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Despite widespread belief that the 2007 election was rigged, petitioners have failed to convince Nigerian courts of the allegations of against President Umaru Yar'Adua.
A Nigerian election tribunal has upheld President Umaru Yar'Adua's victory last April, despite allegations of widespread rigging. Gilbert da Costa was in the courtroom in Abuja and filed this report for VOA.
Opposition candidates, former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari and former vice president Atiku Abubakar challenged the result before the tribunal. The petitioners alleged ballot papers were not numbered serially, compilation of voter registers were late, and the timing of the April 21 vote, and reports of widespread fraud violated the election law and the vote should be annulled.
Lead judge Abdulkadir Jega told the packed court that the petitioners failed to substantiate their allegations.
"This petition has been plagued by want of evidence in proof of virtually all the allegations contained therein," he said. "Even if I were to accept all the excluded evidence provided by the petitioner, which evidence relates to only four states of the federation, the petitioner would still have been unable to establish his petition. Accordingly, the petition is hereby dismissed."
Despite the ruling, the legal battle may drag on for months as the losing parties are likely to appeal to the Supreme Court for final determination.
February 26, 2008 at 07:47 am by Jarrett Martineau, 281 views, 1 comment
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junioat 19:03 on February 26th, 2008
Then-Vice President Atiku Abubakar at a meeting with visiting American journalists in January 2007.
junio has contributed a photo to this story.