After Supreme Court Judgment, Peterside Insists there was no Election in Rivers
The All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate in the last year
election in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has insisted that the process that brought the state Governor, Nyesom,
Wike to power was never an election but a bloodbath.
Peterside explained that he and his party, APC, were strongly convinced that if there
was a free and fair election, Wike would not have emerged victorious.
Speaking last Wednesday, the defeated APC candidate said though he has accepted the Supreme Court verdict but “those who
rode on peoples' blood to power will never have peace.”
While responding to a statement made by Wike that APC could not
substantiate claims of fraudulent conduct during the Rivers governorship
election, Peterside said based on the collaborated evidences of
witnesses at the courts, there was every reason to believe that no
proper election actually took place.
He said the governor's ignorance of what transpired at the courts was
understandable because he never attended any of the sittings.
"I have not had cause to criticise that judgement of the Supreme Court
because of my principle and standards. The highest court in the land has
made its decision and I stand with them on the decision.
"Even those who won in the Supreme Court know that there was no
election. When they sit back in their private moments, they will know
that they are simply riding to power on the blood of people, on the
graves of people and that they can never have peace.
"I wish they will have peace but the way nature acts, nature rewards
you based on your deeds and so if you killed, if you spill blood, if you
celebrate victory tainted with blood, you will never go scot free. It
is a matter of time. Nature will catch up with them.”
Peterside who spoke on the botched expectations of the APC for a power
shift to the minority area, said both him and the party were quite
convinced that in a free and fair election, he would emerge victorious.
"But unfortunately, we didn’t have an election talk more of a free and
fair one. We simply had a blood bath and so no one can say whether my
candidacy would have been an advantage or disadvantage to the party. But
I know that my candidacy was widely accepted in Rivers State because I
represent three important things firstly; power shift to another side of
the state.
"Rivers state is multi ethnic. Ikwere isn’t the only ethnic group.
There are many major ethnic groups and there are other ethnic groups too
in the state. My candidature represented a change in senatorial
district, change in the geo-political divide of the riverine upland and
represented those who believed one could lead where men and women of
character, men and women who had a vision and men and women who would
use power for good and all those who believed in all these things were
solidly behind my candidature.
On reports of his criticism of the Supreme Court judgement, Dakuku
said: “I have said I do not have capacity to join issues with Supreme
Court. So, I will not comment on the judgement. However there are things
to note: the Supreme Court earlier backed the relocation of the
tribunal from Port Harcourt to Abuja on the grounds that there was
violence before, during and after the elections in Rivers State. But the
same court now said there was no violence in Rivers State."
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