T.A Orji Withdraws Okezie Ikpeazu Cosmos Ndukwe Tipped To Become Abia Governor

T.A Orji Withdraws Okezie Ikpeazu Cosmos Ndukwe Tipped To Become Abia Governor
Cosmos

T.A Orji Withdraws Okezie Ikpeazu Cosmos Ndukwe Tipped To Become Abia Governor
Okezie

Heads may roll at the headquarters of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Abuja over the alleged involvement of a female national commissioner in submission of Form CF 002B that had the signature of the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, without that of the national secretary.

Form CF 002B is the INEC approved document with which chairmen and secretaries of political parties could submit names of their candidates for the governorship election.
Daily Sun learnt yesterday in Abuja that the Form CF002B, as it relates to Abia State had been withdrawn by the PDP national leadership owing to several questions raised about Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu, whose candidacy had been dogged by allegations of tax evasion and  controversy over his tenure at the Abia State Environmental Protection Agency (ASEPA).

Already, investigation is said to have opened into the activities of ASEPA, as regards payment receipts, into and out of the agency’s accounts and others. Also, Ikpeazu’s tax documents have been obtained and are being scrutinised by tax authorities.

Daily Sun gathered that INEC authorities were shocked to find another copy of the Form CF002B of Ikpeazu among other forms, when the PDP national leadership had withdrawn the original copy. In the form it was discovered that only the signature of the PDP national chairman was appended while that of the party’s national secretary was not appended.

A source at the commission told Daily Sun: “We are wondering how the document found its way to INEC.”
Already, a top female commissioner from Abia State has been accused of submitting the controversial Form CF002B of the Abia PDP candidate.

According to Daily Sun findings, national leadership of the PDP had suspended the submission of Ikpeazu’s name as its candidate for the governorship election in Abia State, pending when the controversies trailing him were resolved. Though the party did not specifically name any replacement, it was learnt that it rather asked that stakeholders of the party in Abia State should meet alongside all the governorship aspirants and Governor Theodore Orji to seek a credible replacement. The meeting is yet to hold.

Commenting on the tax issue, as it relates to Ikpeazu, a PDP governorship aspirant in Abia State, Chief Friday Nwosu said: “Some of us in the race who paid tax for the first time, paid four years in one day. 2010, 2011, 2013 and 2014 were paid in one day, claiming business as source of income, as if they were businessmen. When voices were raised on this, the same people changed gear and claimed that they were government workers.

These people went and brought different set of tax receipts claiming that they now paid under Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) and yet the tax receipts were issued in such a way as if Abia is a state of one man and one taxpayer.

“To make matters worse, available records indicated that the 2013 tax was paid before that of 2011, while the date of one of the tax receipts showed it was paid on a Saturday, which was not a working day.”

Nwosu said with the situation, there was a clear case of tax evasion. According to him, Abia State may be lost to the opposition if this is allowed. Abia State is a PDP state. There is no doubt about that, but if the  person with such records of tax payment is allowed to carry the banner of PDP in the state, the opposition  will not even need to campaign for votes but sit down and wait for the election to be over and then go to  court and get the governorship seat and PDP would have laboured in vain.”
Speaking to our correspondent through a telephone interview on behalf of INEC, Chief Press Secretary to the commission’s chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, said the allegation was unfounded, arguing that there was no provision for a substitution of a candidate’s name after submission.

“There is no element of truth in what they are alleging. As you are aware, today (yesterday) is the deadline for the submission of names of candidates of various political parties.  More so, there is no place in the electoral law where you can substitute a candidate name without the approval of the person involved. If you want to substitute a name after submission, the candidate must write to the commission before his political party can make any changes.”
So, I do not see any truth in that allegation.”

Source: Dailysun

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