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2027

OPEN LETTER TO INEC: EXPOSING FALSEHOODS, DEFENDING HISTORY AND DEMANDING IMMEDIATE PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL WARD DELINEATION RESULT

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DATE: 19/3/2026

To the Chairman, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Abuja, Nigeria.

We, the Concerned Elders of Warri Federal Constituency, write with anger that can no longer be restrained and with a sense of duty that cannot be compromised because what is unfolding before our eyes is not merely a delay but a dangerous erosion of constitutional order and a calculated suffocation of justice. Your continued refusal to publish the final ward delineation result, despite a clear and binding judgment of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, has moved beyond administrative hesitation into the realm of institutional defiance and it now stands as a direct threat to peace, stability and democratic legitimacy in Warri Federal Constituency. Let it be clearly stated without ambiguity or apology, this delay is not administrative, this delay is not accidental and this delay is injustice in motion.

We reject in totality the sustained attempts to distort the historical realities of Warri through selective narratives and deliberate misrepresentations. Documented records, colonial archives, scholarly works and judicial findings, have consistently established that Warri is a historically multi-community region whose identity cannot be monopolized by any single group. Accounts preserved in Benin archival traditions clearly indicate that Prince Ginuwa’s arrival into the coastal region was facilitated by already existing riverine populations and his prolonged stay in areas such as Amatu underscores the undeniable presence of organized communities long before the emergence of later political structures. In the authoritative work of Prof. Alan Ryder, Benin and the Europeans (1485–1897), the early presence of Niger Delta communities along the Benin River and Escravos axis is unmistakably acknowledged, while historical writings attributed to William Moore further concede that the territory was inhabited by Ijaw, Urhobo (Sobos) and Mahin peoples prior to the crystallization of Itsekiri identity. Judicial records, including Suit No. W/28/65 and other land-related litigations, equally demonstrate that ownership and occupation in Warri have always been layered, shared and contested, not absolute, not exclusive and certainly not subject to the narrow claims now being amplified. Traditional inter-marriages, lineage intersections and centuries of socio-cultural interaction across communities reinforce a simple but powerful truth. Warri’s history is one of coexistence, not monopoly. These are not emotional assertions, they are recorded facts, preserved in history, affirmed in scholarship and tested in law and no volume of propaganda can erase them.

Yet, while truth stands firmly documented, INEC has chosen silence. The Supreme Court of Nigeria has already spoken in clear, final and binding terms in the case of George Timinimi & Ors v. INEC (SC/CV/1033/2022), directing the proper delineation of wards in Warri Federal Constituency. That judgment is not open to negotiation, reinterpretation or delay. The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, under Section 287(1), commands that the decisions of the Supreme Court shall be enforced by all authorities and persons across the Federation and INEC is not exempt from this command. The Commission has already conducted the delineation exercise, the fieldwork has been completed, communities have been engaged, data has been gathered and the process has been executed. What remains is the publication of the final result, yet this simple constitutional duty has been withheld, transforming what should have been a straightforward act of compliance into a troubling display of institutional reluctance. This is no longer a delay in process, it is a refusal to complete justice.

Let it be understood in the clearest possible terms that without the publication of the final delineation result, the electoral framework of Warri Federal Constituency remains fundamentally incomplete, structurally defective and legally questionable. Where the foundation is uncertain, the structure built upon it cannot stand and any voter registration exercise, electoral preparation or political activity conducted under such conditions raises serious concerns about legitimacy, legality and constitutional compliance. Democracy is not an abstract concept sustained by rhetoric, it is a system grounded in representation and representation itself begins with properly defined and publicly recognized electoral units. You cannot conduct credible elections on disputed boundaries, you cannot organize democratic processes on concealed outcomes and you cannot claim legitimacy where justice remains suspended.

Every passing day that INEC withholds this result deepens uncertainty, fuels suspicion and amplifies tension. Silence in a matter of this magnitude is not neutrality, it is complicity. Delay is not harmless, it is dangerous. Nigeria has paid dearly in the past for ignoring early warning signs in sensitive regions and Warri must not be allowed to drift into avoidable instability because a constitutional body refuses to act in accordance with the law. The consequences of inaction are already visible in the rising anxiety among communities, the spread of misinformation and the growing perception that forces opposed to transparency are influencing a process that should be guided solely by law and fairness.

We therefore call on the Federal Government of Nigeria to intervene with urgency and decisiveness. The Presidency must rise to its constitutional responsibility, the Attorney-General of the Federation must defend the authority of the Supreme Court and the National Assembly must not remain silent while the implementation of a lawful judgment is indefinitely delayed. A democracy where court orders are treated as optional is a democracy in decline and the rule of law must not be sacrificed on the altar of hesitation, pressure or convenience.

Our position is clear, firm and non-negotiable. We are not asking for favour, we are not negotiating for privilege and we are not pleading for consideration. We are demanding justice. We insist that INEC must immediately publish the final ward delineation result for Warri Federal Constituency in full compliance with the judgment of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Anything short of this is unacceptable, indefensible and contrary to the principles upon which this nation stands.

INEC, the moment before you is a defining one. History will not remember explanations, it will remember actions. The courts have spoken, the process has been completed and the people are waiting. Warri cannot be held hostage by delay and justice cannot be postponed indefinitely without consequence. The Constitution must not be reduced to mere words and the authority of the Supreme Court must not be treated as symbolic.

Publish the final delineation result now. Not tomorrow. Not later. Now.

 

Signed:

Chief Tiemopere Joshua (President)

Chief Ebikeme T. Godstime (Secretary)

Concerned Elders of Warri Federal Constituency

 

Cc:

The President, Federal Republic of Nigeria

The National Assembly of Nigeria

The National Security Adviser (NSA)

The Attorney-General of the Federation

The Delta State Government

2027

OPEN LETTER TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND THE INDEPENDENT NATIONAL ELECTORAL COMMISSION (INEC)

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DATE: 18/3/2026

INEC’S DELAY ON WARRI FEDERAL CONSTITUENCY FINAL DELINEATION RESULT, A DELIBERATE INVITATION TO CRISIS

There comes a point in the life of a people when silence stops being patience and begins to look like surrender. We have reached that point.

The matter before the nation is simple, yet dangerously mishandled. The Supreme Court of Nigeria, in George Timinimi & Ors v. INEC (SC/CV/1033/2022), gave a clear and binding directive. INEC complied halfway, it conducted the delineation exercise. But at the very moment where truth ought to have been unveiled, it paused, withheld and retreated into a silence that now raises more questions than answers.

This is no longer delay in the ordinary sense. Delay suggests movement interrupted. What we are confronted with is something more troubling, a deliberate refusal to complete a lawful process. An institution created to protect democracy now stands at the edge of undermining it.

What makes this more disturbing is not just the silence but what that silence protects. Because behind it lies a familiar pattern, the bending of truth to suit power, the shrinking of a multi-ethnic reality into a convenient narrative and the quiet elevation of one claim above all others, not by evidence but by influence.

Warri, as history has always presented it, is not a single voice. It has never been. It is a convergence of peoples, of cultures, of histories that do not cancel one another but coexist. To attempt to compress that complexity into the authority of one throne is not only historically inaccurate, it is intellectually dishonest.

Even the law, which is expected to be neutral and dispassionate, recognizes this plurality. The Delta State Traditional Rulers Law does not construct a hierarchy of submission, it acknowledges a balance of authorities. Yet, in practice, what is being projected is something entirely different, a narrative where equality is quietly replaced with dominance and coexistence is rebranded as control.

One is then forced to ask, when did history become so negotiable?

We are reminded of 1952, when a colonial administrative decision altered a title and in doing so, attempted to stretch influence beyond its natural limits. That decision, made for convenience, not truth, has somehow survived into modern discourse as though it were an unquestionable foundation. But colonial adjustments cannot become eternal facts. If they could, then history itself would have no meaning beyond paperwork.

The danger lies not just in the distortion but in its persistence.

Because when falsehood is repeated long enough, it begins to wear the appearance of truth. And when institutions begin to act as though that appearance is sufficient, then justice is no longer guided by fact but by accommodation.

At the same time, there is an uncomfortable pattern that cannot be ignored. Warri has, over the years, been steadily weakened, not by accident but through a series of decisions and circumstances that all point in one direction. Economic relevance has been eroded. Institutions have shifted away. Opportunities have followed the same path.

Crisis, it seems, has become a silent instrument of relocation.

And now, the refusal to release a completed delineation result fits too neatly into that pattern to be dismissed as coincidence. It sustains uncertainty. It prolongs tension. It keeps representation in suspension. And in doing so, it preserves a structure where ambiguity becomes power.

But history, unlike institutions, does not forget.

Records from the colonial era, untouched by today’s political anxieties, speak plainly of Warri as a shared space, inhabited by Ijaw, Urhobo and Itsekiri. Judicial pronouncements, from the Privy Council to the Supreme Court, have repeatedly dismantled claims of overarching authority by one group over the others. These are not interpretations. They are conclusions reached after scrutiny, evidence and law.

Even earlier accounts, far removed from contemporary disputes, place the Ijaw people in the region long before the political structures now being elevated came into existence. These are not emotional claims. They are historical observations.

So the question becomes unavoidable, what exactly is being protected by this silence?

Because it cannot be the law, the law has already spoken.
It cannot be history, history has already recorded itself.
It cannot be justice, justice demands conclusion, not concealment.

What remains is something far less defensible.

The Constitution of Nigeria does not permit governance by hesitation. It does not endorse selective obedience. It does not recognize a democracy where participation is delayed until it becomes irrelevant. Sovereignty resides in the people, not in withheld documents. Representation is a right, not a privilege to be granted at convenience.

Time, in law, is not elastic. There is such a thing as reasonable time. And that time has passed.

What is left now is not a process in progress but a process in question.

It must be clearly understood that no democratic exercise can stand on an incomplete foundation. Electoral activities built on undefined or undisclosed structures are not merely flawed, they are illegitimate in principle. Legitimacy does not come from procedure alone, it comes from compliance with law and fairness.

And where those are absent, stability becomes fragile.

This is not an attempt to inflame. It is an attempt to prevent what history has shown us repeatedly, that unresolved injustice does not disappear. It accumulates. It deepens. And eventually, it expresses itself in ways that no institution can easily control.

Patience, often praised as a virtue, has limits. Beyond those limits, it begins to lose meaning.

We therefore speak, not in anger alone but in clarity.

The delineation has been done. It must be released.
The judgment has been given. It must be obeyed.
The people have waited. They must not be ignored.

Anything short of this is not neutrality. It is complicity.

Warri does not belong to a single narrative. It does not answer to a single authority. It cannot be reduced to a convenient version of itself.

It remains what it has always been, a meeting point of peoples whose rights are equal, whose histories are valid, and whose voices cannot be selectively amplified or silenced.

The responsibility now lies with those entrusted with authority.

To act.
To conclude.
To restore confidence before it erodes completely.

Because in the end, institutions are remembered not for what they began but for what they failed to finish.

Signed:

Chief Tiemopere Joshua ~ President

Chief Ebikeme T. Goodstime ~ Secretary

Stakeholders of Warri Federal Constituency for Truth and Justice

Cc:
The President of the Senate, National Assembly

The Speaker, House of Representatives

The National Security Adviser NSA

The Chief Justice of Nigeria

The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice

Media Houses

International Observers

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2027

National Assembly Passes Revised Electoral Act Ahead of 2027 Elections

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By Divine Perezide

Abuja, Nigeria – In a major legislative development this week, the Nigerian National Assembly passed a reworked version of the Electoral Act, 2022 (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Amendment Bill 2026, moving the long-debated electoral reform bill closer to becoming law ahead of the 2027 general elections.

The passage came after days of intense debate among senators and members of the House of Representatives on several contentious provisions — most notably those governing the transmission of election results and the timetable for conducting polls.

During proceedings in the Senate, lawmakers rescinded an earlier version of the bill and went into detailed clause-by-clause consideration to harmonise differences with the House of Representatives. One notable amendment reduced the required notice period for elections from 360 days to 300 days to give the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) greater flexibility in setting dates without clashing with the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The Senate also retained a controversial clause that addresses how election results are transmitted. While the bill endorses electronic transmission to INEC’s results viewing portal (IReV), it allows for the use of manual documentation (Form EC8A) as a fallback if technology fails. Supporters of the provision argue it reflects practical realities, while critics say it could weaken reforms aimed at boosting transparency.

The House of Representatives initially experienced a rowdy and fractious session on Tuesday, as some opposition lawmakers protested aspects of the bill and even walked out of the chamber. Despite the tension, the lower house ultimately agreed to the Senate’s version after further negotiation.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu signed the amended Electoral Act into law on Wednesday at the State House in Abuja, officially bringing the legislation into force ahead of the February-March 2027 election cycle. The signing was attended by principal officers of the National Assembly.

Backers of the amendment assert that the new Electoral Act will strengthen Nigeria’s democratic process by clarifying timelines, improving transparency mechanisms, and addressing long-standing legal ambiguities. Civil society groups, however, have called for vigilant implementation and monitoring to ensure that reforms translate into credible, transparent elections.

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2027

Negerese Leads Massive Defection to APC, Hails, Lokpobiri, Diri’s Infrastructural Strides

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– As Minister Lokpobiri Receives Thousands of Alabini Political Frontiers

– Promises More Support for Bayelsa Development

By: Derick Peretengboro

Yenagoa — In a significant political shift yesterday, the Alabini community in the Alabini Progressive Front(APF) in their hundreds of numbers in Ekeremor Constituency 3 Bayelsa state, under the leadership of Hon. Chief Berry Negerese, officially defected from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party(LP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC) on November 13, 2025. The event took place in Tamara Hall Otiotio, Yenagoa, and highlighted the People’s commitment to aligning with the state’s vision of “Renewed Prosperity.”

This was contained in a statement released by Yenne Lucky Dennis, Director General, Media/Publicity to the Wind of Progress Forum, efficiently led by Negerese.

Hon. Chief Berry Negerese, in his address, expressed profound gratitude to the Governor of Bayelsa State Sen Douye Diri for his recent infrastructural developments, particularly the gas turbine initiative and the three pivotal senatorial roads. The road connecting Brass in the East and Agge in the West was emphasized as a catalyst for economic empowerment among Bayelsans. “We, as a people, will continue to support Mr. President, the Governor, and the Minister for Petroleum State (oil) Sen Heineken Lokpobiri for their commendable efforts,” he stated, underlining the People’s optimism for the future.

Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, the Minister of State for Petroleum, (Oil) welcomed the defectors, acknowledging their contributions and reaffirming his commitment as a “bonafide son of the Alabini.” He praised President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for entrusting him with the ministerial role, vowing to continue supporting the Governor and Alabini people in their development journey.

The gathering was attended by notable figures, including: Hon. Israel Sunny-Igoli, former House of Representative member from Brass, Hon. Isaac Onniye, Executive Chairman of Ekeremor LGA,Dr. Sybriks Obriki,Hon. Peter Peroutubo, Hon. John Alla Commissioner for Tourism Development Bayelsa state,Hon. Thompson Amule, Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, along with his wife, High Chief Ben Eyorokumoh Director of Collection, Bayelsa Board of Internal Revenue, Hon. Dein Benadoumene, Chairman Assembly Service Commission, Bayelsa State, High Christopher Tuduo (Boulowenewei) of Ezetu Pethington Kingdom, the Twelve (12) councilors of Ekeremor Legislative Assembly, Royal fathers, High Chief Job Ayiba DDG/ Chairman organizing Committee for Defectors, Hon. Victor Ebiyekon Secretary defectors committee, Hon. Chief Austine Lugbeinwei, High Chief Emmanuel Shopboy, CDC chairmen, Capt Joshua Oropere Chairman PiA Trust in EA host Community Development Truts, Traditional Rulers, CDC chairmen, Women Leaders, Youth leaders, Students leaders and other critical stakeholders.

The event marked a pivotal moment in Bayelsa’s political landscape, with echoes of “Yes to Renewed Prosperity!” resonating among community members. With hopes for further infrastructural growth and economic stability, the Alabini people are poised to embark on this new political chapter with optimism and determination.

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