The Presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the February 25 election, Peter Obi has asked the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) to among others, declare him the winner of the election.
In the alternative, Obi wants the court to cancel the election and conduct a fresh one.
These form part of the reliefs being sought in a petition he filed with his party at the court’s secretariat located at the Court of Appeal in Abuja.
It was learnt that Obi and LP filed their petition early on Tuesday, with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Bola Tinubu (President-elect), Kashim Shettima (Vice President-elect) and their party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) listed as respondents.
The petitioners are challenging the election on three grounds, including that Tinubu “at the time of the election was not qualified to contest the election.”
They are also contending, among others, that Tinubu “was not duly elected by the majority of the valid votes cast.”
They also argued that Shettima was not qualified to contest the election on the ground of his alleged double nomination as a candidate for Borno Central and as a Vice Presidential candidate.
The petitioners stated that, at the trial of the petition, they “shall contend at the trial that the purported sponsorship of the second and third respondents (Tinubu and Shettima) by the fourth respondent (APC) was rendered invalid by reason of the third respondent knowingly allowing himself to be nominated as the Vice Presidential candidate whilst he was still a Senatorial candidate for the Bomo Central Constituency.
The petitioners shall further contend that for this reason, the votes purportedly recorded for the second respondent at the contested presidential election were/are wasted votes and ought to be disregarded”.
“That it be determined that all the votes recorded for the second respondent in the election are wasted votes, owing to the non-qualification of the second and third respondents.
“That it be determined that on the basis of the remaining votes (after discountenancing the votes credited to the second respondent) the first petitioner (Obi) scored a majority of the lawful votes cast at the election and had not less than 25 per cent of the votes cast in each of at least 2/3 of the states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja and satisfied the constitutional requirements to be declared the winner of the 25th February 2023 presidential election.