The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, was unable to call additional witnesses as anticipated, thus the governorship election petition tribunal in Abeokuta, Ogun State, yesterday abruptly ended its hearings.
The party’s counsel, Chief Chris Uche SAN, called only one witness, Ayinde Ridwan Olamilekan from Abeokuta and hoped to call two further witnesses from Odogbolu but none of the scheduled witnesses showed up.
Chief Uche informed the tribunal that the vehicle conveying the two witnesses to the venue of the tribunal broke down on the road and, therefore, made it impossible for them to attend the proceedings, as he prayed the court for an adjournment till tomorrow, (today) which was granted accordingly.
Considering the abysmal response of scheduled witnesses, the PDP, through it’s counsel has changed the date slated to close it’s case to tomorrow, against Friday earlier planned.
Chief Uche told the Tribunal that he had earlier today (yesterday) filed the Witness Statement of an Expert Witness – one Chief Reginald Udunze – as well as the Expert Report of the said witness.
He informed the Tribunal that as was the practice, he would like to give the lawyers for APC and Governor Abiodun time to peruse those documents since they had just been served.
Meanwhile, during the short proceedings, the sole witness who appeared before the panel to testify in favour of PDP, Ayinde Ridwan Olamilekan, from Abeokuta South, was crossed examined by the counsel to Governor Dapo Abiodun, Bode Olanipekun SAN.
Under cross-examination, Ridwan declared that he could not remember the date he signed the statement he submitted to the tribunal.
Ridwan had claimed to simply just be a voter and not a member or supporter of the PDP. However, under cross-examination, he revealed that when the events of election day occurred, he decided to report his side of the events to the PDP Ward Chairman and PDP lawyer.
On why he decided to report his grievances during the exercise to a PDP lawyer when he is not a member of the political party and even wrote the statement he tendered before the panel at the PDP secretariat, the witness could not give any answer to the question as he kept pretending not to understand questions by asking the lawyers cross-examining him to “come again”.
This pretence became so rampant that the Tribunal had to call on PDP’s counsel, Chief Uche, to instruct Ridwan appropriately.
It was only after Chief Uche instructed Ridwan that he began to answer questions directly, most of which showed that he was a massive sympathiser of the PDP who was even called on the telephone by the PDP Ward Chairman on election day.