Saturday, April 18, 2015

How Orubebe, Others Planned To Kidnap INEC Chairman To Disrupt Presidential Elections

Orubebe while making a scene at the venue of the collation in Abuja on 31st of March 2015
A new report by Reuters reveals how former minister Orubebe renown for the scene he caused during the collation of the Presidential polls results, and other allies of President Jonathan planned to kidnap the Independent National Electoral Commisions-INEC chairman Poffessor Attairu Jega. Read the report below:
As Muhammadu Buhari closed in on Nigeria's presidency, an aide to election commission chairman Attahiru Jega sent a text message to an independent voting monitor, warning of an imminent threat to the electoral process.
The aide had unearthed a plot by supporters of President Goodluck Jonathan to disrupt the public announcement of the national election results and kidnap Jega in a bid to wreck the count, according to pro-democracy advocates and a Nigeria-based diplomat.


Causing a scene, Orubebe who is seen here causing a scene during the collation of the Presidential election results in Abuja
Central to the plan, they said, were Jega's security detail and Godsday Orubebe, a former cabinet minister from Jonathan's Niger Delta, an area whose leaders feared a change of power would mean an end to the perks it enjoyed under Jonathan's presidency.


Orubebe's role was to cause a disturbance at the headquarters of the commission as cover for the abduction of Jega. Orubebe did not respond to requests for comment on the details of the plot.

The commission, called INEC, also declined to comment and turned down requests for an interview with Jega, whom Reuters was unable to reach independently. Reuters found no evidence to suggest that Jonathan, who conceded defeat in the election, was involved. His spokesman and his party, the PDP, did not respond to requests for comment.

While the plot would likely not have changed the result, it could have unleashed fury among Buhari supporters in the north, where 800 people were killed in rioting after his last election defeat in 2011.

But the plot's failure enabled Africa's most populous country to complete its first credible vote since independence in 1960.

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