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See full details of states where INEC dubiously failed to upload election results on IREV

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Nigeria elections

The table below shows full details of states where the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) dubiously failed to upload election results on its IREV portal according to the number of the polling units, as the hearings on the petitions before the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal over the controversial February 25 election get underway.

News Band had, earlier in the day, reported that results obtained from the IREV shows that as at today, May 2, the electoral body has yet to upload results from 9,403 polling units, despite hastily declaring the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as the winner of the election.

According to data obtained from the IREV, Kano State topped the table of polling units where INEC failed to upload election results on IREV with 1,101 polling units.

It was followed by Anambra State with 834 unloaded polling units, and Rivers State was third with 793.

Others are Imo State with 620, and Oyo State with 577 unloaded polling units.

Only one state, Ekiti, had a 100 per cent success for uploading results on IREV, followed by Enugu with just two unloaded polling units.

Result Stats for the Presidential election – 2023-02-25, is as follows:

  • Total number of polling units — 176846
  • Total number of uploaded/submitted results — 167443
  • Total number of expected results — 9,403
  • Percentage of uploaded results — 94.68%
  • Last upload time — March 25, 2023, 10:36:31 PM
  • Total number of Local Government Areas — 774

See the full table below:

State LGA Wards Polling Units Uploaded Unloaded
Abia Aba North 12 503 387 116
Arochukwu 11 183 174 9
Bende 13 214 210 4
Aba South 12 518 453 65
Isiala Ngwa North 10 185 183 2
Ohafia 11 282 196 86
Obingwa 11 312 239 73
Osisioma 10 301 255 46
Umuahia North 12 378 371 7
Ukwa West 10 129 109 20
Total 428
Adamawa Fufore 11 274 269 5
Ganye 10 198 197 1
Jada 11 215 214 1
Lamurde 10 152 151 1
Madagali 10 160 157 3
Michika 16 223 222 1
Mayo-Belwa 12 206 187 19
Mubi South 10 143 142 1
Yola North 11 377 376 1
Total 33
Akwa Ibom Eket 11 203 202 1
Eastern Obolo 10 57 56 1
Ibiono Ibom 11 199 174 25
Ibesikpo Asutan 10 180 174 6
Abak 11 186 180 6
Essien Udim 11 219 216 3
Mbo 10 100 95 5
Etim Ekpo 10 111 92 19
Uruan 11 166 165 1
Udung Uko 10 61 60 1
Itu 10 140 139 1
Mkpat Enin 14 145 137 8
Nsit Ubium 10 117 116 1
Ukanafun 11 134 129 5
Oruk Anam 13 221 196 25
Uyo 11 424 410 14
Total 122
Anambra Ayamelum 11 191 54 137
Ekwusigo 12 193 106 87
Dunukofia 14 165 164 1
Idemili North 12 467 161 306
Nnewi North 10 318 317 1
Njikoka 18 231 224 7
Idemili-South 12 243 113 130
Nnewi South 20 297 278 9
Orumba South 18 208 206 2
Ogbaru 16 383 311 72
Anaocha 19 320 288 32
Oyi 15 207 193 14
Awka South 20 390 389 1
Ihiala 20 323 188 35
Total 834
Bauchi Dambam 10 163 162 1
Darazo 11 270 269 1
Gamawa 11 289 288 1
Ganjuwa 11 253 252 1
Misau 10 256 252 4
Ningi 11 371 370 1
Zaki 11 261 260 1
Total 10
Bayelsa Nembe 13 228 224 4
Ekeremor 12 258 215 43
Brass 10 172 156 16
Ogbia 13 301 294 7
Sagbama 14 244 243 1
Yenagoa 15 427 420 7
Total 78
Benue Gboko 17 475 332 43
Gwer East 14 189 163 26
Gwer West 15 123 122 1
Logo 10 184 164 20
Ohimini 10 87 86 1
Ado 10 157 147 10
Otukpo 13 280 268 12
Vandeikya 12 286 274 12
Guma 10 200 155 45
Kwande 15 339 334 5
Ukum 13 272 240 32
Total 207
Borno Shani 11 144 125 19
Abadam 10 93 89 4
Dikwa 10 107 99 8
Jere 12 386 379 7
Monguno 12 109 108 1
Total 39
Cross River Akamkpa 10 195 194 1
Total 1
Delta Ethiope East 11 220 189 31
Oshimili 10 165 164 1
Isoko South 11 257 250 7
Oshimili South 11 319 312 7
Ughelli North 11 400 365 35
Sapele 11 268 249 19
Ughelli South 11 244 243 1
Warri South 12 351 339 12
Uvwie 10 327 300 27
Ethiope West 11 220 217 3
Okpe 10 236 231 5
Ndokwa East 10 158 154 4
Udu 10 265 257 8
Patani 10 99 98 1
Warri North 10 192 190 2
Ukwuani 10 168 142 26
Total 189
Ebonyi Ezza North 11 207 188 19
Ikwo 20 308 306
Onicha 12 217 216 1
Ohaozara 11 170 168 2
Total 22
Edo Akoko Edo 10 241 233 8
Total 8
Ekiti

 

Total  
Enugu Igbo Eze North 20 266 265 1
Oji-River 20 175 174 1
Total 2
FCT Gwagwalada 10 338 335 3
Abaji 10 135 134 1
Kwali 10 201 196 5
Kuje 10 262 248 14
Bwari 10 485 484 1
Municipal 12 1401 1366 35
Total 59
Gombe Gombe 11 408 405 3
Total 3
Imo Ezinihitte Mbaise 12 175 100 75
Aboh Mbaise 12 212 107 105
Ikeduru 12 227 203 24
Ideato South 13 152 143 9
Isiala Mbano 12 196 185 11
Mbaitoli 12 287 245 42
Isu 11 123 122 1
Njaba 11 134 115 19
Ohaji/Egbema 12 210 153 57
Nwangele 11 113 106 7
Obowo 10 128 114 14
Ehime Mbano 11 154 120 34
Oru-East 10 171 147 24
Okigwe 11 154 114 40
Orlu 13 209 205 4
Onuimo 10 97 80 17
Oru West 10 147 65 82
Ngor Okpala 11 193 189 4
Owerri North 12 236 229 7
Owerri Municipal 11 239 227 12
Oguta 11 184 153 31
Orsu 11 137 136 1
Total 620
Jigawa Kaugama 11 161 160 1
Kirika Samma 10 149 125 24
Malam Madori 11 154 153 1
Ringim 10 240 180
Gumel 11 103 102 1
Jahun 11 232 186 46
Buji 10 117 66
Dutse 11 267 265 2
Birniwa 11 148 138 10
Birnin Kudu 11 322 286 36
Total 121
Kaduna Birnin Gwari 11 263 239 24
Igabi 12 600 495 105
Kachia 12 317 243 74
Kaduna North 12 704 537 167
Kaura 10 186 185 1
Kagarko 10 222 221 1
Kubau 11 310 308 2
Sabon Gari 11 398 396 2
Giwa 11 262 258 4
Sanga 11 195 194 1
Makarfi 10 208 194 14
Jema’a 12 325 316 9
Soba 11 298 297 1
Zangon Kataf 11 337 329 8
Total 415
Kano Albasu 10 185 168 17
Bagwai 10 186 183 3
Bebeji 14 161 149 12
Ajingi 10 175 171 4
Bichi 11 277 240 37
Dawaki Tofa 11 224 221 3
Bunkure 10 183 147 36
Dawaki Kudu 15 303 270 33
Dala 12 668 634 34
Gabasawa 11 164 113 51
Doguwa 10 149 148 1
Kabo 10 188 166 22
Fagge 10 521 500 21
Gaya 10 206 173 33
Kumbotso 11 410 396 14
Gezawa 11 229 221 8
Kano Kano Municipal 13 630 369 261
Kibiya 10 149 147 2
Makoda 11 145 138 7
Karaye 10 169 94 75
Kunchi 10 142 104 38
Shanono 10 151 123 28
Kura 10 217 184 33
Rogo 10 220 202 18
Nasarawa 11 817 803 14
Tsanyawa 10 157 154 3
Tofa 15 147 141 6
Sumaila 11 221 156 61
Tarauni 10 425 421 4
Tudun Wada 11 281 241 40
Takai 10 251 101 150
Warawa 15 143 133 10
Ungogo 11 384 362 22
Total 1,101
Katsina Batagarawa 10 186 178 8
Dandume 11 177 176 1
Kankara 11 256 249 7
Dutsin-Ma 11 209 208 1
Faskari 10 231 226 5
Jibia 11 203 194 9
Kafur 10 270 227 43
Katsina 12 501 499 2
Musawa 11 161 160 1
Safana 10 168 167 1
Total 77
Kebbi Argungu 11 246 242 4
Bagudo 11 226 198 28
Augie 10 141 140 1
Arewa 11 214 210 4
Bunza 10 141 140 1
Birnin Kebbi 15 385 377 8
Dandi 11 190 155 35
Gwandu 10 156 136 20
Fakai 10 109 104 5
Jega 11 232 203 29
Kalgo 10 104 71 33
Koko/Besse 12 191 181 10
Maiyama 11 172 159 13
Ngaski 10 128 124 4
Shanga 10 144 135 9
Wasagu/Danko 11 229 193 36
Suru 11 207 191 16
Zuru 10 200 196 4
Total 260
Kogi Bassa 10 130 96 34
Adavi 11 217 215 2
Ajaokuta 14 146 144 2
Dekina 12 352 333 19
Idah 10 120 117 3
Kabba/Bunu 15 156 145 11
Okene 11 284 280 4
Okehi 11 188 181 7
Ogori Mangogo 10 67 63 4
Mopa Moro 10 53 46 7
Olamaboro 10 174 167 7
Omala 11 148 131 17
Total 117
Kwara Baruten 11 230 203 27
Edu 10 175 167 8
Ifelodun 18 236 162 74
Asa 17 145 78 67
Ilorin-West 12 464 383 81
Ilorin-South 11 275 274 1
Offa 12 173 129 44
Irepodun 11 158 156 2
Isin 11 80 78 2
Moro 17 142 69 73
Patigi 10 105 69 36
Total 415
Lagos Ajeromi/Ifelodun 11 734 701 33
Amuwo-Odofin 11 637 622 15
Alimosho 11 1545 1543 2
Epe 19 374 365 9
Eti-Osa 10 725 712 13
Ikorodu 19 682 681 1
Lagos Mainland 11 493 492 1
Ikeja 10 667 665 2
Kosofe 10 899 892 7
Surulere 12 757 751 6
Oshodi/Isolo 11 890 871 18
Total 107
Nasarawa Karu 11 516 471 45
Keana 10 114 109 5
Nasarawa Eggon 14 255 253 2
Kokona 11 194 181 13
NASARAWA 15 303 261 42
Keffi 10 215 205 10
Toto 12 204 194 10
Total 127
Niger Agaie 11 164 142 22
Borgu 10 208 203 5
Bida 14 270 268 2
Bosso 10 249 246 3
Chanchaga 11 379 369 10
Edatti 10 119 117 2
Gbako 10 156 155 1
Katcha 10 149 135 14
Lapai 10 193 192 1
Kontagora 13 248 244 4
Magama 11 189 186 3
Paikoro 11 232 231 1
Rafi 11 219 210 9
Suleja 10 277 276 1
Tafa 10 171 170 1
Rijau 11 178 168 10
Total 88
Ogun Egbado South 10 257 219 38
Abeokuta South 15 445 425 20
Egbado North 11 251 219 32
Ifo 11 448 435 13
Ewekoro 10 188 146 42
Ijebu North East 10 111 98 13
Ijebu North 11 268 247 21
Ijebu Ode 11 161 128 33
Ipokia 12 262 164 98
Obafemi/Owode 12 329 327 2
Imeko/Afon 10 132 130 2
Odeda 10 182 181 1
Total 315
Ondo Ileoluji/Okeigbo 10 191 190 1
Ose 12 141 140 1
Akoko North East 13 159 158 1
Ifedore 10 169 168 2
Total 5
Osun Atakumosa East 10 77 49 28
Atakumosa West 11 76 31 45
Boluwaduro 10 74 69 5
Boripe 11 112 108 4
Ede North 11 139 108 31
Ifedayo 10 63 47 16
Ifelodun 12 145 144 1
Ife South 11 131 111 20
Ilesa West 10 121 118 3
Iwo 15 170 155 15
Ejigbo 11 133 104 29
Ife North 10 111 110 1
Oriade 12 123 116 7
Odo-Otin 15 121 115 6
Osogbo 15 282 279 3
Total 85
Oyo Afijio 10 95 90 5
Atisbo 10 152 107 45
Ibadan North 12 512 337 175
Ibarapa North 10 148 113 35
Ibadan North East 12 336 217 119
Ibarapa Central 10 140 97 43
Iseyin 11 229 224 5
Iwajowa 10 120 118 2
Ido 10 196 188 8
Ogbomoso 10 188 186 2
Ona-Ara 11 150 124 26
Oluyole 10 229 181 48
Ogbomoso South 10 183 173 10
Oorelope 10 93 85 8
Saki West 11 228 182 46
Total 577
Plateau Bassa 16 296 295 1
Langtang North 14 225 220 5
Mangu 16 409 406 3
Total 9
Rivers Degema 17 178 177 1
Emohua 14 280 255 25
Eleme 10 233 206 27
Ikwerre 13 312 151 161
Asari-Toru 13 251 213 38
Khana 19 359 207 52
Obio/Akpor 17 1211 1116 95
Etche 19 271 176 95
Okrika 12 170 159 11
Omuma 10 167 162 5
Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni 17 335 329 6
Tai 10 141 140 1
Bonny 12 165 159 6
Oyigbo 10 217 215 2
Gokana 17 260 218 42
Ogu/Bolo 12 131 126 5
Port Harcourt 20 961 759 202
Ahoada East 13 176 172 4
Ahoada West 12 171 162 9
Abua-Odual 13 214 209 5
Andoni 11 265 264 1
Total 793
Sokoto Dange/Shuni 11 194 119 75
Bodinga 11 181 180 1
Goronyo 11 172 162 10
Isa 10 146 143 3
Gada 11 239 218 21
Gwadabawa 11 186 116 70
Shagari 10 148 145 3
Kware 11 153 108 45
Illela 11 210 186 24
Tangaza 10 139 119 20
Silame 10 101 85 16
Rabah 11 126 119 7
S/Birni 11 232 197 35
Sokoto South 11 341 326 15
Tambuwal 11 259 196 63
Wurno 11 132 102 30
Yabo 10 114 90 24
Kebbe 10 113 55 58
Sokoto North 11 289 242 47
Wamakko 11 259 257 2
Total 569
Taraba Gassol 12 342 339 3
Gashaka 10 137 129 8
Donga 10 201 198 3
Bali 11 254 239 15
Jalingo 10 383 377 6
Kurmi 10 142 128 14
Karim-Lamido 11 274 252 22
Takum 11 245 36 209
Sardauna 11 358 320 38
Ussa 11 156 93 63
Wukari 10 377 333 44
Zing 10 154 148 6
Yorro 11 121 110 11
Total 442
Yobe Fika 10 200 146 54
Bade 10 210 209 1
Gulani 12 131 130 1
Jakusko 10 161 109 52
Total 108
Zamfara Bungudu 11 325 304 21
Anka 10 164 136 28
Bakura 10 189 175 14
Bukkuyum 10 193 191 2
Kaura Namoda 11 261 255 6
Gummi 11 221 200 21
Maru 10 247 182 65
Gusau 11 564 518 46
Maradun 10 195 165 30
Tsafe 11 301 292 9
Shinkafi 10 172 24 148
Talata Mafara 11 259 188 71

Results were supposed to be electronically transmitted from each of the polling stations to the commission’s collation system and also uploaded to its website.

While INEC apologised for the technical glitches” in uploading results on the IREV portal as planned, its chairman Prof Mahmood Yakubu, carried on with the process and declared Tinubu winner.

According to Yakubu, Tinubu scored a total of 8,794,726 votes, while the PDP candidate Atiku Abubakar came second with a total of 6,984,520 votes.

Labour Party candidate Peter Obi came third with a total of 6,101,533 votes while Rabiu Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) came fourth with 1,496,687 votes.

The opposition parties have since rejected the outcome of the election and filed petitions at the Election Tribunal citing irregularities and INEC’s failure to abide by provisions of the law. The electoral commission and the APC have also filed counterclaims insisting the election was credible. Read more.

Read also:

Presidential election: INEC yet to upload results from 9403 polling units ahead of Tribunal despite hastily declaring winner March 1

©Copyright 2023 News Band

(If you would like to receive CURRENT NEWS updates from News Band on WhatsApp, or Telegram, or wish send eyewitness accounts/ reports/ articles, write to elstimmy@gmail.com and we will respond instantly. Follow us on twitter @News Band; like our Facebook page: News Band.)

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Analysis

Nigeria is radicalizing the Igbo, one injustice at a time ~ by Abolaji Rasaq

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There’s something about persecution that does two things to a people: it either breaks them, or it makes them beasts of survival.

For centuries the Jews… they were hunted, hated, and humiliated by empires. But they didn’t vanish.

They evolved. They adapted. And today, the Jews are arguably the most powerful tribe in the world economically, intellectually, and politically. Ruthless when necessary.

They are unapologetic about their survival. Now, look at the Igbo. A tribe known for industry, resilience, and brilliance.

A people who just want to live, do business, and thrive. But Nigeria doesn’t want that. Nigeria wants control.

Nigeria wants submission. And the one thing the Igbo have never known how to do is bow. And that’s the real issue.

So what does Nigeria do? It sidelines them. Isolates them. Provokes them. Bombs their villages under the guise of security.

Locks up their agitators. Shuts down their businesses. Mocks their pain. Ignores their history. Prevent them from voting. Play politics with their education. Sponsored bigotry on them.

And then Nigeria pretends to be surprised that there’s growing radicalization in the East?

Let me be clear: The Igbo didn’t start this fire. Nigeria did.

And history, the very same history we keep refusing to learn from, has shown us that when you keep pushing a tribe that knows how to survive, they evolve into something stronger, something unstoppable.

It’s happened before. With the Jews. Europe tried to exterminate them. Instead, they became the backbone of global finance, media, tech, and diplomacy.

You don’t touch a Jew today without consequences. You don’t push them to the wall and expect them to stay quiet.

READ ALSO:  BVAS: INEC mischievous, device can handle 50 elections without configuration — IT Expert

Now Nigeria is doing the same to the Igbo, pushing, prodding, provoking.

But here’s the warning: when you push an animal to the wall, it doesn’t stay calm. It fights back. It bites. And this time, when it bites, don’t act shocked.

But this isn’t just about the Igbo solely. Nigeria has perfected the art of creating monsters, then acting surprised when they bite.

The Niger Delta? Radicalized. The region was exploited for oil, polluted beyond repair, and ignored until their youths picked up arms.

The Fulani terrorists? Radicalized. Left behind by the same government that claimed to represent them, now manipulated by religion and resentment.

The Almajiri? Radicalized. Abandoned by an elite that used their poverty as a vote bank and then left them to rot.

The Agbero? Radicalized. Uneducated, weaponized, and unleashed as tools of political chaos.

Even the middle class is slowly being radicalized, not with guns, but with hopelessness. That, too, is a ticking time bomb.

A nation cannot continue to marginalize its most brilliant tribe and expect peace.

The Igbo are not docile. They are not quiet. They are not forgetful. They are survivors, and survivors don’t beg for space forever. At some point, they take it.

The Igbo didn’t set out to be radicals. They were made into one by a country that won’t stop seeing their confidence as a threat.

You can’t keep pretending unity means silence. You can’t keep preaching peace while planting injustice.

The Igbo are not asking for too much, they just want to live, build, and grow.

READ ALSO:  Result on IREV shows Peter Obi won Rivers State with landslide

But if you insist on turning their dignity into defiance, their enterprise into enmity, and their survival into sedition, then you are creating a monster.

And if history has taught us anything, it’s this: when a persecuted people decide that survival is no longer enough, when they decide to stop running and start resisting, they don’t just fight back. They win.

Nigeria must understand this: you cannot keep pushing people into a corner and expect submission.

When you back a lion into a wall, don’t expect it to purr. It will roar. It will claw. It will tear through anything standing between it and freedom.

So here’s the final warning, for those who still care to listen: Nigeria is radicalizing the Igbo.

But worse, Nigeria is radicalizing everyone. And it won’t end well.

When the fire spreads, when the rebellion multiplies, when the beast we created begins to fight back, don’t act shocked; no tribe will be left untouched.

Don’t pretend it wasn’t preventable. We all made it happen. You don’t corner a lion and expect peace.

Abolaji Rasaq is a public affairs analyst.

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Igbo Corner

Crisis hits Nnewi over Uruagu PG election, as BoT members protest, resign

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Palpable crisis is brewing in Nnewi over the election of the President General of Uruagu Community in the industrial town of Anambra State, with a business mogul and owner of Organiser Plc., Chief Innocent Okoli, accused of upsetting the apple cart.

The crisis has led to protests and resignation of members of the Board of Trustees (BoT).

One of the resignation letters sighted by News Band was from a legal practitioner, J. N. Obi, Esq.

Barrister Obi, until his resignation served as the Secretary of the Executive Committee and member, Uruagu Board of Trustees.

Tendering his resignation letter, Obi cited brazen violation of the Constitution of Uruagu Nnewi Community Development Union.

The letter was referenced OB/03 /296/2025, dated May 8, 2025, and addressed to His Highness. Obi A. C. Obi (Ogidi IV).

In the letter entitled “Letter of resignation as member, Board of Trustees (B.O. T) Uruagu Nnewi. Obi announced his resignation based on the following reasons:

  1. Article 8. 9 (a) of the Constitution of Uruagu Nnewi Community Development Union. 2022 (As Amended) states and I quote:
    “The Board shall “Ensure the observance of this Constitution”. 
  2. Article 14.4 of the Constitution of Uruagu Nnewi Community Development Union 2022 (As Amended) states and I quote:
    “Each ward shall submit a list of the Electors In writing to the Secretary General of the Union, one month before any election.
    “The submission of the list of the Electors shall be done by the Ward Chairman In consultation with the Ward’s Obi.”
  3. “The election sought to be conducted on Saturday, 10th day of May 2025, did not comply with the above provisious as it was on the Union’s general meeting of the I3th day of April 2025 that the expiration of the tenure of the Executives was announced.”

The legal pratictioner, however, noted that the election to be held on May 10 will not be up to one month.

READ ALSO:  Ibụ onye Igbo? Ilu ole ka ịma?

He, therefore, resigned his membership of B. 0. T for failure to abide by the above provisions of the Constitution as stated above.

On his part, the former President General of Uruagu Nnewi, Chief Ambassador Charles Nwonye, decried series of illegalities in the proposed election championed by Chief Okoli.

He recalled the efforts of past and present stakeholders to ensure that Uruagu Nnewi Community Development Union is recognised as a legal and responsible entity in the state.

He, however, speaking in a voice note obtained by Diaspora Digital Media (DDM), regretted:

“It’s very, very unfortunate that those counsels that instituted Uruagu Development Union are no longer alive.

“They were the ones who were known for speaking out the truth. But at the same time, we will not all keep quiet.

“I, hereby, wish to bring the following to the attention of all Uruagu indigenes, scattered all over Nigeria and in the diaspora that four years ago, a similar thing happened.

“Uruagu Nnewi Constitution was also flagrantly violated four years ago.

“At the end, a lot of stakeholders asked the former Executive Committee to resign and leave en masse.

“The Constitution, however, allowed them to recontest.

“The Executive Committee then honourably resigned and no one of us recontested, ushering in a new Executive Committee.

“They argued that following the election, the Constitution will be amended to correct all the flaws and ensure no such flagrant abused repeats itself.

“They went for the election and what happened there was the same illegality we’re talking about.

“Some of our youths went and connived with mischief makers, disrupted the election and declared the present Executive Committee members winners.

READ ALSO:  Result on IREV shows Peter Obi won Rivers State with landslide

“The youths stood by them in their misguided thoughts that the Executive Committee members enjoy special gains in the office.

“They disrupted the election and ensured that the present crop of Executive Committee members was ushered in.

“The election was heavily flawed and rigged in favour of Eloka Ike and Innocent Okoli, but we let go and left peacefully.

“The new Executive Committee promised to preside for only four years and leave, but we are currently seeing the same illegalities.

“I dare ask: Should Uruagu be known only for illegalities? I thought Ndi Uruagu are smart people?

“I have observed that there are certain individuals who are hell-bent on ensuring that the Uruagu leadership fails.

“They seem bent on destroying all our efforts, acting as agents of chaos and destruction.

“How can one man gather a bunch of Umuezeagu indigenes and take them to the court, claiming that they sued the union to court?

“They deceived the High Court and got a frivolous injunction against Uruagu people, all in the name of election!

“When I got this information, I knew that something was wrong.

“How can someone, after serving a tenure fraught with irregularities, fight his way to a second tenure against the people’s wish?

“I want to make it clear to all the delegates in the so-called election that it will not be possible to make an illegality legal.

“Anyone who casts a vote in that sham election is an agent provocateur, as well as a villain.

“Let it be on record that I denounced the so-called election founded on illegality and fraud and all participants, be it a delegate or participant in any manner is an enemy of the people.”

READ ALSO:  BVAS: INEC mischievous, device can handle 50 elections without configuration — IT Expert

Chief Okoli and other responsible people of Nnewi leadership could not be reached for comment at the moment of this publication.

More details will follow…

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Celebrity/Entertainment

Late Mbaise monarch—Eze Nwabueze Ugorji to be buried May 22, 2025

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The remains of HRH Eze Stephen Nwabueze Ugorji, Orji Ukwu 1 of Lorji Nwekeukwu Autonomous Community in Aboh Mbaise Local Government Area, will be laid to rest on Thursday, May 22, 2025.

The late Eze Ugorji will be buried in his palace at Orji Ukwu Estate, Lorji, following a Catholic funeral Mass at St. Andrews Catholic Church, Lorji.

News Band was informed that His Excellency the Catholic Bishop of Ahiara Diocese, Bishop Okezuo Nwobi, has been invited to officiate at the ceremony.

Bishop Nwobi, it was learnt, has also accepted the family’s invitation to officiate at the funeral rites of the late grand traditional ruler.

This information was provided to members of the press in Owerri by the Opara Eze (First Son of the Eze), former Commissioner for Homeland Security and Vigilante Affairs, Dr. Ugorji Okechukwu Ugorji.

His Lordship Bishop Okezuo Nwobi, the Catholic Bishop of Ahiara Diocese (Mbaise) and Eze Nwabueze Ugorji's First Son, Dr. Ugorji Okechukwu Ugorji

His Lordship Bishop Okezuo Nwobi, the Catholic Bishop of Ahiara Diocese (Mbaise) and Eze Nwabueze Ugorji’s First Son, Dr. Ugorji Okechukwu Ugorji

“The family is grateful to His Lordship for granting us a rare request to officiate at a funeral on a Thursday,” Dr. Ugorji said.

“Our father will feel honored and appreciated because he was not just a devoted Catholic, he shouldered the building of the St. Andrews Catholic Church at Lorji until his death,” the former commissioner added.

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Igbo Corner

EXCLUSIVE: Ngozi Orabueze dissolves Biafra Govt In Exile as Simon Ekpa may spend longer time in prison

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Mr. Simon Ekpa and Dr. Ngozi Orabueze

Dr. Ngozi Orabueze has abruptly dissolved the Biafra Government In Exile following secret information that his former boss, Simon Ekpa may not be coming out from Finnish detention in a hurry.

News Band reported that Mrs. Orabueze, a former Chief of Staff to Mr Simon Ekpa, the self-acclaimed Prime Minister of Biafra Government In Exile, toppled his principal after he was thrown into prison for promoting violent agitation and terrorism in the Southeast of Nigeria.

Ekpa’s trial is scheduled to start in May 2025.

Ngozi, a former chairperson of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Atlanta, United States in a statement on Wednesday, announced the dissolution of Biafra Government In Exile.

She said all assets of the Biafra Republic Government In Exile and it’s affiliates shall be transferred to the secretary of the State of the United States of Biafra.

Orabueze also directed all officers of the former exile government to report to their counterpart with the United States of Biafra for reassignment.

The statement reads, “It is resolved that the Biafra Republic Government In Exile (BRGIE) is hereby dissolved as it’s reason for the existence has been superceded by the November 29, 2024 Declaration of the restoration of the Independent United States of Biafra

“All assets of the Biafra Republic Government In Exile and it’s affiliates(BRGIE corporation ID: D237527271) shall be transferred to the secretary of the State of the United States of Biafra.

“All officers of the former exile government shall report to their counterpart with the United States of Biafra for reassignment. All activities of the Biafra Republic Government In Exile shall cease as of February 15, 2025”.

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Meanwhile, an insider source in the movement reliably told News Band that Ngozi decided to dissolve BRGIE after receiving intel that Simon Ekpa might spend longer time in prison.

The source also revealed that the Nigerian government is doing everything within it’s power to nail Simon Ekpa for all his atrocious acts in the SouthEast region.

So, the only way to keep the agitation going in the absence of Ekpa is to dissolve BRGIE.

“Yes, Ngozi Orabueze dissolved the Biafra Republic Government In Exile so as to be fully in charge of the assets belonging to the movement. With the way the Nigerian government is going about the case of Simon Ekpa, he may spend longer time in prison”, the source said.

Moreover, before now, Orabueze has been at war with some arrowheads of the separatist movement who refused to acknowledge her authority.

This however, has led to series of fights, accusation and counter accusations among the agitators.

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Igbo Corner

A tribute to Mrs. Roseline Udu Eze

Published

on

We celebrate the life of Mrs. Roseline Udu Eze, a devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and pillar of strength.

Her unwavering love, kindness, and selflessness left an indelible mark on all who knew her.

Though we mourn her passing, we take solace in the legacy she leaves behind and the cherished memories we hold. Rest peacefully in the arms of the Lord, dear Roseline.

You will forever be missed.

May her soul rest in perfect peace.

Amen.

 

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