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PHOTOS: Kano indigenes in Ogun protest ahead of Supreme Court’s hearing

Some northern youths based in Ogun State, on Tuesday, stormed Sagamu street to protest what they termed injustice over Kano State Governorship poll.

The youths mostly commercial motorcyclists joined by some teenagers took to the street to express concern over growing tension ahead of the Supreme Court judgement on the legal battle challenging Governor Abba Yusuf’s election.

Daily Trust reports the Supreme Court has fixed Thursday for hearing on the disputed Kano election.

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Last month, the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja upheld the sack of Governor Yusuf, of the NNPP, and declared Nasiru Yusuf Gawuna, the governorship candidate of the APC as the duly elected governor of the state.

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In a unanimous judgment of a three-member panel delivered by Justice Moore Adumein, the appellate court dismissed the appeal filed by the Kano Governor against the judgment of the State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal, which declared Gawuna, as the winner of the state’s governorship election held on March 18.

However, there is palpable tension in the state over possible outcome of the apex court’s judgement.

The two major political parties in the state, the New Nigerian Peoples Party and the All Progressives Congress, last week signed another peace accord to maintain decorum ahead of the last leg of the legal battle.

Just on Saturday, northern leaders in the Southwest met in Abeokuta, Ogun State, where they expressed concerns on the building tension in Kano State.

On Tuesday, Northern youths residing in Sagamu, Ogun State, joined the call for caution in handling Kano Gov’ship crisis to avoid bloodshed.

The youths armed with placards with different inscriptions said if violence breaks out in Kano as a result of the disputed poll, it would spread to the South.

Some of the inscriptions read “Avoid bloodshed! Ensure justice for Kano; “Safe today but tomorrow”; “the Kano problem may spread to south”; “We are behind our mandate”; “We are safe in the South but injustice in Kano may spread violence”, among others.

See pictures below:

 

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