The visibly traumatised Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC), accredited observers during Saturday’s governorship and state
assembly elections in Enugu State have narrated their ordeals at the
residence of Senator Ayogu Eze, the guber candidate of the All
Progressives Congress (APC).
The Observers say they had paid a visit to verify his alleged boycott of the election.
The
observers, who introduced themselves as members of Global Policy
Advocate and Leadership Initiative said they narrowly escaped death
during the unfortunate attack on them, despite all the efforts they made
to identify themselves before the angry supporters of Senator Eze,
numbering over seven hundred.
Speaking to journalists shortly
after they were rescued by the police and brought to Enugu from
Enugu-Ezike, where the ensuing fracas claimed one life, the group
thanked God for sparing their lives.
Resulting from the injury
sustained from the attack, the leader of the Team, Amaka Offor, felt
seriously sick and fainted just a few meters away from the Enugu Police
Command headquarters, immediately they were granted bail.
She could not narrative her experience.
It would be recalled that an incident at the residence of Senator Eze, claimed the life of a 30-year-old man.
Speaking on the incident, the observers alleged that they escaped death by the whiskers.
One
of the leaders of the the team, Mr. Frank Ohazulike, said but for the
prompt response of security operatives, they would have either been
lynched or burnt alive.
Ohazulike, who gave graphic details of
the incident, further stated that it was cruel for anyone to have
claimed that they were Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, thugs.
He narrated their experience thus:
“We’re independent domestic observers, a team from Global Policy Advocate and Leadership Initiative.
“This
is an organization accredited by the INEC. We’re the 50th group that
was accredited to monitor this election, hence we came down here to
Enugu to monitor this process.
“We came here and in the process
of going for electoral observation, our car broke down. We then looked
for an alternative means to move around. Luckily for us, we approached a
friend that works in the Government House and he obliged to give us a
bus so we could use it to move around.
“At a point, we got a call
that Senator Ayogu Eze, the APC guber candidate had allegedly boycotted
the election. So, we decided to visit his home at Umuida in Enugu Ezike
in order to get our facts and figures right so that we would be able to
ascertain the correct information to give to the outside world when
writing our reports.
“So, when we got to Senator Ayogu Ezeh’s
residence, we requested to see him. We also met some media people there
while other observers were coming out from the place. We requested to
know if it was, indeed, true as it was being alleged that he had
threathened to boycott the exercise. Some people alleged that it was
because of the removal of his name from INEC list whereas others claimed
that they knew that the PDP would compromise the processes. They told
us that he was busy inside and would not come out.
“So, as we
were driving out of his compound, one man accosted us and asked us where
we were coming out from and our mission there. We explained to him and
even showed him our ID cards. The man got enraged and asked us: ‘why
would you people come to this place in a vehicle with a government
number plate? We explained that we had an issue on the road and we had
to get an assistance in that emergency situation.
“We told him
that we didn’t see that as a problem because even when the presidenct
visits non-PDP States, they give the entourage vehicles to move around.
We explained to him that in the spirit of oneness, we can always get
help to make sure that the electoral process is observed.
“Immediately,
the man beckoned on all the thugs within the compound; they were more
than 700 and they rushed to our vehicle, smashed the windscreens and
other glasses in the vehicle. They even brought out one cap with an
inscription ‘Gburus’ and they dropped it in the front of our car.
“Before
we knew it, they started beating us. We were beaten to stupor; they
threatened to get the ladies with us Unclad. If not for the timely
intervention of the police, the DSS and the Army, it would have been a
different thing. They asked them to stop beating us because we’re
observers, that we were merely doing our job. Some of the thugs
threatened to burn us inside the vehicle. They collected all our phones,
our gadgets, our reports and other personal effects.
“At that
point, the police now started shooting their guns apparently to harass
and/or disperse them. Some of them still remained adamant. One of them
was busy struggling for the gun with one of the mobile policemen.
“In the process, we now suddenly saw somebody lying in the pool of his own blood.
There
was a lot of pandemonium. Senator Ayogu Eze now came down and called
us, asked us what the problem was. When we told him, he apologized to
us; he said that he felt bad over what had happened to us. He now
pleaded with the police to escort us out of the place.
“The
police took us from there to the police station in the area and finally
to Enugu until now we were granted bail after police investigation
confirmed our name in the list of observers with INEC.”
On the
claims that they were PDP thugs, the INEC-accredited observer charged:
“How can we be thugs; who is saying that? Didn’t they see our tags? We
had nothing to do with the State Government; it was just on pure
emergency that we sought assistance and got that bus from a friend. We
actually had a vehicle which we had been using. So, we never had any
contact with the State Government. We are observers, properly accredited
by the INEC and we did identify ourselves as the 50th on that list.”
When
asked to rate the conduct of the elections, Ohazulike said “the
election was going on very smoothly until we had that incident which was
not in a polling booth.
“So, there was no issue in Enugu apart
from that isolated incident. If you ask me to rate the performance, I
would say it was over 90 percent success on the part of the INEC, the
security agencies and other stakeholders.”
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