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Politics of Tuesday, 16 May 2023

Source: www.legit.ng

BBC says INEC results show Peter Obi defeated Bola Tinubu in Rivers State

A collage of Bola Tinubu and Peter Obi A collage of Bola Tinubu and Peter Obi

An emerging report that could prove crucial to the ongoing presidential election petition tribunal has unfolded.

The emergence of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as Nigeria's president-elect continues to raise eyebrows after a BBC report confirmed that the presidential election in Rivers state was manipulated.

Over the years, Rivers State has been one of the significant election deciders, and pre-election predictions tipped Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, to have the day. Still, surprisingly, the candidate of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Bola Tinubu, emerged victorious in the south-south state.

The investigation from the election in Rivers state also triggered probing questions about the identity of the electoral official who read out some unexplained results.

It was gathered that after the end of voting across all the over 6,000 polling units in Rivers state, collation revealed that Tinubu won; however, thorough findings stated otherwise and showed that Peter Obi won with a vast margin in the oil-rich state.

The BBC report says: "We found an increase of just over 106,000 in Mr Tinubu's vote in the official declaration when compared with our polling station tally - almost doubling his total in the state.

"In contrast, Mr Obi's vote had fallen by over 50,000." The report, however, revealed that after a thorough search on the INEC portal for results across the 6,866 polling units in the state, "we were not able to obtain results from all of them."

The report says: "Some were incorrectly uploaded, others were missing, even after a month from the date of polling.

"For about 5% of polling stations, the photos of tally sheets were too blurred for us to read. It's reasonable to assume that the official count would have included these as they would have had the original documents.

"In another 17%, there were no results at all. Many of these would have been places where no voting took place due to security issues or the non-arrival of voting materials. Others had technical problems preventing officials uploading the documents."

Where the inconsistencies in results emanated

According to a BBC report, it was gathered results in Oyigbo local government area confirmed that Tinubu's votes were six times larger than the official results, which contrasted with BBC findings which discovered that Obi's vote had been cut in half. In the official result of the Obio/Akpor local government, Tinubu polled 80,239 votes, but findings revealed that he only polled 17,293.

Obi's official result was announced as 3,829 votes, but findings revealed that he polled a whopping 74,033 votes for him on the tally sheets.

The man behind the scheme

BBC report revealed that at the INEC headquarters in Oyibo, the electoral official, during a live telecast, identified himself as Dr Dickson Ariaga and announced the results.

BBC obtained the collation sheet duly signed by INEC officials and party agents, and it was confirmed that the "numbers in this document closely matched our tallies for the two leading candidates (Obi and Tinubu)."

During the live telecast, Dr Ariaga, who worked at the Federal College of Education in Omoku, as stated by him, announced the result, which was tallied with all the results in the collation sheet except Tinubu and Obi.

BBC report says: "But when he reached Mr Tinubu's APC, instead of saying 2,731 as written on our photograph of the sheet, he read out "16,630".

Then for Mr Obi's party (LP) the figure changed again - instead of the 22,289 seen on the sheet, he announced "10,784", more than halving his vote."