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Rivers Guber Tussle: ‘Supreme Court ’ll Come To The Rescue’

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Governor Nyesom Wike

Governor Nyesom Wike

We now have a ba
bel of voices concerning judgments  on electoral  matters before the courts. The Tribunals and Court of Appeal  are singing  discordant tunes, allowing  political  considerations to be the  centrepiece  of  their decisions.
The situation  has so degenerated that a relationship  with  the  centre gives one a clear advantage in any electoral matter before  the  lower courts. Without  doubt, the oil-rich States of the Niger Delta  are worse hit by this sad development  in the nation’s  judiciary.
Rivers State has suffered the most in the current  wave of judicial  indiscretion  at the lower bench. Once the matters involve Rivers State,  the Electoral Act and the Constitution  are thrown out of the windows. Cases decided elsewhere  based on the law are disregarded  when it comes  to  Rivers State.
The Court of Appeal has decided on all the National Assembly elections in Rivers State and judgements  have been  entered  for the Governorship  and State Assembly Elections.
In its  judgment  on the governorship  election,  the Court of  Appeal claimed that there was no election anywhere  in  Rivers State.  The court claimed that it arrived at its decision  on  the  strength  of  the  use of the card readers and the testimonies of just 56 witnesses.
The judgments  of  the Court of  Appeal on all the elections  in Rivers  State  are flawed in all respects. However,  nothing  can be  done for the victims  of  the  judicial  error as regards the  National Assembly and State Assembly elections.  They will have  to make the sacrifice of approaching their constituents  again  for  the  revalidation of their earlier mandate.
However,  with the unfolding  scenario,  it is necessary  to  use the the disposition of the  Court of  Appeal  to actually analyse  the situation  in the state.
First, the judgments churned out by the Court of  Appeal have proved for the very first time, that the elections in Rivers State  were held in compliance  with  the  Electoral  Act and the Constitution.  The fact that the Court of  Appeal  has upheld State Assembly elections  from constituencies in all the three senatorial  districts of the state show that the APC  lost fairly and Governor  Wike  was duly elected by lawful votes cast. Out of the 32 State Constituencies , the Appeal Court  upheld  elections  in  11 State Constituencies.  That represents  roughly 35 percent of the State. Yet, the same Court said that the  governorship  election  did not hold. This error is regrettable.
In one of the state Constituencies upheld  by the Appeal Court, that is the Port Harcourt Constituency 1, the Court held that Victoria  Nyeche of the  APC  defeated  Jones Ogbonda of the PDP  in a legally  conducted election.  Recall  that both the Governorship  and State Assembly elections held on same day.
The same Appeal Court  held that elections  held successfully in Okrika State Constituency,  Etche 1 State  Constituency,  Ahoada West State Constituency, Ogu/Bolo State Constituency , ONELGA 2 State Constituency,  Oyigbo, Khana,Phalga  1 ,Abua/Odual   and Okrika Constituencies.
These were Constituencies  where the  APC  claimed violence  caused elections  not to the hold. Two of these Constituencies, ONELGA and Ahoada West were celebrated by the APC as hotbeds of electoral  violence and irregularities.
If the  Appeal Court has finally  admitted that  elections  held in these constituencies,  it goes to prove that no diligent judicial  review was done before the decision  to  annul the  Rivers State Governorship Election was taken.
The controversial  decisions  of the Appeal Court panel  on Rivers election have been premised on faulty lines already disregarded  by other panels of the Appeal  Court  and the Supreme Court. First, the Court of Appeal  panel for Rivers elections shifted the burden from the petitioners (APC ) to the respondents (PDP ).
An Appeal Court Panel  sitting  in  Makurdi  on the appeal filed by Prince Terhemen Tarzoor against  the decision upholding the election of Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom held thus:
“The complaint of the Appellant under this issue is that the Tribunal had misplaced the burden of proof on him when it said that he must win his case on the strength of his own case and not on the weakness of the Respondents’ cases or defence, was on the assertion made that the 2nd Respondent did not conduct a primary election at all for the nomination of the 1st Respondent as a candidate to contest the election in question. The Appellant calls and labels the said assertion or allegation, as a negative assertion which he has no duty to prove under the law. However, as demonstrated earlier, an assertion or allegation, can be either negative or positive, but once made by a party in a case, he owes and bears the legal burden of proof, which is fixed and static, to prove same if he expects a court or tribunal to, on its basis, make a declaration of right he claims in the case in his favour. It is a clear misconception, with due respect to counsel, to argue that the Respondents who had denied the assertion made by the petitioner as the vital and crucial point and fulcrum of his case, had the legal burden of proof of such an allegation against them merely on the basis of their denial of the assertion or allegation”.
But in the  state of all Rivers State  elections decided so far, the Appeal Court panel moved the burden from the APC  to  the  PDP.
In the case of the governorship  election,  the Rivers State APC only called only 56 witnesses. Majority  of  these witnesses had nothing to do with  the  governorship election at the polling  unit. They were soldiers, mobile policemen  and DSS  operatives  detailed by the Security  High  Command to lie in court. Even where the exact officers  who personally  provided security for the elections  testified,  they were ignored.
Even at that, these few 56 witnesses’  testimonies in line with  the  Supreme  Court  position  on the required proofs to void an election represent just 56 polling units out of the 4442 polling  units  for the entire state. It is unheard of that courts would rely on gossips or hearsay to decide electoral  matters.
According  to  the  Supreme Court,  a petitioner  can only prove that elections  did not hold by calling a voter per polling  unit to prove his case. Therefore,  a petitioner  cannot rely on blanket frivolous  allegations  like APC  have done to get judgment  in an electoral dispute.
Deciding  the election  petition  filed by Senator  Ucha against the election of  former Governor Elechi of Ebonyi State in 2012, the Supreme Court declared:
“The results declared by INEC are prima facie correct and the onus is on the petitioner to prove the contrary. Where a petitioner complains of non-compliance with provisions of the Electoral Act, 2010 (as amended), he has a duty to prove it polling unit by polling unit, ward by ward and the standard of proof is on the balance of probabilities and not on minimal proof. He must show figures that the adverse party was credited with as a result of the non-compliance, Forms EC8A, election materials not stamped/signed by Presiding Officers. He must establish that non-compliance was substantial, that it affected the election result. “.
Now, there is the issue of the  qualification  to contest the  Rivers State elections  in the state first place. Section 85 (1) spells out clearly  that a political  party  must give INEC 21 days notice before holding  a  valid primary.  Failure  to  do this implies that no primary  was held. It was on the premise of the APC’S failure  to  observe  Section 85 (1) that the Appeal Court panel upheld the  election  of  Prince Nnam Obi, representing ONELGA /Ahoada West at the House of  Representatives.  It was also on the  basis  of  Section 85 (1) that the same  Appeal Court dismissed  the  appeal  of  Labour Party  against  the  election  of  Governor Wike.
Only this week, the Court of  Appeal  nullified  the  election  of  Senator Uche Ekwunife of the PDP on the strength  that she was not validly nominated.
According  to  the  Appeal Court panel that sat in Enugu :
“Nomination is part and parcel of qualification to stand for an election and since an election can be challenged on the grounds of lack of qualification, it follows that the appropriate forum to challenge it after the election is held is the Election Tribunal”.
However,  the  Appeal  Court  panel  that considered  all the  appeals on the Rivers State  elections  deviated  from this norm. Instead, they chose to support the illegality wherein the APC  conducted no valid primary  in the  state.  Based on the Electoral Act,  APC  had no governorship candidate,  no National Assembly candidates  or State Assembly candidates.
Finally,  there is  the issue of card reader accreditation.  The Appeal  Court  panel for Rivers elections  elevated  the  card reader  accreditation  above the Electoral Act and the Constitution. The Electoral Act spells out the process of accreditation  during  an election.
The electoral dispute  between  Jimi Agbaje  (PDP ) and the  Lagos State Governor,  Akinwunmi Ambode  (APC ) is the most prominent  case to cite on the issue  of card reader accreditation. The Appeal Court threw  out Agbaje’s appeal in a considered opinion.
Justice Ogbuinya, the presiding judge of the Appeal Court panel held that: “The paragraph (13b) displays a vitriolic attack on the irregularities germinating from the improper or non-use of the smart card readers in the polling units.
“As it is, it has no life of its own as a ground. It endeavours to introduce the defects in the use of smart card readers. The evolution of the concept of smart card reader is a familiar one. It came to being during the last general election. On this score, it is a nascent procedure injected into our infant and fledgling electoral system to ensure credible and transparent election.
“The extant Electoral Act (2010) which predates the concept (of card reader) is not its parent or progenitor. Since it is not the progeny of the Electoral Act, fronting it as a ground to challenge any election does not have its (the Electoral Act’s) blessing, nay Section 138 (1) of it.
“Put simply, a petitioner cannot project the non-presence or improper use of smart card reader as a ground for questioning an election. It does not qualify as one.”
The preceding  paragraphs  on the Lagos State Governorship Dispute between  the  PDP and the APC  rests the issue on card reader accreditation. It brings  to the fore the errors  that invalidate  the Appeal Court judgments on Rivers elections.
In Delta State,  the Appeal Court similarly  dismissed  the card reader as the basis for the nullification  of  an election  in the appeal filed by Great Ogboru  of  Labour Party who challenged the  election  of  Governor Ifeanyi Okowa.
Justice Abba-Aji in the lead judgment of the Court of Appeal held that Ogboru merely relied on records of the card reader accreditation without demonstrating the documents by credible evidence.
She held that Ogboru never challenged the evidence of the respondents and even his own witnesses that the card readers had challenges in many part of the states and that apart from the use of card reader, there was also manual accreditation.
While the  National and State Assembly elections  have come and gone, the judiciary  still has the opportunity  to remedy  its  dwindling  image  in relation  to  the  Rivers State Governorship Election.
The onus to address the errors  of the Appeal Court panel that sat on Rivers State elections  rests squarely with the Supreme Court.  These erroneous  judgments  of the Appeal Court panel should be  confined to  the  dustbin  of history.  They have  damaged  the electoral jurisprudence,  but the Supreme Court must come to the rescue. Irrespective  of  whose  political  ox is gored, the Supreme Court  must rise to the  occasion.
From all indications, immediate past Rivers State    Governor,  Rotimi Amaechi has concluded  plans  to  use Rivers State as a collateral  to remain  relevant  in Abuja after squandering  over N3trillion in the worst governance tragedy  of  our time. Amaechi  and his political  crooks who have  been  fingered in the worst judicial  misrepresentation of all time. The National  Judicial Council should act on the petition filed against  the  Appeal Court panel  that failed the Justice  system.  This is the only way the reforms the Chief Justice of Nigeria promised dissatisfied  Nigerians will be  effected. Indicted Amaechi  is using these illegally  acquired  funds to compromise  the  judiciary. The facts are with the EFCC and Nigerians  are waiting  for the commission  to act.
SimeonNwakaudu is Special Assistant to the Rivers State Governor on Electronic Media.

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MOSOP – Tinubu Not Sincere With Ogoni People For Oil Resumption

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The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People, MOSOP, has accused President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of lacking sincerity in ongoing efforts to restart  oil exploration in Ogoniland, insisting that key confidence-building promises remain unfulfilled.Gas price forecast
Spokesperson of the Anda Wai-Ogosu faction of MOSOP, Mr. Oscar Imeabe, made the allegation while speaking at the May  stakeholders’ meeting organised by Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited, PINL, in Port Harcourt.
Imeabe said the Federal Government had failed to implement critical measures it earlier described as confidence-building steps toward the resumption of oil production in Ogoni land.
He specifically cited the Federal University of Environmental Technology in Ogoni, noting that although the institution commenced operations in September 2025, it had not received any operational funding from the Federal Government as of May 2026.
“Part of the confidence building measures by President Tinubu was the establishment of the Federal University of Environmental Technology in Ogoni. The school took off since September 2025, but as we speak, this is May 2026, the Federal Government has not released any funds for the running of that university,” Imeabe said.
“So where is the confidence building measures the president talked about?”
The MOSOP spokesman also referenced the legacy of environmental activism in the region, recalling the execution of Ogoni leader Ken Saro-Wiwa and others, and the longstanding grievances over environmental degradation and economic exclusion linked to oil production.Gas price forecast
“I want to also remind us that people like Ken Saro-Wiwa fought and died for this same oil operations in Ogoni.  Oil was being pumped in thousands of barrels in Ogoni, while Ogoni communities remained impoverished and the environment degraded and devastated,” he added.
Imeabe stressed that MOSOP was not opposed to the resumption of oil production in Ogoni, but insisted that due process, inclusion, and community participation must be guaranteed.
“We are not against oil resumption in Ogoni, but we are saying that the right thing should be done. The people of Ogoni must be involved in the oil resumption process. The people of Ogoni must be part of oil production. The people of Ogoni must benefit from Ogoni oil,” he said.
He urged stakeholders and advisers within the Federal Government to prevail on President Tinubu to fulfil earlier commitments and rebuild trust with the Ogoni people before any restart of oil operations in the area.
By: Kiadum Edookor
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FG Pledge Support For IOM To Address Climate Incuced In West And Central Africa 

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The Federal Government has pledged support for the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) initiative aimed at mobilising investment to address climate-induced migration in West and Central Africa.
The Minister of Environment, Mr Balarabe Lawal, made the commitment on Tuesday in Lagos at a regional conference organised by the IOM.
The Tide source reports that the conference was targeted at bridging the gap between climate change policy to the actual climate financing.
Lawal, who was represented by the Director of Climate Change in the ministry, Dr Iniobong Abiola-Awe, said Nigeria would continue to support efforts to bridge the gap between climate policy and financing.
The conference with the theme: “Migration and Climate Action in West and Central Africa: From Policy Commitment to Climate Mobility Investment,” brought together policymakers, development partners and financial institutions.
Lawal said the region was facing increasing environmental pressures, including desertification in the Sahel, coastal erosion in the Gulf of Guinea and flooding across major river basins.
“As widely recognised, climate change acts as a threat multiplier, intensifying vulnerabilities and influencing migration decisions.
“However, we must shift our perspective. Mobility is not only a crisis to be managed, but also a form of adaptation and a pathway to resilience when properly harnessed,” he said.
The minister said Nigeria had taken proactive steps through its National Adaptation Plan, which provides a long-term framework for building resilience and reducing vulnerability to climate risks.
He said the plan prioritised climate-resilient agriculture, water resource management, disaster risk reduction, urban resilience, infrastructure and ecosystem-based adaptation.
Lawal added that Nigeria was integrating human mobility into its climate policy frameworks, recognising migration as a legitimate adaptation strategy rather than solely a consequence of failed adaptation.
He said the country’s approach aligned with the Kampala Ministerial Declaration on Migration, Environment and Climate Change.
Lawal stressed the need for greater investment in climate finance, resilient infrastructure, livelihoods and stronger regional cooperation.
“Without adequate investment, policy commitments risk remaining aspirational,” he said.
He reaffirmed Nigeria’s readiness to collaborate with regional partners, development institutions and the private sector to strengthen climate mobility governance and institutional capacity.
In her opening remarks, the IOM Regional Director for West and Central Africa, Ms Sylvia Ekra, said climate change was already reshaping livelihoods, economies and migration patterns across the region.
She said more than two million people in West and Central Africa had already been displaced by disasters.
According to her, up to 32 million people in the region could be forced to move internally by 2050 if inclusive and effective climate action is not taken.
“Mobility is not only a crisis. It is also part of the solution, enabling people to adapt, manage risks and preserve livelihoods,” she said.
Ekra noted that while policy frameworks existed, responses remained fragmented and insufficient in scale.
She said the conference was significant because it brought together climate and migration stakeholders to jointly develop practical financing solutions.
Also speaking, the Head of Cooperation at the Delegation of the European Union to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Massimo De Luca, reaffirmed the European Union’s commitment to supporting IOM activities in Nigeria and across West and Central Africa.
De Luca described the EU as one of the world’s largest funding partners in the area of migration and said it would continue to work closely with the IOM on climate and migration issues.
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NGOs Task Media On Investing In Climate Literacy

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Non Governmental Organisations in Abuja have urged media organisations to invest in climate literacy, aiming to move beyond basic weather reporting toward in-depth, solution-oriented journalism.
The NGOs made the call at a two-day Media Training Conference on “Climate Governance and Gender Mainstreaming in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and Minamata Conventions”.
The Tide source reports that the training was organised by EnviroNews Advocacy & Campaigns for Sustainability (Endvocas) in collaboration with the Women Environmental Programme (WEP).
Rep. Sam Onuigbo, a former two-time member of the House of Representatives, said the media is a critical bridge between scientific knowledge and public action, necessitating specialised reporting to counter misinformation and drive accountability.
Onuigbo, who is also the sponsor of Nigeria’s Climate Change Act 2021, urged the media to also do investigative reports and have specialised environmental desks capable of sustaining informed public engagement.
“Journalism is the bridge between scientific knowledge and public consciousness.
“Scientists can publish reports, legislators can enact laws, and governments can formulate policies, but without journalists who translate technical realities into human understanding, public mobilisation becomes difficult.
“Climate journalism extends far beyond reporting temperature increases or covering international climate summits,” Onuigbo said.
According to him, Climate journalism involves holding governments accountable for climate commitments, investigating climate financing and environmental corruption and also to amplify the experiences of vulnerable communities.
“The Minamata Convention and Environmental Sustainability is beyond greenhouse gas emissions and rising temperatures.
“Environmental governance must also address toxic pollution and hazardous substances capable of threatening both human health and ecological sustainability.
“One of the most important international frameworks in this regard is the Minamata Convention on Mercury, adopted in 2013 and named after Minamata Bay in Japan where industrial mercury poisoning caused devastating health and environmental consequences.”
He stated that mercury pollution remains a major concern, particularly within artisanal and small-scale mining activities where unsafe mercury usage continues to contaminate water bodies, destroy ecosystems, and endanger human lives.
“The consequences include neurological disorders, developmental impairments, respiratory illnesses, and long-term ecological degradation.
“It is now a lived reality affecting communities across Nigeria and beyond. From devastating floods and desertification to food insecurity, displacement, shrinking water bodies, and rising temperatures.
“The consequences of climate disruption are already altering livelihoods and threatening national stability.
“Climate change is too large for one institution to solve alone. It demands a multistakeholder response involving legislatures, executives, the media, civil society, academia, the private sector, traditional institutions, women, and youths,” Onuigbo said.
Mr Michael Simire, Publisher of EnviroNews Nigeria, said that as climate impacts intensify across Nigeria, from devastating floods to heatwaves, biodiversity loss, and pollution, the need for informed, responsible, and gender responsive climate governance has never been more urgent.
“This is where the media stands tall.Journalists are not just storytellers; they are agenda setters, watchdogs, educators, and catalysts for change.
“The narratives you shape influence public perception, policy direction, and community action. When the media is empowered with knowledge, context, and clarity, society benefits from better governance, stronger advocacy, and more inclusive decision-making.
“Women and girls are disproportionately affected by climate change and mercury pollution, yet their voices remain underrepresented in policy spaces.
“Integrating gender perspectives into climate and environmental reporting is not optional, it is essential for justice, equity, and effective solutions,” Simire said.
Mr Steve Abu, the National Network Coordinator, Climate and Sustainable Development Network (CSDevNet) said that in Nigeria and across Africa, climate change is no longer a headline about tomorrow, it is the reality people are surviving today.
“This is why the role of journalists, storytellers, editors, broadcasters, and digital creators has been more critical.
“It is the media that translates complexity into public understanding. It is the media that gives human faces to scientific statistics.
“It is the media that can transform climate conversations from conference halls into kitchen-table discussions across Africa.
Dr Priscilla Achakpa, Founder and Global Lead, Women Environmental Programme said that environmental communication must go beyond headlines.
“Across the world, climate change is no longer a distant threat. It is here with us. We see it in rising temperatures, devastating floods, prolonged droughts, food insecurity, displacement of communities, and growing threats to livelihoods and public health.
“These environmental crises are not just scientific or policy issues. They are human stories. They are economic stories. They are justice stories.
Achakpa added that the role of the media had never been more critical; the media is not merely a channel for information but a force for transformation.
“Without informed and consistent environmental reporting, many citizens may never fully understand the dangers of climate change or the hidden impacts of chemical pollution.
“We need reporting that helps citizens understand why flooding is becoming more frequent, Why heatwaves are intensifying, why unsafe mining practices and mercury exposure matter and why environmental policies should concern every Nigerian.
She emphasised that the fight against climate change and pollution cannot be won by governments alone.
“The stories you tell can influence national priorities.
The questions you ask can drive accountability.
The facts you publish can save lives. And the awareness you create can shape a more sustainable future.
“Because the future of our environment is ultimately the future of our people.
Together, let us amplify the voices for climate justice, environmental protection, and sustainable development,” Achakpa said.
Dr Iniobong Abiola-Awe Director, Department of Climate Change in the Ministry of Environment, advocated gender responsive reporting as regards climate change.
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