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Monday, 4 January 2016

#Bayelsa Elections: Dickson Accused of Bribing Bayelsa REC N200m to Favour Election


The Governor of Bayelsa state is in another web of controversy after a supervisory presiding officer with the Independent National Electoral Commission, accused him of giving N200million to an INEC Official.
An Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) official and Supervisory Presiding Officer (SPO), Mr. Francis Asmakia Ted, has accused the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Bayelsa State, Mr. Baritor Kpagih, of collecting N200 million bribe from Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State, The Nation reports.
The SPO said: “The heavy financial inducement was behind the fact that even though Ekeremor, Nembe, Ogbia local government areas of Bayelsa State were marred with serious violence and irregularities, Kpagih overlooked all those and rather targeted Southern Ijaw Local Government Area and unilaterally declared the results inconclusive all in a bid to justify the huge sum of money he collected from Dickson to ensure that he emerges victorious in the polls.”
According to the report, the accusation is contained in an affidavit of facts deposed to at the Federal High Court to support a petition to the INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu. Ted alleged that Dickson offered the REC N1 billion bribe to tilt the December 5 polls in Bayelsa State in favour of the governor, stressing that the N200 million cash bribe was the initial payment.
In the petition to the INEC chairman dated December 22, 2015, Ted pointed out that in a recent newspaper publication, Kpaigh himself confessed in an interview that he was offered money to rig the election in favour of a particular candidate.
“I wish to state that the candidate in question is Hon. Seriake Dickson, the incumbent governor of Bayelsa State. Contrary to The Guardian publication, Kpaigh collected money from Governor Dickson,” the SPO stated.
Ted in the affidavit affirmed that he served as SPO in the Bayelsa State gubernatorial election and that he had been a close friend of Kpagih, who personally recruited and appointed him for the INEC job “with a firm and specific instruction to report directly to him with a mandate to gather all relevant information and raise intelligence reports across the state to assist him in his duties, which I carried our diligently.
Ted added in his affidavit: “I got close to Mr. Baritor Kpagih, the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), INEC, Bayelsa State, and sequel to the close interaction and personal relationship that ensued between us; I am very conversant with the facts deposed herein.”
“That based on my vast knowledge of the operation of the electoral commission in the three senatorial districts of the state, the said Mr. Baritor Kpagih, Bayelsa State Residential Electoral Commissioner, INEC, also frequently sought advice from me on issues regarding the operations of the electoral commission in Bayelsa State even before I was appointed as an SPO in the recent governorship election in Bayelsa State.
“That Mr. Baritor Kpagih informed me in his office and I verily believe him as follows:
“That he was summoned by the Governor of Bayelsa State, Hon Seriake Dickson, to the Government House, Creek Haven, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, for a meeting which he attended.
“That the agenda for the said meeting was strictly on areas of possible assistance INEC can render through the office of the Resident Electoral Commissioner to Governor Seriake Dickson to emerge victorious and be re-elected in the forthcoming governorship election in Bayelsa State.
“That one Barrister Talford Ongolo who according to him is the Chief of Staff to Governor Seriake Dickson was also present at the said meeting.
“That he told the Bayelsa State Governor, Hon. Seriake Dickson, in the course of that meeting that due to the nature of his request and its possible implications, he (The Resident Electoral Commissioner), is ready to work in that direction towards his victory and would also go back to the commission and consult with his close confidant on the best way that can be achieved and revert back to the governor later.
“That Governor Seriake Dickson offered him a total sum of One Billion Naira (N1 Billion) for him and his men to facilitate the governor’s victory at the polls for which a whooping sum of N200,000,000.00 only, shall be released cash in the first instance as advance for performing the role.”
Ted further stated that when he was informed of the outcome of the said meeting and his favourable disposition towards carrying out the “electoral fraud” towards ensuring victory for Governor Seriake Dickson in the said election, he took steps to ensure that he dropped the idea of going on with the said process as same was not in line with the lofty ideals of INEC as an electoral umpire in recent years.
He added: “Surprisingly, very late at night on Saturday December 5, 2015 at the INEC office, Yenagoa, I overheard Mr. Baritor Kpagih instructing two men who are not staff of INEC to drive their vehicle and follow the governor’s representative in one other tinted vehicle to a comfortable zone where they can transfer funds meant for him into that vehicle.
“That I became curious and went out of the office and saw the two men enter a Toyota Camry, 2007 model car and drove behind a tinted black jeep; not quite ten minutes thereafter, I suddenly saw the Toyota Camry car with the two men inside return to the office.
“That I saw the two men transferring three bags (Ghana must go bags) which I know where loaded with money into Mr. Baritor Kpagih’s car and went straight to his office.

“That Mr. Baritor Kpagih came out of his office and walked towards his car; I followed him immediately at close range and watched the whole scenario and when I saw him open his car boot, I surfaced and saw them counting the money with the Resident Electoral Commissioner   confirming   the money to be N200,000,00.
“That I know for a fact from his statement that it was Governor Seriake Dickson that brought the said N200 million as part payment of their earlier conceived plan to fraudulently manipulate the electoral process to ensure the re-election bid of Governor Seriake Dickson.”
The INEC SPO said he had to open up “as a patriotic Bayelsan, committed to free, fair and credible election in the quest for improved well being of the people of Bayelsa State.”
But a swift reaction, the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) has condemned allegation, saying it was vague, unsubstantiated, unfounded and malicious. In a statement signed by the IYC Central Zonal Chairman, Mr. Bobolaiyefa Owopelei, the body also dismissed the allegation as a figment of the imagination of the enemies of democracy and the Ijaw nation.
The IYC also described the allegation as a naked falsehood by the APC to blackmail and discredit the INEC, having failed in their bid to compromise the REC.
While describing Kpagir as a man of integrity, the group said the APC was bent on destroying the REC for refusing to be bribed.
While describing the Bayelsa APC and its agents as serial liars, the IYC said the latest allegation levelled against the governor was consistent with the antics of the APC which would stop at nothing to use the name of President Muhammadu Buhari to redeploy INEC officials in the state and replace them with those that will compromise the electoral process on January 9 in the rescheduled election in Southern Ijaw.
The IYC wondered why Dickson who has always had a lead over Sylva would compromise a REC who has no power to influence the outcome of the election. The umbrella organisation for the Ijaw youths reasoned that only the people on whose shoulders sovereignty rests can decide who the next governor would be and not the REC.
According to the IYC, since the governor has won six local government areas out of the seven where the elections held, the election has already been won by the PDP and Dickson, adding that the outcome of the elections in Southern Ijaw will not alter Governor Dickson’s victory, it will only consolidate it. The group called on Dickson not to be distracted, describing him as a man of integrity who cannot condescend to the level of bribing anybody. 

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