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The Nigeria Democratic Congress has rejected the result of the Enugu North by-election, alleging widespread irregularities during the senatorial poll. The party’s candidate said the exercise lacked credibility and failed to reflect the genuine choice of voters in the district.

Bishop Oscar Ossai, who flew the party’s flag, insisted the process was neither transparent nor free, and declared that the NDC does not recognise the outcome announced by the electoral authorities. He pledged to pursue every lawful avenue to challenge the declared winner.
Why the NDC contests the Enugu North by-election
Ossai built his case around several specific complaints. He alleged that some ad hoc staff deployed by the electoral commission were members of the ruling party, a situation he argued compromised the neutrality and fairness of the whole exercise from the outset.
He further claimed that the Bi-modal Voter Accreditation System was either not deployed or not properly used in several polling units. In some locations, he said, results were not electronically transmitted, raising doubts about how votes were counted and collated across the district.
Allegations of irregularities
The candidate described the by-election as falling short of basic standards of credibility, pointing to what he called malpractice that distorted the will of the people. He maintained that the irregularities were not minor lapses but serious flaws striking at the integrity of the poll.
Such accusations are not new to Nigerian elections, where accreditation technology and result transmission have repeatedly become flashpoints. The NDC’s complaints echo concerns raised by other parties about how closely field practice matches the rules set out by the electoral commission.
Technology under scrutiny
Much of the dispute centres on the tools meant to safeguard the vote. The accreditation system and electronic transmission of results were introduced to boost transparency, but parties routinely allege failures in the field, from devices that malfunction to results that never reach central servers.
When those systems falter, trust erodes quickly. The NDC argues that gaps in deployment opened the door to manipulation, a charge that places the spotlight squarely on how the electoral body manages its own technology on polling day.
Heading to court
The party says it has begun compiling evidence to back its challenge, including witness testimonies, polling unit records and video footage. Ossai indicated the NDC would approach the courts, setting up a legal contest that could stretch well beyond the day’s vote count.
Election petitions are a familiar feature of Nigeria’s democracy, often running for months as tribunals weigh competing claims. The outcome here will hinge on whether the party can substantiate its allegations with documentation strong enough to persuade the courts.
What it means going forward
The dispute adds to a charged political mood as parties jostle ahead of the 2027 general elections. By-elections are increasingly treated as early tests of strength, and a contested result in Enugu North keeps attention fixed on the credibility of the electoral process.
For voters in the district, the immediate concern is representation, which now hangs in legal limbo. Until the courts rule, the cloud over the Enugu North by-election will linger, underscoring familiar questions about trust in Nigeria’s election management.