Opara astounded stakeholders including the state
Returning Officer, RO, and the State Resident Commissioner, REC, of INEC when
she confessed that she and her colleagues were held hostage for several hours
by elders, youths and thugs in the area, and were forced to write results of
the governorship polls in favour of a party.
“We were held hostage by the elders of the area who
took us to a house where we were forced to write the results of the
governorship elections. I and the collation officer for Oru East local
government had no choice but to do what they asked us to do in order to save
our lives because the people were very aggressive and that was why we could not
do the collation in the other wards and had to come back to our office in
Owerri,” she narrated.
Unconfirmed report from Imo State has revealed that
result sheets from areas won by one of the candidates were recorded on sheets
with Sokoto serial numbers.
The Imo State Governorship election was declared
inconclusive by INEC. But what happened in Oru in Imo is child's play compared
to the degree of violence that happened in other states across the country
during the election last week. For many observers, it was like the country
descending to its previous ignoble status when elections were a do or die
affair; where killings, barefaced intimidations and destruction of property
held sway.
Independent observers had a field day reporting
electoral violence across the 29 and 36 states where governorship and state
assembly elections were held respectively in the country.
Over 10 political parties participated in the
election. But there are sufficient reasons to worry over the spate of violence
that occurred during the voting process at the polling units, even though
results of the outcome of the polls have been announced with some areas still
designated inconclusive. Although accreditation went on smoothly without
incident in most polling units across the country, significant incidences of
shootings, protests, arson and fatalities were recorded in most geopolitical
zones in the country.

Gunmen were also reported to have taken over the Town
Hall Polling Zone in Ilase-Ijesa, Obokun LGA of Osun state. Rivers state
reportedly recorded the highest and most serious cases of violence in this
election. Protests, violence and sporadic shootings over alleged
non-availability of some electoral materials were reported in Buguma, Obio
Akpor and Andoni LGAs. In Obio Akpor, for example, thugs reportedly snatched
electoral materials meant for voting.
Also in Gokana LGA, the police apprehended men in fake
military uniform and identity cards.
The house of the current Rivers State Commissioner for
Women Affairs, Mrs Joeba West, was also reportedly set ablaze. Clashes
involving political party agents were also reported in Iyamoyom in Obubra LGA
of Cross River State, leading to injuries.
Independent Election Monitoring Group, IEMG, where
perhaps more graphic in there description of what happened in Rivers State. The
group described what happened in Rivers State as a “bloody election, a
coup-de-tat against democracy.”
From its own findings, it may well appear that INEC
itself is to blame for the ugly outcome. Across the state, INEC officials were
reported to have arrived late in most of the polling units across the local
government areas of the state. Observers noted that none of the INEC staff
arrived before 9am while most arrived between 10 and 1pm.

It was gathered that accreditation did not commence on
time where it actually happened. In most places it did not happen as materials
never arrived, or when they arrived, they were carted away to unknown destinations
by unknown gun carrying thugs, often times in company of uniformed security
personnel, as reported. Observers also noted that security was not adequate on
that day. Generally, most polling stations reportedly had security presence.
But there were also reports that security was either absent or insufficient in
a number of places.
There are documented reports of killings across the
state. Violence, intimidation, harassment of voters/observers and disruption
and carting away of voting materials were rife. As a direct result, actual
voting never took place in most units and wards and local governments in the
state. For instance, shootings were reported in Ikuru Town, Andoni Local
government area. Voters as a direct result were scared of turning up to vote.
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