The Osun State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal hearing the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party PDP candidate in the August 9 governorship election in Osun state,,Senator Iyiola Omisore yesterday admitted in evidence as exhibit a subpoena and four bags of ballot papers used during the election in Ilesa East local council.
Senator Omisore is challenging the result of the election won by Governor Rauf Aregbesola in 17 local councils including Ilesa East.
At yesterday’s sitting, a star witness and forensic expert in the petition Mr Pius Bakare appeared before the commission to testify.
Lead counsel to the petitioner,Dr. Alex Izinyon SAN leading the forensic expert in witness tendered a subpoena and four bags of the ballot papers produced by the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC but the move was objected by counsel to governor Aregbesola, Akin Olujimi SAN, All Progressives Congress APC counsel, Professor Yemi Osinbajo and counsel to INEC,Ayotunde Oginleye.
In his submission,Olujimi argued that the subpoena tendered from the Bar by Izinyon was not a Certified True Copy CTC, hence it is not admissible before the panel.
He also told the tribunal that the forensic expert brought by the petitioner has no connection wiith the subpoena.
Besides, he also noted that there was no fact to authenticate that the sacks of ballot papers brought to the court were produced by INEC officials.
He also noted the expert witness was not the maker of the documents and therefore cannot tender them and that certain marks were made on the subpoena which makes it inevitable for the person who made the marks to be cross-examined
Osibajo,citing section 89 and 90 of the Evidence Acts also corroborated Olujimi’s submission stating the subpoena as a public document made by the court could only be tendered from the Bar in its original form.
He said the ballot papers should not be admitted in bulk but should be tendered one after the other adding that only INEC officials were competent to tender the ballot papers who in turn could be properly cross-examined.
INEC counsel however raised no objection to the admissibility of of the subpoena but objected to admissibility of the ballot papers on the ground that the needed foundation was not laid by the expert witness.
In its ruling however, the tribunal chairman, Justice Elizabeth Ikpejieme admitted the subpoena and the ballot papers in evidence as exhibits.