, in the case.
It noted that both Atiku and the PDP are not statutory respondents or necessary parties to the petition.
On the alleged $460,000 forfeiture made by Tinubu to the United States Government, Justice Tsammani said, “The petitioners have evidently failed to establish their allegation that the 2nd respondent is disqualified from contesting the presidential election under section 137 (1)(d) of the 1999 constitution because he was fined $460,000 by a district court in Illinois.
“The order of forfeiture in exhibit P5 on which the petitioners have relied does not qualify as a sentence of fine for an offence involving dishonesty or fraud within the formulation of section 137 (d) of the 1999 constitution.”
25% FCT votes
On the interpretation of the 25 per cent votes cast in the Federal Capital Territory, Tsammani ruled that the interpretation of the constitution on the issue by the LP is “fallacious.”
According to him, sections 134 (1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria (as amended) stipulate that a presidential candidate must attain or score a majority of votes cast in a presidential election, where two or more candidates are involved, and at least 25 per cent in two-thirds of the 36 states and the FCT to meet the constitutional requirement to be declared as duly elected as President of Nigeria.
“With due respect to counsel to the petitioners, their interpretation of the provision of the constitution as regards the 25 per cent in Abuja is fallacious if not completely ludicrous,” the jurist affirmed, stressing that there is equality of rights irrespective of which part of the country voters prefer to live.
Puncturing Obi’s claims, Tsammani added, “The futility and hollowness in the arguments of the petitioners that the votes of the voters in the FCT have more weight than others in other parts of the country to the extent that their votes purportedly have a greater effect on other votes is null and void.”
Meanwhile, the tribunal has said it is not mandatory for the INEC to transmit election results electronically, adding that INEC is at liberty to define the mode it intends to use.
It emphasised that the sole technological requirement mandated for use by the commission during elections is the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System.
“By the provision of section 52 and section 65 of the Electoral Act, INEC is at liberty to prescribe the manner in which results can be transmitted. INEC cannot be compelled to electronically transmit results,” the court held.
The tribunal rejected the European Union Election Observers Mission report on the February 25 presidential election on by Peter Obi and the Labour Party.
The court said it rejected the report on the grounds that it was not tendered by an official of the body which is the author and has custody of the document.
The tribunal similarly dismissed allegations of non-compliance with the Electoral Act 2022 filed against Tinubu’s election by Atiku and the PDP.
Justice Adah said the petitioners failed to substantiate their claim that the election did not comply with the provisions of sections 134 and 135 of the Electoral Act.
He said, “There has to be sufficient grounds before the petitioners can establish that there was no substantial compliance with the Electoral Act in the conduct of the election. The petitioners have in their petition listed some of the facts relating to their complaints of non-compliance with the Electoral Act 2022.
‘’The key facts are in paragraphs 18, 22, 23,, 25, 28, 29, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40-44, 46 and 48 of the petition. The respondents have issues with the petitioners in respect of this issue and they all denied the facts pleaded by the petitioners.
“In paragraphs 17, 18, 19, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36 and 37, the first respondent, the Independent National Electoral Commission replied to the petition and denied all the allegations in the petition. The verdict of proof remains on the petitioners to establish their claim as required by the law.
‘’Apart from the first respondent who is the primary respondent due to the fact that it is its acts that are challenged in this petition, the second and third respondents who are the beneficiaries of the declaration of the result, vary issues with the petitioners.
He added, “The second respondent in his reply to the petition countered all the petitions pleaded in the case of the issue. The third respondents countered the petitioners’ allegations in paragraphs 36, 37 and 40 in his reply to the petition.
“Non-compliance means failure to or refusal to do something that you are officially or statutorily required to do. The Electoral Act 2022 in an explicit manner has laid clear ground on which election can be questioned in section 134 thereof and section 135 which looks like a provision to section 134.
“For proper appreciation of the intention of the law, sections 134 and 135 of the Electoral Act must be considered together.”
What Electoral Act sections say
Section 134 (1) says that an election may be questioned on any of the following grounds-A person whose election is questioned was, at the time of the election, not qualified to contest the election; the election was invalid by reason of corrupt practices or non-compliance with the provisions of this Act.
“And 135 (1) says “An election shall not be liable to be invalidated by reason of non-compliance with the provisions of this Act if it appears to the Election Tribunal or Court that the election was conducted substantially in accordance with the principles of this Act and that the non-compliance did not affect substantially the result of the election.”
That said, Justice Adah further held that “This ground of non-compliance with the Electoral Act has been in all our election laws even when we had a parliamentary system of government.”
Adah, who read the ruling on objections against the petition, expunged several documents tendered by Atiku on the grounds that the exhibits were made during the pendency of the petition.
The tribunal equally expunged from the court’s records several key witnesses presented by Atiku for having been made in manners not known to law.
It held that the wrongful mode adopted by the Adamawa-born presidential candidate in the construction of the petition made several paragraphs liable for expunging due to lack of merit.
The court went further to strike out some portions of the reply filed by Atiku and his party, including the part where they accused Tinubu of having dual citizenship.
It also rejected the aspect where the petitioners claimed Tinubu was not qualified on the grounds of alleged criminal conviction and criminal forfeiture in the US.
The court held that the information contained in the reply was an attempt to smuggle in fresh evidence to cover for the information they failed to provide in their petition in support of their claim that Tinubu was not qualified.
It declared that the two witnesses’ statements and other documents filed along with the reply were inadmissible.
Delivering judgment in some objections argued by Tinubu’s lead counsel, Wole Olanipekun SAN, Justice Ugoh averred that several parts of Atiku’s petition could neither stand nor survive, hence, is incompetent.
In a similar judgement pronounced on Obi’s petition, the court stated that the former vice president failed to provide several facts fundamentally required to support his petition.
It said the PDP candidate failed to name the places where ballot boxes were snatched, the ways and manners the BVAS machines were manipulated, and specific polling units where the alleged malpractices happened.
Atiku, who claimed to have polled the majority of lawful votes, was said to have failed to state in strong terms, the total lawful votes he claimed to have scored.
Though the former VP alleged that Tinubu did not score the majority of lawful votes, the court said he failed to reveal the perceived lawful votes in his petition to the tribunal.
The panel recalled that the petitioner made grievous allegations against Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State and the Chairman of Olamaboro Local Government Area of Kogi, Friday Adejoh, but he neglected to join them as respondents in his petition.
Justice Ugoh held that the failure to join the governor who was accused of electoral fraud obstructed the petition because the governor was denied the opportunity to defend himself as required by law.
Therefore, the justice dismissed the allegations of over-voting nationwide by the petitioner saying such pleadings run foul of the law because he failed to mention the specific locations where the alleged over-voting took place.
Atiku’s petition was also faulted for introducing several facts and allegations in unlawful ways that caught the respondents unaware, adding that the tactic employed was unfair and made him clever by half.
Amongst the new facts he was said to have wrongfully introduced were the allegations of certificate forgery, criminal conviction, and dual citizenship of Guinea made against Tinubu outside the mode of filing a petition

News
Nigerian professor jailed 70 months in US for $1.4m fraud
A United States federal court has sentenced a Nigerian-born former nonprofit chief executive, Dr Nkechy Ezeh, to 70 months in prison for orchestrating a $1.4 million fraud scheme involving taxpayer and donor funds meant for vulnerable preschool children.
The sentencing was announced in a press release on Wednesday by the Office of the US Attorney for the Western District of Michigan.
The sentencing was delivered by Chief US District Judge Hala Y. Jarbou, who also imposed a concurrent 60-month sentence for tax evasion and ordered Ezeh to pay $1.4 million in restitution and $390,174 to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.
Ezeh, 61, of Kent County, Michigan, was the founder and former CEO of Early Learning Neighborhood Collaborative, a West Michigan nonprofit that provided early childhood services in underserved communities.
She is also a former Associate Professor of Education and Director of Early Childhood Education Program at Aquinas College.
She was immediately remanded into federal custody after sentencing.

During the proceedings, Judge Jarbou described Ezeh as “a fraud and a thief,” adding that the scheme was “brazen and widespread,” and involved funds intended for some of the region’s most vulnerable children.
US Attorney for the Western District of Michigan, Timothy VerHey, said Ezeh diverted money meant for low-income children for personal use.
“Nkechy Ezeh’s greed is beyond reprehensible.
“She stole taxpayer and private-donor dollars meant for low-income children in our community. Instead of helping kids, she spent that money on herself.
“The stolen money could have supported hundreds of West Michigan children and their families. Judge Jarbou’s sentence was perfectly appropriate,” VerHey said.
According to court filings, Ezeh used stolen funds to finance personal expenses, including travel to Hawaii, Europe and Africa, as well as a family wedding.
Prosecutors also said she placed relatives on a “ghost payroll,” enabling them to receive hundreds of thousands of dollars for little or no work.
She was further accused of using intermediaries to transfer stolen funds to family members in Nigeria.
The nonprofit, ELNC, was funded by US federal programmes including Head Start, the Department of Education, and private donors. It provided meals, transport and support services to children in low-income communities.
Following the fraud, ELNC shut down in 2023, leading to the loss of funding for several preschools and the layoff of 35 employees.
A former bookkeeper at the organisation, Sharon Killebrew, who was identified as a co-conspirator, was earlier sentenced to 54 months in prison for her role in the scheme.
US authorities said the case highlights the abuse of federal grants and its impact on vulnerable communities, particularly children in low-income neighbourhoods.
The investigation was conducted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General and the Internal Revenue Service–Criminal Investigation unit, while Assistant U.S. Attorney Clay Stiffler prosecuted the case.

News
Gun to my head, I won’t stay beyond four years — Obi
Former Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi has said he would serve only one term of four years if elected president, insisting he would serve only one term in office “even with a gun to my head.”
Obi made the statement in a clip from an interview scheduled to air on News Central TV on Thursday.
“I want to be a one-term president because of stability. I would not stay a day, with a gun to my head, longer than four years,” he said in the circulating video.
The former Anambra State governor also criticised the current administration’s economic policies, including borrowing and rising cost of living, saying Nigeria had entered one of its most difficult economic periods.
Obi contested the 2023 presidential election on the platform of the Labour Party, where he came third behind President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party.
Since the election, Obi has remained a key opposition figure, frequently criticising the Tinubu administration’s economic reforms.


News
NEW ENUGU SMART CITY: Peter Mbah’s Audacious Blueprint For A Global City And A New Economic Frontier
By Dr. Collins Ogbu
Cities are the new engines of global prosperity. Across the world, nations are no longer competing merely on the strength of their natural resources; they are competing on the efficiency, innovation, livability and attractiveness of their cities. From Dubai to Singapore, from Kigali to Shenzhen, the story is the same: governments that deliberately build modern urban ecosystems create wealth, attract investors, generate employment, and redefine the future of their people.
This is precisely the philosophy driving *Governor Peter Ndubuisi Mbah*’s ambitious vision for Enugu State.
When Governor Mbah declared his determination to grow Enugu’s economy from $4.4 billion to $30 billion, many saw it as audacious. But history teaches that transformational leadership is often mistaken for impossible ambition; until execution begins to silence doubters. Today, the New Enugu Smart City stands as one of the clearest physical manifestations of that economic revolution: a bold urban expansion project designed not merely as a real estate development, but as a futuristic economic ecosystem that will fundamentally alter Enugu’s economic trajectory.

The New Enugu Smart City
For decades, the old Enugu metropolis has borne the pressure of population growth, rising commercial activity, inadequate housing supply, traffic congestion, urban sprawl, and increasing pressure on public infrastructure. Like many fast-growing African cities, urban expansion often happened without long-term planning. Roads became overstretched, commercial clusters became chaotic, and housing shortages intensified. The answer to such pressures globally has never been to merely manage congestion; it has been to build new cities.

Abuja was built to decongest Lagos and create a more centrally planned capital. _Eko Atlantic_ emerged as a premium urban extension to accommodate business growth. _Konza Technopolis_ was conceptualized as Africa’s Silicon Savannah. _King Abdullah Economic City_ was created to diversify an oil-dependent economy.
_Songdo International Business District_ became a global reference point for smart urban development through integrated digital infrastructure.
The _New Enugu Smart City_ belongs in that class of visionary projects.
It is strategically designed as a modern mixed-income, mixed-use urban settlement that caters to both high-net-worth individuals and middle-income earners. Unlike elitist urban projects that often exclude the average citizen, Enugu’s model deliberately creates opportunities for luxury housing, commercial districts, technology hubs, hospitality centres, industrial clusters, retail spaces and affordable residential schemes. This means that whether one is a corporate executive, diaspora investor, entrepreneur, civil servant, student, artisan or hospitality investor, there is a place for everyone within the emerging urban ecosystem.
At the heart of every smart city lies infrastructure intelligence. The New Enugu Smart City is envisioned with modern road networks, integrated drainage systems, uninterrupted power architecture, smart security systems, broadband-enabled connectivity, efficient waste management systems, green recreational spaces, industrial layouts, commercial districts, healthcare facilities, educational institutions and technologically enabled public services.
This is what separates a smart city from conventional urban settlements.
Traditional cities often expand reactively. Smart cities expand intentionally.
Traditional cities battle traffic chaos. Smart cities deploy intelligent mobility systems.
Traditional cities struggle with utility inefficiency. Smart cities integrate modern infrastructure from inception.
Traditional cities create informal congestion. Smart cities optimize space for productivity.
And productivity is where the real conversation begins.
Land itself is one of the greatest wealth creation tools available to governments. Globally, cities such as Dubai generated billions through strategic land development, infrastructure-led real estate appreciation, tourism expansion, and business investments. The New Enugu Smart City presents similar revenue-generating opportunities through land allocation, property taxes, business licensing, hospitality investments, industrial occupancy, tourism spending and foreign direct investment inflows.
As property values appreciate, internally generated revenue rises.
As businesses move in, employment expands.
As investors arrive, confidence deepens.
As population shifts, congestion reduces in the old city.
It is a cycle of growth that smart economies understand very well.
The decongestion benefits alone are enormous. Existing commercial centres in Ogbete, Independence Layout, Abakpa, Coal Camp and surrounding districts have long experienced infrastructure pressure due to concentrated economic activities. By creating an entirely new urban destination, government is redistributing population density and commercial activity in a way that ensures balanced development across the state.
This is how globally competitive cities are built;not by overburdening old districts, but by creating new economic corridors.
And what makes this even more strategic is that the New Enugu Smart City is not developing in isolation.
It is rising within a broader ecosystem of transformational infrastructure already being built by the Mbah administration.
Enugu Air is opening Enugu to regional and global connectivity while positioning the state as a major aviation hub in southeastern Nigeria. New dual carriageways and modern road corridors are dramatically reducing travel time across urban and rural communities. The development of world-class transport terminals is redefining organized mass transit and improving urban mobility.
The construction of Smart Green Schools across the 260 political wards in Enugu State is creating the human capital pipeline that future industries within the Smart City will require. These schools are embedding digital literacy, innovation and modern learning systems into the educational ecosystem. The ongoing rollout of Type-2 Primary Healthcare Centres ensures healthcare accessibility at the grassroots level, while the 300-bed international hospital is positioning Enugu as a destination for advanced medical services and medical tourism.
The International Conference Centre, alongside the nearly-completed five-star ICC hotels, further strengthens Enugu’s business tourism credentials. Conferences, summits, exhibitions and international business events require premium accommodation, modern residential options and commercial infrastructure; and the New Enugu Smart City provides exactly that complementary ecosystem.
Governor Mbah’s target of attracting three million visitors annually becomes significantly more realistic when supported by a city that can comfortably absorb tourists, investors, conference attendees, returning diaspora citizens and business travelers.
Visitors need hotels.
Professionals need homes.
Investors need infrastructure.
Businesses need certainty.
The Smart City answers all four.
More importantly, this project opens massive opportunities for private sector participation. Real estate developers, construction firms, fintech companies, hospitality brands, logistics operators, retailers, healthcare providers, educational institutions and manufacturing concerns all stand to benefit from the city’s growth trajectory.
This is how new economies emerge.
A construction economy first.
Then a services economy.
Then a technology economy.
Then a tourism economy.
Then a manufacturing ecosystem.
Then sustainable long-term prosperity.
This model has transformed Shenzhen from a fishing settlement into a global manufacturing giant. It transformed Dubai from a desert outpost into a global investment capital. It transformed Kigali into one of Africa’s cleanest and fastest-growing urban destinations.
Enugu is writing its own version of that story.
The symbolism is equally powerful.
For decades, Enugu has proudly borne the identity of the Coal City. But the future demands a broader identity; one rooted in innovation, enterprise, global competitiveness and smart urban planning. This is why the Governor now calls it: THE CITY OF GREAT MINDS!
The New Enugu Smart City represents that transition.
From legacy economy to future economy.
From administrative capital to investment destination.
From regional relevance to global competitiveness.
From potential to performance.
Governor Peter Ndubuisi Mbah understands what many leaders fail to grasp; that economic greatness is often built through infrastructure decisions whose true value unfolds over decades.
The New Enugu Smart City is not just about buildings.
It is about building confidence.
It is not just about roads.
It is about creating routes to prosperity.
It is not just about urban expansion.
It is about economic expansion.
And years from now, when investors, tourists, multinational corporations, technology firms and families choose Enugu as their preferred destination, many will look back at this moment and recognize that this was where the future began.
A city is being built.
But beyond that;
an economy is being born.
• By Dr. Collins Ogbu – SSA to the Governor of Enugu State on Strategic Communications

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