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INEC presents blurred copies of Adeleke’s WAEC/GCE certificates before tribunal

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After the submissions, it was agreed that the original file containing Form CF001, in INEC custody in Abuja, be brought before the tribunal next week.

By Jeffrey Agbo

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Thursday presented before the Osun Election Petitions Tribunal, sitting in Osogbo Form CF001, containing the WAEC-GCE certificate and Secondary School Testimonial of Governor Ademola Adeleke.

Tribunal Chairman, Justice Tertsea Kume, had on November 25 given the order for the commission to present Adeleke’s certificates after INEC, Osogbo office said the documents were in its headquarters in Abuja.

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Lead counsel to INEC, Prof. Paul Ananaba, informed the tribunal that the order given had been complied with and that the documents had been brought from Abuja by Mrs Joan Arabs, a Deputy Director.

However, Lateef Fagbemi, counsel to the petitioners (APC and Gboyega Oyetola), after going through the two-page document, told the tribunal that the documents produced by INEC (Form CF001) were not legible and could not be used to prosecute their case.

Fagbemi pointed out that they paid N305,000 for the documents and that the first document, West African Examination Council (WAEC) – General Certificate of Examination (GCE), does not have anything/result details on it and that only the signature at the bottom was legible.

He also said that the second document, School Testimonial, obtained from Ede Muslim Grammar School by Adeleke, does not have the address or location of the school on it.

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Fagbemi told the court that the documents could not be used or managed by them, saying that they were not clear and legible.

The petitioners’ counsel urged the tribunal to take note of their objections to the documents produced by INEC.

Kume upheld the objection of the petitioners and ruled that the respondent (INEC) had not fully complied with the tribunal’s order to produce Form CF001, saying that the documents produced were not legible.

The tribunal chairman then ordered that INEC should produce clearer copies of the documents.

INEC counsel, thereafter, asked the tribunal to allow it to take pictures of the documents in their custody in Abuja and forward same so that the hearing could go on.

Kume then granted the request and gave a break of one hour and 30 minutes for INEC to get the documents.

As the hearing continued after the break, Ananaba said INEC Abuja had made the screenshot of the copy of the documents, which he printed and presented to the tribunal.

Kume, however, said that the copies were not better than what the INEC Deputy Director brought.

After the arguments and submissions from the petitioners and respondents’ counsel, they agreed that the original file containing Form CF001, in INEC custody in Abuja, be brought before the tribunal next week.

Kume adjourned the next hearing to December 3.

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