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APC has no governorship candidate in Akwa Ibom – INEC

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has reiterated that the All Progressives Congress (APC) Akwa Ibom primary that produced Akanimo Udofia as a governorship candidate was not monitored by it’s officials.

INEC noted similarly that the primary that produced former minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio, as APC senate candidate was also not monitored.

The two botched primaries were reportedly held around midnight on May 26 and June 9, respectively.

It, therefore, means the APC may not have a governorship candidate in Akwa Ibom State for the 2023 general elections, and that Akpabio is not recognised by INEC as a candidate, as previously reported.

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INEC spokesperson in Abuja, Festus Okoye, said there is no distinction between INEC at the national headquarters and those at the different states in the country.

“There’s only one INEC that operates through its state offices at the state level,” Okoye told Premium Times in an interview.

“When a political party wants to organise a primary, what the political party does is that it gives INEC that mandatory 21 days’ notice of its intention to organise the party primary.

“Then it gives INEC the venue and the date of the primary. The commission will constitute a monitoring team for that particular state headed by the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC),” Okoye added.

Senator Godswill Akpabio, Niger Delta Minister East-West Road

Senator Godswill Akpabio, Niger Delta Minister

Okoye explained how INEC monitors party primaries. “There is supposed to be a team from the Election and Party Monitoring (EPM) Department from the headquarters that will go to the state, but the team will report to the REC who will head them because he is the most senior officer.

Only a team monitors party primaries, he said. “There’s only one team from the commission. We don’t make any distinction between the team from the headquarters and the team from the state,” Okoye said.

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“For instance, in a governorship primary, we send an assistant director or deputy director or even a director from the INEC headquarters. The director will report to the REC who is the most senior officer in that particular state and the REC will lead the team that will go and monitor the governorship primary or senatorial primary of a particular political party.”

Okoye’s position validates a report filed by the REC in Akwa Ibom, Mike Igini, on the matter.

The clarification became necessary following the misinformation on social media that the INEC headquarters had deployed officials from Abuja to monitor the contentious primaries, and that the INEC authorities distanced themselves from Igini.

Akwa Ibom REC, Mike Igini is widely believed to be working for the PDP

Akwa Ibom REC, Mike Igini

Unhappy with the dramatic turn of events, some of the APC supporters in Akwa Ibom, especially those who belong to the faction that is loyal to Akpabio, have been attacking Igini’s credibility.

“Igini works for INEC and he is not the chairman of INEC and he is not INEC,” Chris Ekong, one of the APC governorship aspirants in Akwa Ibom,
reportedly told reporters in Uyo on Wednesday.

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Ekong, who is a professor of economics at the University of Uyo, was commissioner for youths and sport when Akpabio was the governor of Akwa Ibom.

“What I want to tell Akwa Ibom people is to forget that negative propaganda. Akwa Ibom APC has a governorship candidate, and he is Akan Udofia and by next week he will be given the flag and when he collects the flag we will bring it here,” Ekong said.

Igini, in a report to INEC headquarters, explained what occurred between the election commission and the Akwa Ibom APC on the day of the party governorship primary.

“We wish to report that the APC governorship primary scheduled to hold on Thursday, May 26, 2022, at the Sheergrace Arena, Nsikak Eduok Avenue, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State did not hold at all,” Igini said in his report dated May 27.

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According to the report, the commission’s monitoring team led by Igini, together with the Commissioner of Police in Akwa Ibom, Andrew Amiengheme, arrived at the venue of the primary for the third time at 6:45 p.m., seeing no one inside the hall.

The heads of the two federal agencies were informed that the APC election committee members were held up by an angry group of APC members along a major road in Uyo.

The operatives of the State Security Services (SSS) later rescued the APC election officials that night and took them to their (SSS) facility in the city.

The Chairman of the Election Committee, Tunde Ajibulu, informed Igini on the phone that he was unable to leave the SSS office because he was traumatised and could not go ahead with the primary.

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Ajibulu reportedly told Igini that Sheergrace Arena was not the venue given to him by the party’s national office in Abuja to conduct the governorship primary and concluded that “all activities be postponed until he gets back at the Commission.

Igini at that point briefed the reporters who were present at the venue. He left the venue at about 10:30 p.m. that day.

The APC faction that is backed by Akpabio later held the primary of the party around midnight at a different venue, where Udofia, a man who is less than a month old in the party, was declared winner of the exercise.

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