Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Team Ned Nwoko dismisses primaries result, warns against premature celebration

Senator Ned Nwoko

Senator Ned Nwoko

From Fred Itua, Abuja

The media team of Senator Ned Nwoko has reacted sharply to reports of his defeat in the All Progressives Congress senatorial primaries in Delta State, cautioning those celebrating the victory of rival candidates to exercise restraint and warning that premature announcements could run foul of the law.

Chief Tonnie Oganah, media director of the Anioma state creation project championed by Senator Nwoko, said the official and authentic results of the exercise conducted on Monday could only be announced from the APC national headquarters in Abuja and signed by the party chairman, insisting there were no factions within the party whose results could be taken as definitive.

Oganah argued that all candidates in the election had their respective strongholds and that announcing partial results amounted to half-truths, which he described as embellished lies capable of misleading the public.

His remarks align with the position earlier staked out by the APC National Secretariat, which issued a disclaimer declaring all results being circulated in the media unauthorised and directed the public to disregard them pending formal review, verification and approval by the National Working Committee in Abuja.

Beyond the procedural arguments, the statement made a broader political case for Nwoko’s continued relevance and indispensability to the Anioma cause.

According to Oganah, Nwoko symbolises the Anioma dream of identity and economic liberation, with an ambitious vision to expand Anioma’s political representation from one senator and three House of Representatives members to three senators and nine federal lawmakers.

The plan also envisages a tripling of state assembly members and councillors, the creation of new local government areas and the retention of Asaba as the capital of the proposed Anioma State.

The statement further reminded party stakeholders that Nwoko was among the first prominent politicians in Delta State to openly declare support for President Bola Tinubu and the APC, well ahead of others who later joined the bandwagon.

Oganah said that at the appropriate time during the January 2027 elections, the entire Anioma nation would demonstrate its gratitude by voting APC across the board, adding that Anioma people were neither short-sighted nor susceptible to the crumbs and inducements being offered by rival candidates.

In what appeared to be a veiled warning directed at his political opponents, Oganah stressed that the APC constitution and Nigeria’s electoral laws were clear on the requirements for valid party membership, noting that clear evidence of resignation from a former political party must exist in the public domain before membership of a new party could be considered valid.

He added pointedly that membership of two or more political parties was an offence under the law and that no one was above it, a remark widely interpreted as a direct challenge to the eligibility of one or more of the candidates who participated in the primaries.

Oganah concluded by emphasising that the party remained supreme and would consider several factors before officially naming its flagbearer, including the absence of any pending EFCC cases or criminal matters against the candidate.

The statement cast Nwoko’s ambition not merely as a personal political project but as a generational imperative for the Anioma people, warning that abandoning his candidacy in favour of rivals would amount to a historic act of self-sabotage that the region would live to regret.