2022 Osun State gubernatorial election

2022 Osun State gubernatorial election

← 2018 16 July 2022[1] 2026 →
Turnout42.16%[a]
 
Nominee Ademola Adeleke Gboyega Oyetola
Party PDP APC
Running mate Kola Adewusi Benedict Gboyega Alabi
Popular vote 403,371 375,027
Percentage 50.14% 46.62%

Results by local government area

Governor before election

Gboyega Oyetola
APC

Elected Governor

Ademola Adeleke
PDP

The 2022 Osun State gubernatorial election took place on 16 July 2022,[1] to elect the governor of Osun State. Incumbent All Progressives Congress Governor Gboyega Oyetola was eligible for re-election but lost by a 3.5% margin to former Senator Ademola Adeleke—the nominee of the Peoples Democratic Party.[2] Adeleke and his running mate, Kola Adewusi, were inaugurated on 27 November.[3] However, the Election Petition Tribunal overturned the result on 27 January 2023, awarding the win to Oyetola;[4] Adeleke immediately appealed the ruling and remains in office pending the results of further litigation.[5]

The primaries, scheduled for between 16 February and 12 March, resulted in Oyetola winning the APC nomination for a second time, albeit amid outcry from his primary challengers.[6] For the main opposition PDP, longtime internal disputes led to two parallel primaries being held as a faction nominated former senatorial candidate Dotun Babayemi while the faction recognized by the national PDP nominated former Senator for Osun West Ademola Adeleke, the party's 2018 nominee. As the Independent National Electoral Commission only observed the primary that nominated Adeleke, he was recognized as the legitimate PDP nominee.

The general election was noted by solid logistical organisation and mainly peaceful voting but was marred by reports of vote buying. By the early morning of 17 July, collation completed and the Independent National Electoral Commission declared Adeleke as the winner.[7] In total, Adeleke won over 400,000 votes and 50% of the vote as runner-up Oyetola received around 375,000 votes and over 46% of the vote. Electoral analysis focused on the effect of the divisions within the state APC along with the election's national impact as the final election before the presidential election in 2023.[8][9] Civil society and election observer groups concentrated on the vote-buying reports but commended the highly successful election administration by INEC which resulted in smooth voting, direct online transmission of results, and an early winner declaration.[10] However, Oyetola rejected the results and filed a challenge at the electoral tribunal.[11] In a separate court case, Oyetola's nomination was voided after a court ruled that the APC gubernatorial primary was illegally conducted;[12] however, Oyetola won the appeal.[13]

Electoral system

The governor of Osun State is elected using a modified two-round system. To be elected in the first round, a candidate must receive the plurality of the vote and over 25% of the vote in at least two-thirds of state local government areas. If no candidate passes this threshold, a second round will be held between the top candidate and the next candidate to have received a plurality of votes in the highest number of local government areas.

Background

Osun State is a small, Yoruba-majority southwestern state with vast natural areas and rich cultural heritage but facing an underdeveloped agricultural sector and high debt.[citation needed]

Politically, Oyetola's close 2018 victory was a forerunner of the state's competitiveness in the 2019 elections with presidential incumbent Muhammadu Buhari barely winning the state back and all three Senate races being fairly close. Of the Senate elections, two seats went to the APC and one went to the PDP while the House of Representatives elections went 6 APC and 3 PDP. Contrastly, the APC won a large majority in the State House of Assembly.[citation needed]

At the beginning of Oyetola's term, his promises included completing in-progress projects, full payment of civil servant salaries, and further developing his predecessor's welfare programs.[14][15] In terms of his performance, Oyetola was commended for mining development but was criticized for declaring numerous public holidays and failing to pay pensions.[16][17][18] Oyetola also came under pressure when the Pandora Papers revealed that he had bought a London mansion from an international fugitive wanted for money laundering using a British Virgin Islands-based offshore company as Nigerian authorities were attempting to freeze the fugitive's assets.[19]

Primary elections

The primaries, along with any potential challenges to primary results, were scheduled for between 16 February and 12 March.[1] According to some candidates and community leaders, an informal zoning gentlemen's agreement should have set the Osun West Senatorial District to have the next governor as since the 1999 return of democracy, all Osun governors have come from either the Osun East or Osun Central Senatorial Districts. While the PDP ended up nominating Adelake, a westerner, Oyetola was renominated by the APC despite his Central origins.[citation needed]

All Progressives Congress

Although there were rumors of a rift between Governor Oyetola and former Governor Rauf Aregbesola that could lead to Oyetola failing to be renominated,[20][21] Osun APC Chairman Gboyega Famodun claimed that Oyetola was widely accepted throughout the state and local APC chapters and thus would have the support of the state party.[22] However, the Osun State APC later factionalized between the Oyetola-aligned IleriOluwa faction (chaired by Famodun) and the Aregbesola-aligned The Osun Progressives faction (chaired by Rasaq Salinsile).[23][24] Despite outside attempts at reconciliation, the party crisis deepened by January 2022 and the threat of two parallel primaries loomed as Oyetola registered to run in the IleriOluwa APC while challengers registered to run in the TOP APC.[25] Eventually, the IleriOluwa faction was recognized by the national APC and the primary continued within it as Aregbesola endorsed challenger Moshood Adeoti while Oyetola began his campaign for a second term.[26]

In January 2022, the APC rescheduled its primary for 19 February with the expression of interest form costing ₦2.5 million and the nomination form costing ₦20 million; a 50% discount would be provided to women candidates and candidates with disabilities. The party also rescheduled its candidate screening and screening appeal process for 10 and 15 February, respectively.[27] Different dates had been announced in November but the dates were changed after national revision.[28][29]

In the days before the election, the Oyetola-Aregbesola feud escalated after Aregbesola formally endorsed Adeoti on 14 February. Aregbesola then claimed that his convoy was attacked later that day in an assassination attempt while the police and Oyetola administration claimed that Aregbesola's guards shot into the air without any provocation.[30] The next day, Aregbesola allies claimed that they had uncovered a new plot to kill Aregbesola by "state government-sponsored political thugs," thus indirectly accusing Oyetola of organizing the assassination plots.[31] These incidents lead to fears that the primary could be marred by violence despite the increased security presence during the exercise.[32] Thankfully, the practice was mainly peaceful, albeit with one person being shot dead over a non-election related dispute according to police.[33] In the early morning of 20 February, head of the primary committee and Kwara State Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq declared Oyetola as the APC nominee after announced results showed him defeating Adeoti and former House Deputy Speaker Yusuf Sulaimon Lasun by over 200,000 votes with 60% turnout.[6] Before the results were even announced, Adeoti and his allies rejected the primary wholeheartedly with his supporters claiming that their names were purposefully left off registers, others observing that INEC officials were absent from units, and Aregbesola calling the primary a "sham of an election."[34] For their part, Oyetola supporters backed the exercise's fairness and Oyetola himself called for party unity the day after the primary.[35][36] Prior to taking outside legal action, Adeoti appealed to the APC primary election appeal committee which denied his appeal;[37] accordingly, Adeoti then asked a Federal High Court in Abuja to declare him winner.[38] The case was not resolved until 14 July when Justice Inyang Eden Ekwo dismissed the lawsuit.[39] However, a different case brought by the PDP contested that the primary was invalid due to illegitimate APC national leadership as then-APC Chair Mai Mala Buni was an incumbent governor; on 1 October 2022, a Federal High Court ruled in favor of the PDP, nullifying the APC gubernatorial primary and declaring Oyetola's nomination void.[12] The APC announced that the party would appeal the ruling and on 3 December, a Court of Appeal judgment overturned the lower court's decision.[40][13] On 2 February 2023, the Supreme Court upheld the Court of Appeal judgment by dismissing the PDP case.[41]

Nominated

Defeated in primary

Declined

Results

Candidates' vote share

  Gboyega Oyetola (94.32%)
  Moshood Adeoti (5.48%)
APC primary results[6][46][47]
Party Candidate Votes %
APC Gboyega Oyetola 222,169 94.32%
APC Moshood Adeoti 12,921 5.48%
APC Yusuf Sulaimon Lasun 460 0.20%
Total votes 235,550 100.00
Turnout 247,207 58.77%
By local government area
LGA Oyetola Adeoti Lasun Total Votes
# % # % # % #
Aiyedaade 3,615 87.00% 540 13.00% 0 0.00% 4,155
Aiyedire 3,274 92.07% 279 7.85% 3 0.08% 3,556
Atakunmosa East 2,637 94.04% 165 5.89% 2 0.07% 2,804
Atakunmosa West 4,655 93.72% 305 6.14% 7 0.14% 4,967
Boluwaduro 6,399 99.04% 62 0.96% 0 0.00% 6,461
Boripe 15,034 99.97% 5 0.03% 0 0.00% 15,039
Ede North 7,117 95.79% 311 4.21% 0 0.00% 7,430
Ede South 2,664 80.92% 628 19.08% 0 0.00% 3,292
Egbedore 5,500 92.91% 420 7.09% 0 0.00% 5,920
Ejigbo 8,007 95.70% 360 4.30% 0 0.00% 8,367
Ife Central 10,843 96.92% 344 3.07% 1 0.01% 11,188
Ife East 12,030 97.36% 326 2.64% 0 0.00% 12,356
Ife North 3,377 93.18% 242 6.68% 5 0.14% 3,624
Ife South 8,268 99.48% 43 0.52% 0 0.00% 8,311
Ifedayo 4,214 96.76% 141 3.24% 0 0.00% 4,355
Ifelodun 11,873 94.75% 631 5.03% 27 0.22% 12,531
Ila 8,834 99.47% 47 0.53% 0 0.00% 8,881
Ilesa East 4,857 90.94% 483 9.04% 1 0.02% 5341
Ilesa West 3,877 89.68% 446 10.32% 0 0.00% 4,323
Irepodun 7,928 89.34% 732 8.25% 214 2.41% 8,874
Irewole 7,560 93.37% 537 6.63% 0 0.00% 8,097
Isokan 6,468 95.68% 279 4.13% 13 0.19% 6,760
Iwo 9,432 78.76% 2,543 21.23% 1 0.01% 11,976
Obokun 5,245 90.84% 527 9.13% 2 0.03% 5,774
Odo Otin 7,035 86.65% 384 13.35% 0 0.00% 8,119
Ola Oluwa 3,771 91.22% 363 8.78% 0 0.00% 4,134
Olorunda 7,103 92.74% 555 7.25% 1 0.01% 7,659
Oriade 10,935 96.05% 438 3.85% 11 0.10% 11,384
Orolu 6,652 98.08% 130 1.92% 0 0.00% 6,782
Osogbo 22,265 96.43% 655 2.84% 170 0.74% 23,090
Totals 222,169 94.32% 12,921 5.48% 460 0.20% 235,550

People's Democratic Party

By 2021, Ademola Adeleke, the 2018 PDP nominee, had already received the support of the national PDP with party officials claiming he has effectively been given the nomination according to PDP Deputy National Publicity Secretary Duran Odeyemi.[48] However, the state PDP claimed that while "the majority of our party stakeholders" were supporting Adeleke, all contenders were allowed to run in the primary. This assessment became contested as the state party later factionalized between the Adeleke-supporting faction (chaired by Sunday Bisi) and the faction aligned with the other five candidates (chaired by Wale Ojo).[24] Another internal battle was sparked in January 2022 when a dispute between Ademola and Dele Adeleke—both members of the powerful Adeleke political family of Ede—escalated and tied in popular musician Davido, cousin of Dele and nephew of Ademola, who has supported Ademola since 2018 and attacked Dele on social media.[49]

In November 2021, the PDP announced that its primary will be held on 7 March 2022 with the sale of the expression of interest and nomination forms being held between 22 November and 10 December. On 8 January, the PDP rescheduled its candidate screening from 11 January to 12 January with the screening appeal process remaining scheduled for 26 January; all six candidates were approved by the committee.[50][51][52] The primary date was later pushed back to 8 March.[53]

In the weeks ahead of the primaries, contentious ward congresses to elect delegates for the primary left two people dead and led to fear of continued violence between the Bisi and Ojo factions during the primary itself.[54][55][56] The primary was shaping to primarily be a rematch of the 2018 primary between Ademola Adeleke and Akin Ogunbiyi until Ogunbiyi withdrew on 7 March citing alleged bias from the national party in favour of A. Adeleke; on the same day Sanya Omirin, Dele Adeleke, and Fatai Akinade Akinbade also dropped out leaving just Dotun Babayemi and A. Adeleke in the race.[57][58][59] On the morning of the primary, two parallel primaries held with the Ojo-led faction holding a primary at the Women and Children Development Initiative Foundation (WOCDIF) Centre while the Bisi-led faction (backed by the national PDP) held its primary at the Osogbo City Stadium.[60] After both primaries were peacefully held, the WOCDIF Centre primary ended in Babayemi winning by a wide margin while the Stadium primary resulted in a large win for Ademola Adeleke.[61] The national party-appointed returning officer, Bayelsa Deputy Governor Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, presided over the Stadium primary and dismissed the WOCDIF Centre primary as "invalid" while former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola backed the WOCDIF Centre primary.[62] The PDP national headquarters gave Adeleke the certificate of return on 10 March but Babayemi stated that the decision was "not the end of journey."[63][64] As the Independent National Electoral Commission only observed the primary that nominated Adeleke, he was listed as the legitimate PDP nominee in April before in May, a Federal High Court dismissed Babayemi's challenge to be declared nominee.[42][65] In July, after the general election, Babayemi's appeal was also rejected as the Court of Appeal in Akure upheld the High Court ruling.[66] He again appealed, but the Supreme Court upheld the rulings of the lower courts and sided with Adeleke in late September 2022.[67]

Nominated

Defeated in primary

Withdrew

Declined

Results

Candidates' vote share

  Ademola Adeleke (99.74%)
  Other candidates (0.26%)
PDP Stadium primary results[69]
Party Candidate Votes %
PDP Ademola Adeleke 1,887 99.74%
PDP Sanya Omirin (withdrawn) 4 0.21%
PDP Dele Adeleke (withdrawn) 1 0.05%
PDP Fatai Akinade Akinbade (withdrawn) 0 0.00%
PDP Dotun Babayemi 0 0.00%
PDP Akin Ogunbiyi (withdrawn) 0 0.00%
Total votes 1,892 100.0


Invalid WOCDIF Centre primary results

Candidates' vote share

  Dotun Babayemi (94.73%)
  Other candidates (5.27%)
PDP WOCDIF Centre primary results[70]
Party Candidate Votes %
PDP Dotun Babayemi 1,781 94.73%
PDP Dele Adeleke (withdrawn) 32 1.70%
PDP Fatai Akinade Akinbade (withdrawn) 28 1.49%
PDP Akin Ogunbiyi (withdrawn) 23 1.22%
PDP Sanya Omirin (withdrawn) 16 0.85%
PDP Ademola Adeleke 0 0.00%
Total votes 1,880 100.0

Minor parties

Nominees

Campaign

After the primaries confirmed that the general election would be a rematch of 2018 between Oyetola (APC) and Adeleke (PDP), analysts contended that the election would be shaped by what each camp had done since 2018 as the power struggle between the two continued. For both, the early parts of the general election campaign were dominated by attempts to address controversies around their respective primaries as the contentious primaries were identified as a key potential problem for their campaign. However, several of both nominees' intraparty opponents remained disgruntled leading one of Oyetola's primary challengers (Yusuf Sulaimon Lasun) to leave the APC entirely to run under the LP while one of Adeleke's primary opponents (Akin Ogunbiyi) defected to become Accord flagbearer.[75][76][77] On the other hand, Adeleke and Babayemi settled their dispute in May as the national APC attempted to reconcile Oyetola and Aregbesola around the same time.[78][79]

As campaigning escalated in May and June, the nominees' unveiled their policy agendas and brought in out-of-state politicians to hold rallies. However, for the PDP, the internal crisis surrounding the party's presidential primary led aggrieved politicians to avoid the Osun campaign trail.[80] Analysts noted the similarities to the 2018 race during the campaign while continuing to focus on both state parties' attempts to reconcile their nominees with intraparty opposition.[81] Policy also took centre stage in the fortnight before the election as debates were held; the first debate on 30 June was held by BBC Yoruba and had Adeleke attack Oyetola for bad roads and hospitals while Oyetola touted his administration's banking and security policies.[82][83][84] In the second debate, conducted by Arise News on 6 July, Oyetola vowed to create jobs and voiced his support for state police but the debate was not attended by Adeleke.[85] The final debate, jointly held by Channels TV and the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room, was attended by both major contenders as Adeleke attacked Oyetola on security while Oyetola attempted to defend his record.[86] The days right before the election were overshadowed by an armed attack on Lasun's home on 11 July;[87] to combat fears of further electoral violence, 13 candidates signed a peace accord on 13 July at the behest of the National Peace Committee.[88] Analysis directly before the election confirmed the competitiveness of the race while noting the election's numerous factors and its national implications as the final election before the next year's presidential election.[89][90][91][92][93][94]

Election debates

2022 Osun State gubernatorial election debates
Date Organisers     P  Present[b]    S  Surrogate[c]  
 NI  Not invited   A  Absent invitee 
A APC LP PDP SDP Other parties Ref.
30 June BBC Yoruba P
Ogunbiyi
P
Oyetola
P
Lasun
P
Adeleke
P
Omigbodun
NI
Multiple
[82]
6 July Arise News P
Ogunbiyi
P
Oyetola
P
Lasun
A
Adeleke
P
Omigbodun
NI
Multiple
[95]
10 July Channels TV-CSSR P
Ogunbiyi
P
Oyetola
P
Lasun
P
Adeleke
P
Omigbodun
NI
Multiple
[96]

Conduct

Electoral timetable

The Independent National Electoral Commission released the timetable, setting out key dates and deadlines for the election.[97]

  • 15 February 2022 – Publication of Notice of Election
  • 16 February 2022 – First day for the conduct of party primaries
  • 12 March 2022 – Final day for the conduct of party primaries, including the resolution of disputes arising from them
  • 14 March 2022 – First day for submission of nomination forms to INEC via the online portal
  • 18 March 2022 – Final day for submission of nomination forms to INEC via the online portal
  • 17 April 2022 – Commencement of the official campaign period
  • 14 July 2022 – Final day of the official campaign period
  • 16 July 2022 – Election Day

Pre-election

As the election neared, INEC and other authorities started announcing their preparations with the election commission announcing that it would deploy both full-time and ad-hoc staffers to the state's 3,753 polling units on election day along with BVAS machines while noting that vote buying was a major concern in the wake of the Ekiti State gubernatorial election.[98] For the Nigeria Police Force, a statement on 10 July noted that police would deploy Deputy Inspector-General Johnson Babatunde Kokumo to be coordinator of election security efforts that would include thousands of conventional police officers and soldiers along with special forces, five armored personnel carriers, three helicopters, and drones.[99]

Election Day

On election day, voting was mainly peaceful and logistically well-organized but reports of vote buying from party agents marred the exercise.[100][101] On the other hand, INEC was commended for successful election administration as the vast majority of polling units had early-arriving officials, security operatives, and well-functioning equipment according to preliminary reports from election observers CDD West Africa, Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room, and YIAGA Africa.[102][103]

General election

Results

Candidates' vote share

  Ademola Adeleke (PDP) (50.14%)
  Gboyega Oyetola (APC) (46.62%)
  Other candidates (3.24%)
2022 Osun State gubernatorial election[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
PDP Ademola Adeleke 403,371 50.14%
APC Gboyega Oyetola 375,027 46.62%
ADP Kehinde Munirudeen Atanda 10,104 1.26%
A Akin Ogunbiyi 4,514 0.56%
LP Yusuf Sulaimon Lasun 2,729 0.34%
AAC Peter Segun Awojide 2,148 0.27%
YPP Ademola Bayonle Adeseye 1,303 0.16%
APM Awoyemi Oluwatayo Lukuman 1,222 0.15%
PRP Busuyi Ayowole 1,007 0.13%
NRM Samuel Adetona Abede 777 0.10%
APP Adebayo Adeolu Elisha 601 0.07%
SDP Akinrinola Oyegoke Omigbodun 515 0.06%
New Nigeria Peoples Party Rasaq Oyelami Saliu 393 0.05%
BP Adeleke Adedapo 374 0.05%
ZLP John Olufemi Adesuyi 364 0.05%
Total votes 804,450 100.0%
Invalid or blank votes 18,674 N/A
Turnout 823,124 42.16%[a]
PDP gain from APC

By senatorial district

Oyetola margin:      <5%
Adeleke margin:      <5%      10–15%

The results of the election by senatorial district.

Senatorial District Oyetola
APC
Adeleke
PDP
Others Total Valid Votes
District Incumbent Senator Votes Percentage Votes Percentage Votes Percentage
Osun Central Senatorial District[d] Ajibola Basiru 136,294 47.99% 138,733 48.85% 8,964 3.16% 283,991
Osun East Senatorial District[e] Fadahunsi Francis Adenigba 121,873 48.71% 120,080 47.99% 8,260 3.30% 250,213
Osun West Senatorial District[f] Adelere Adeyemi Oriolowo 116,860 43.24% 144,558 53.49% 8,828 3.27% 270,246
Totals 375,027 46.62% 403,371 50.14% 26,052 3.24% 804,450

By federal constituency

Oyetola margin:
  <5%
  5–10%
  10–15%

Adeleke margin:
  <5%
  5–10%
  10–15%
  30–35%

The results of the election by federal constituency.

Federal Constituency Oyetola
APC
Adeleke
PDP
Others Total Valid Votes
Constituency Incumbent MHR Votes Percentage Votes Percentage Votes Percentage
Atakunmosa East/Atakunmosa West/Ilesa East/Ilesa West Federal Constituency[g] Lawrence Babatunde Ayeni 38,279 47.60% 39,480 49.10% 2,655 3.30% 80,414
Ayedaade/Isokan/Irewole Federal Constituency[h] Taiwo Oluga 43,558 51.45% 38,373 45.33% 2,725 3.22% 84,656
Aiyedire/Iwo/Ola-Oluwa Federal Constituency[i] Amobi Yinusa Akintola 34,412 49.60% 31,521 45.43% 3,452 4.98% 69,385
Boluwaduro/Ifedayo/Ila Federal Constituency[j] Olufemi Fakeye 21,828 47.17% 23,626 51.05% 825 1.78% 46,279
Ede North/Ede South/Egbedore/Ejigbo Federal Constituency[k] Bamidele Salam 38,890 33.47% 74,664 64.25% 2,651 2.28% 116,205
Ife Central/Ife East/Ife North/Ife South Federal Constituency[l] Taofeek Abimbola Ajilesoro 59,678 51.87% 51,078 44.40% 4,289 3.73% 115,045
Irepodun/Olorunda/Osogbo/Orolu Federal Constituency[m] Olubukola Oyewo 63,711 43.64% 76,402 52.34% 5,868 4.02% 145,981
Obokun/Oriade Federal Constituency[n] Oluwole Oke 23,916 43.68% 29,522 53.92% 1,316 2.40% 54,754
Odo-Otin/Boripe/Ifelodun Federal Constituency[o] Olalekan Rasheed Afolabi 50,755 55.33% 38,705 42.19% 2,271 2.48% 91,731
Totals 375,027 46.62% 403,371 50.14% 26,052 3.24% 804,450

By local government area

The results of the election by local government area.

LGA Oyetola
APC
Adeleke
PDP
Others Total Valid Votes Turnout Percentage
Votes Percentage Votes Percentage Votes Percentage
Aiyedaade[104] 14,527 50.11% 13,380 46.16% 1,081 3.73% 28,988 43.87%
Aiyedire[105][106] 7,868 46.24% 7,402 43.51% 1,744 10.25% 17,014 46.55%
Atakunmosa East[106] 7,449 50.08% 6,992 47.00% 434 2.92% 14,875 37.03%
Atakunmosa West[i][109][106] 6,601 44.62% 7,750 52.39% 443 2.99% 14,794 41.53%
Boluwaduro[110] 5,649 47.89% 5,860 49.68% 286 2.43% 11,795 49.35%
Boripe[111][112] 21,205 71.86% 7,595 25.74% 710 2.41% 29,510 43.30%
Ede North[113][106][114] 9,603 28.15% 23,931 70.15% 579 1.70% 34,113 48.34%
Ede South[115] 5,704 22.20% 19,438 75.66% 549 2.14% 25,691 47.81%
Egbedore[ii][116] 9,228 40.00% 13,230 57.34% 614 2.66% 23,072 44.12%
Ejigbo[117] 14,355 43.07% 18,065 54.20% 909 2.73% 33,329 46.50%
Ife Central[118][106] 17,880 54.94% 13,532 41.58% 1,132 3.48% 32,544 29.50%
Ife East[119] 19,353 49.46% 18,071 46.19% 1,701 4.35% 39,125 35.50%
Ife North[120] 9,964 47.34% 10,359 49.21% 727 3.45% 21,050 36.99%
Ife South[121] 12,481 55.90% 9,116 40.83% 729 3.27% 22,326 40.41%
Ifedayo[iii][114] 5,016 50.61% 4,730 47.72% 166 1.67% 9,912 51.21%
Ifelodun[iv][123][106] 16,068 47.21% 17,107 50.26% 861 2.53% 34,036 43.52%
Ila[124][125] 11,163 45.43% 13,036 53.05% 373 1.52% 24,572 53.42%
Ilesa East[v][128] 13,452 53.08% 10,969 43.28% 921 3.64% 25,342 35.60%
Ilesa West[129][106] 10,777 42.43% 13,769 54.20% 857 3.37% 25,403 37.02%
Irepodun[vi][130] 12,122 41.75% 14,369 49.49% 2,541 8.75% 29,032 51.25%
Irewole[131][132] 18,198 54.62% 14,216 42.67% 901 2.71% 33,315 45.97%
Isokan[133] 10,833 48.46% 10,777 48.21% 743 3.32% 22,353 43.14%
Iwo[134] 17,421 48.89% 16,914 47.47% 1,299 3.65% 35,634 40.57%
Obokun[135] 9,727 40.85% 13,575 57.01% 511 2.14% 24,399 45.81%
Odo Otin[vii][136] 13,482 47.83% 14,003 49.68% 700 2.48% 28,185 42.78%
Ola Oluwa[137][114] 9,123 54.51% 7,205 43.05% 409 2.44% 16,737 46.28%
Olorunda[138] 18,709 45.42% 21,350 51.84% 1,128 2.74% 41,187 40.04%
Oriade[139][114] 14,189 45.86% 15,947 51.54% 805 2.60% 30,941 45.54%
Orolu[140] 9,928 47.81% 10,282 49.52% 555 2.67% 20,765 53.41%
Osogbo[141] 22,952 41.73% 30,401 55.28% 1,644 2.99% 54,997 39.27%
Totals 375,027 46.62% 403,371 50.14% 26,052 3.24% 804,450 42.16%[a]
Notes
Election day notes by LGA
  1. ^ Atakunmosa West: Results were voided in one polling unit due to an attack on the unit's presiding officer.[107][108]
  2. ^ Egbedore: Results were voided in 2 polling units due to overvoting.
  3. ^ Ifedayo: Results were voided in one three registration area due to overvoting.[122]
  4. ^ Ifelodun: Results were voided in one polling unit due to overvoting.[122]
  5. ^ Ilesa East: Results were voided in 2 polling units due to ballot paper destruction attacks by "thugs."[126][127]
  6. ^ Irepodun: Results were voided in 2 polling units due to overvoting.[122]
  7. ^ Odo Otin: Results were voided in one polling unit due to voting disruption.[122]

Response

Candidates and parties

Before the results were even formally announced, videos of Adeleke and his supporters celebrating emerged after the PDP's own count reportedly confirmed his victory.[142] After he was declared winner, Adeleke dedicated his victory to his late brother—Isiaka Adeleke—and the people of Osun State.[143] For Oyetola's part, he did not initially respond to the results as a 17 July morning press release from his office simply said he had "taken cognisance of the results" and planned to study them in addition to consulting "with critical stakeholders of the party."[144] Former Governor and serving minister Rauf Aregbesola—Oyetola's intraparty rival who boycotted the election and allegedly supported Adeleke—celebrated the results in social media posts titled Osun Le Tente[p] but deleted the posts soon afterwards with an aide saying the messages were "unauthorised."[145][146]

On the national level, President Muhammadu Buhari congratulated Adeleke on the morning of 17 July and labeled the election as a positive step "towards strengthening the integrity of the electoral process in Nigeria" while APC National Chairman Abdullahi Adamu later stated the party's surprise at the results.[147][148] Similarly to Buhari, PDP presidential nominee Atiku Abubakar and LP presidential nominee Peter Obi also congratulated Adeleke on 17 July.[149][150] However, APC presidential nominee Bola Tinubu is yet to release a statement on the result, reportedly deferring to Oyetola for the next move.

It was not until 4 August that Oyetola or the state APC revealed their next plans when Osun APC Chairman Gboyega Famodun finally announced that the party planned to challenge the election results at the elections petitions tribunal.[11]

Civil society

From civil society, reports spoke positively about the election turnout and INEC's administration but again noted the prevalence of vote buying.[142] The nonprofit YIAGA Africa, which monitored the election and ran a parallel vote tabulation, stated that PVT had verified the accuracy of INEC's released results as the released totals for the two major candidates fell well within the ranges estimated by PVT. YIAGA stated that INEC's turnout and rejected ballot numbers were in estimated ranges as well.[151][152] However, YIAGA and other groups like the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room lamented the vote buying reports and called on authorities to come up with countermeasures.[153][10]

Analysis

In the days after the election, political analysts noted several post-election takeaways with the political focus on the impact the results could have on the presidential race, especially since Oyetola is the relative and close ally of Bola Tinubu—the APC presidential nominee.[154][155] Pundits also noted numerous potential reasons for the result, namely: the divide within the state APC, anger at the APC administration—both on the state and national levels, the political clout of the Adeleke family, and the successful Adeleke campaign which often featured his nephew Davido.[8][9][156][157] Observers also noted anger at Oyetola over the alleged diversion of COVID-19 palliatives meant for the public and his administration's failure to pay owed civil servant salaries; in addition, post-election analysis examined specific cases of APC infighting in several LGAs that Adeleke eventually won, the extensive campaigning of PDP figures like former Senate President Bukola Saraki and Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki, and the purported support that Aregbesola and LP nominee Lasun gave to Adeleke.[158]

Aftermath

Litigation

The tribunal opened its registry for complaints before election day with David Umar Dike, the Tribunal Secretary, noting that complainants had 21 days to file challenges.[159] On 4 August, Osun APC Chairman Gboyega Famodun announced Oyetola's intent to challenge the results at the Election Petition Tribunal, stating that "we have a strong case and we believe we will win at the court."[11][160] In response, Osun PDP Caretaker Committee Chairman Akindele Adekunle condemned the APC's contest to the election results, describing the move "as anti-people and a challenge of God's will" while expressing a lack of concern about the result of the challenge "as the election that produced the winner was adjudged to be of global democratic compliance."[161][162] Later that month, Oyetola formally filed his petition and the Tribunal began hearing the challenge application on 22 August.[163][164] As the case continued and the formal tribunal sitting date was set for 26 September, Oyetola's team proposed a relocation of the tribunal from Osogbo to Abuja but were rebuffed by an appeal court.[165][166] After the initial hearings in September, the tribunal continued meeting until January to hear the Oyetola case which was based on overvoting in certain polling units and claims that Adeleke had falsified certificates.[167][168] The date for the tribunal's judgment is set for 27 January.[169] On the date, the tribunal ruled against Adeleke in a judgement that declared Oyetola the rightfully elected governor based on the reports of overvoting.[4] The judgment sparked protests and prompted an immediate appeal from now-Governor Adeleke, who remains in office pending the results of further litigation.[5][170]

Transition and inauguration

Adeleke and Adewusi received the certificates of return on 20 July at a brief ceremony at the Osun State INEC office in Osogbo.[171] About a week later, Adeleke formed a 37-member transition committee chaired by former House of Representatives member Muyiwa Oladimeji.[172] While inaugurating the committee, Adeleke tasked its members with forming an agenda for his first hundred days and his first year in office.[173] About a week later, the House of Assembly began working on the Transition Bill 2022 to organize a clean transition.[174] For Oyetola administration's part, despite the electoral challenge, moves were made to consolidate APC power in the state by scheduling local government elections for 15 October—about a month before the inauguration; the PDP protested the election as "illegal" and attempt to defraud the state while the Osun Independent Electoral Commission pointed out that the previous local government elections were four years beforehand.[175] Although the elections were held, they were declared illegal by courts after the fact.[176][177]

The inauguration was held on 27 November at the Oshogbo Stadium in Osogbo. Attendees included the Ooni of Ife, Davido, and several PDP governors along with the party's presidential nominee Atiku Abubakar; Oyetola did not attend the ceremony, instead publishing a farewell statement that noted his ongoing challenge to the election results.[178] Adeleke and Adewusi were sworn in by the Chief Judge of the Osun State High Court—Oyebola Adepele-Ojo; Adeleke then gave an inaugural address in which he announced a freeze order on all state government accounts, vowed to investigate corruption from the Oyetola administration, ordered the reversion of the state name back to "Osun State" from "State of Osun,"[q] and reversed several Oyetola appointments.[179][180] The next day, a flurry of executive orders codified these inauguration vows along with mandating the review of all Oyetola's traditional ruler enthronements after the election, ordering the dethronement of three traditional rulers, and reversing all other Oyetola appointments made after the election along with commencing reviews and a staff sudit.[181]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c While 42.16% of registered voters cast a vote—either validly or invalidly, three other metrics for calculating turnout can also be used: the percent of registered voters that were accredited to vote (42.37%), the percent of Permanent Voter Card-holding voters that were accredited to vote (54.48%), and the percent of Permanent Voter Card-holding voters that cast a vote—either validly or invalidly (54.21%).[2]
  2. ^ Denotes a party gubernatorial nominee attending the event.
  3. ^ Denotes a party gubernatorial nominee not attending the event, sending a surrogate in their place.
  4. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Boluwaduro, Boripe, Ifedayo, Ifelodun, Ila, Irepodun, Odo Otin, Olorunda, Orolu, and Osogbo.
  5. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Atakunmosa East, Atakunmosa West, Ife Central, Ife East, Ife North, Ife South, Ilesa East, Ilesa West, Obokun, and Oriade.
  6. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Aiyedaade, Aiyedire, Ede North, Ede South, Egbedore, Ejigbo, Irewole, Isokan, Iwo, and Ola-Oluwa.
  7. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Atakunmosa East, Atakunmosa West, Ilesa East, and Ilesa West.
  8. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Aiyedaade, Irewole, and Isokan.
  9. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Aiyedire, Iwo, and Ola Oluwa.
  10. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Boluwaduro, Ifedayo, and Ila, Osun.
  11. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Ede North, Ede South, Egbedore, and Ejigbo.
  12. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Ife Central, Ife East, Ife North, and Ife South.
  13. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Irepodun, Osun, Olorunda, Orolu, and Osogbo.
  14. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Obokun and Oriade.
  15. ^ Comprising the local government areas of Boripe, Ifelodun, and Odo Otin.
  16. ^ Roughly translates as "Osun excelled" in Yoruba.
  17. ^ In 2011, then-Governor Rauf Aregbesola changed the state name to the "State of Osun." Although courts ruled the move unconstitutional and Aregbesola left office in 2018, the state government continued to intermittently use the "State of Osun" name until Adeleke's inauguration in 2022.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Adenekan, Samson (16 June 2021). "INEC fixes dates for Ekiti, Osun polls". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Independent National Electoral Commission [@inecnigeria] (17 July 2022). "Declaration of Result of the Osun State Governorship Election, held on Saturday 16th July 2022" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  3. ^ Akpan, Samuel. "Ademola Adeleke sworn in as Osun governor". TheCable. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
  4. ^ a b Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "UPDATED: Osun tribunal sacks Adeleke declares Oyetola governor". Premium Times. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Osun Governorship: Adeleke rejects Tribunal ruling, heads to Appeal Court". Premium Times. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Bamigbola, Bola. "BREAKING: Oyetola defeats Aregbesola's man, wins Osun APC gov primary". The Punch. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  7. ^ Yusuf, Kabir (17 July 2022). "BREAKING: INEC declares PDP's Adeleke winner of Osun governorship election". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  8. ^ a b Oluwole, Josiah (17 July 2022). "#OsunDecides2022: Eight factors that helped Adeleke defeat Oyetola". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b Adeuyi, Seun. "Davido And Five Other Reasons Adeleke Unseated Oyetola". Daily Trust. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Osun Election: There Were Open Negotiations To Buy, Sell Votes – Situation Room". Channels TV. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Ezediuno, Francis (4 August 2022). "Osun 2022: APC, Oyetola drags INEC, PDP, Adeleke to election petition tribunal". Daily Post. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  12. ^ a b "Osun 2022: Court nullifies Oyetola's nomination as APC governorship candidate". Premium Times. News Agency of Nigeria. October 2022. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  13. ^ a b Blankson, Esther. "A'Court affirms Oyetola, running mate as APC candidates". The Punch. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  14. ^ "Gov. Oyetola promises to complete uncompleted projects". Vanguard. 23 December 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  15. ^ "Oyetola presents N152bn budget, promises full payment of salaries". Premium Times. News Agency of Nigeria. 27 December 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  16. ^ Adedeji, Toba. "Oyetola has diversified economy through gold mining, says monarch". The Nation. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  17. ^ "RANKING NIGERIAN GOVERNORS, AUGUST, 2019: Top 5, Bottom 5". Ripples Nigeria. 2 September 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2022. Though the governor has the power to declare public holidays in his state, it is, however, doubtful if these holidays hold any immediate or long term economic, social or political impact on the people of the state...Governor Oyetola will do well by dedicating himself much more to policies and actions that will lift the lot of the improverished [sic] ordinary people of the state and not continue in the current public holidays jamboree, hurting the state's economy further!
  18. ^ "Pensioners Block Osun Secretariat, Accuse Oyetola Of Lies, Fake Promises". Daily Trust. 25 November 2021. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  19. ^ Ibekwe, Nicholas; Adebayo, Taiwo-Hassan (7 October 2021). "PANDORA PAPERS: Buhari visited Tinubu in corruption-tainted London villa acquired by Oyetola". Premium Times. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  20. ^ Agbor, Timothy (2 May 2021). "Osun 2022: Final showdown for Oyetola, Aregbesola". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  21. ^ Alike, Ejiofor; Kolawole, Yinka. "All Eyes on Aregbesola over Oyetola's Second Term Bid". ThisDay. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  22. ^ Oladesu, Emmanuel; Ibrahim, Rasaq; Adedeji, Toba. "INEC 2022 timetable raises political tempo in Ekiti, Osun". The Nation. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  23. ^ "Osun APC holds state parallel congresses, produces 2 executives". Vanguard. 17 October 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  24. ^ a b Bamigbola, Bola (16 January 2022). "Osun: APC, PDP's unending crises". The Punch. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  25. ^ Agbor, Timothy (18 January 2022). "Osun APC; Hostilities worsen as Aregbesola confirms own faction". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  26. ^ Adedeji, Toba. "Osun 2022: Aregbesola endorses Adeoti, hits Oyetola". The Nation. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  27. ^ "Osun APC Sets Date For Gov Primary Election, Fixes Sale Of Forms At N22.5m". Channels TV. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  28. ^ "Forms for Ekiti,Osun governorship elections cost N22.5m – APC". The Punch. 16 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  29. ^ Amodu, Taiwo (16 November 2021). "Osun 2022: APC Commences Sale Of Forms To Aspirants, Primary To Hold March 5". Nigerian Tribune. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  30. ^ Agbor, Timothy; Nzor, Ernest. "Police, NSCDC disagree over attack on Aregbesola in Osogbo". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  31. ^ Wahab, Bayo. "Osun APC faction cries out over alleged plot to kill Aregbesola". Pulse.ng. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  32. ^ Ezediuno, Francis (19 February 2022). "Osun 2022: APC holds primary election amid apprehension, tight security". Daily Post. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  33. ^ "Police: One person shot dead during Osun APC guber primary". TheCable. News Agency of Nigeria. 19 February 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  34. ^ Akinlotan, Olasunkanmi (19 February 2022). "Osun 2022: Aregbesola alleges fraud in APC primaries". Premium Times. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  35. ^ "Osun APC Primaries: Oyetola, Aregbesola's camp disagree on conduct of exercise". Premium Times. News Agency of Nigeria. 19 February 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  36. ^ "Osun APC primary: Oyetola extends olive branch to Adeoti, Lasun". The Punch. News Agency of Nigeria. 20 February 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  37. ^ Ezediuno, Francis (25 February 2022). "Osun APC primary election: Committee dismisses Adeoti's appeal". Daily Post. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  38. ^ Egbe, Robert. "Aregbesola's man asks court to void Oyetola's victory". The Nation. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  39. ^ Oyeyemi, Fadehan (14 July 2022). "APC, Oyetola escape disqualification from Saturday's Osun governorship election". Daily Post. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  40. ^ Obarayese, Sikiru (2 October 2022). "APC vows to appeal judgement as court sacks Oyetola, deputy". Daily Post. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  41. ^ Oyeyemi, Fadehan. "Supreme Court dismisses PDP's suit against Oyetola's participation in Osun guber election". Daily Post. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Are, Jesupemi. "IN FULL: INEC releases final list of Osun guber candidates". Daily Post. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  43. ^ Ezediuno, Francis (8 February 2022). "Osun 2022: Adeoti submits gubernatorial nomination form". Daily Post. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  44. ^ Alechenu, John (2 December 2021). "Osun 2022: Nobody can stop me – Gov aspirant, Lasun Yusuf". The Punch. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  45. ^ Akinlotan, Olasunkanmi (14 February 2022). "Osun 2022: Aregbesola backs ex-SSG ahead of APC primaries". Premium Times. Retrieved 15 February 2022. Present at the [Adeoti campaign] event are...former Speaker, Osun State House of Assembly, Najeem Salaam
  46. ^ "How Oyetola emerged winner of Osun APC governorship primary". TheCable. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  47. ^ "How Oyetola emerged winner of Osun APC governorship primary". Twitter. TheCable. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  48. ^ Oyegbade, Hameed (2 April 2021). "Osun 2022: Adeleke Will Fly PDP Ticket Again – Odeyemi". Daily Trust. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  49. ^ Abiodun, Alao. "Osun 2022: Adeleke family bickers over PDP ticket". The Nation. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  50. ^ Angbulu, Stephen (8 January 2022). "Osun 2022: PDP postpones gov aspirants' screening". The Punch. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  51. ^ Yakubu, Dirisu (17 November 2021). "Osun Guber: PDP to commence sale of forms November 22". Vanguard. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  52. ^ a b c d e "Osun: PDP clears Adeleke, six other gov aspirants". The Punch. News Agency of Nigeria. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  53. ^ Ezediuno, Francis (4 March 2022). "PDP NWC okays March 8 for Osun guber primary election". Daily Post. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  54. ^ Bamigbola, Bola (24 February 2022). "Osun PDP holds congress, two die, many injured". The Punch. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  55. ^ Bamigbola, Bola (6 March 2022). "Osun PDP: Adeleke, Ogunbiyi renew battle for gov ticket". The Punch. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  56. ^ Dada, Lateef (6 March 2022). "Osun PDP guber primary: Tug of war over Ademola Adeleke". The Sun. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  57. ^ Bamigbola, Bola (7 March 2022). "Osun 2022: Ogunbiyi withdraws from PDP primary". The Punch. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  58. ^ Olamide, Fatai (7 March 2022). "Osun 2022: Four Aspirants Withdrew From PDP Guber Primary, As Adeleke, Babayemi Battle For Party Ticket". Osun Defender. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  59. ^ Bamigbola, Bola (7 March 2022). "Osun PDP holds gov primary today amid serial accusation of bias, collusion". The Punch. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  60. ^ "Osun 2022: Confusion as PDP holds parallel gov primaries". The Punch. News Agency of Nigeria. 8 March 2022. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  61. ^ Abubakar, Shina (8 March 2022). "Osun PDP primary: Adeleke emerges party's candidate". Vanguard. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  62. ^ Bamigbola, Bola (8 March 2022). "Osun 2022: Adeleke, Babayemi emerge candidates in parallel gov primaries". The Punch. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  63. ^ "Osun 2022: Adeleke gets certificate of return". The Nation. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  64. ^ Oyeleke, Sodiq; Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun: Babayemi vows to fight on as PDP recognises Adeleke". The Punch. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  65. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun PDP: Court affirms Adeleke's candidature, Babayemi to review judgment". The Punch. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  66. ^ Oluwole, Josiah. "Osun 2022: Governor-elect, Adeleke, wins in appeal Court". Premium Times. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  67. ^ Olokor, Friday. "PDP primary: Supreme Court upholds Adeleke's election". The Punch. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  68. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun 2022: PDP unveils deputy gubernatorial candidate, Kola Adewusi". Daily Post. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  69. ^ Olafusi, Ebunoluwa. "Ademola Adeleke wins NWC-backed Osun PDP guber primary". TheCable. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  70. ^ Owolabi, Femi. "Dotun Babayemi wins governorship primary of Osun PDP faction". TheCable. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  71. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun 2022: Lasun Yusuf emerges Labour Party's candidate". The Punch. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  72. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun 2022: Rasaq Saliu emerges NNPP guber candidate". Daily Post. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  73. ^ Gbolagunte, Bamigbola. "Osun 2022: Abede emerges NRM candidate". The Sun. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  74. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun 2022: Gubernatorial candidates emerge for SDP, PRP". Daily Post. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  75. ^ Oyegbade, Hameed. "Replay Battle As Oyetola, Adeleke Set For Osun Gov'ship Poll". Daily Trust. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  76. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Reps ex-Deputy Speaker Lasun dumps APC hours to party convention". The Punch. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  77. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun 2023: Ogunbiyi declares for Accord Party, promises industrialisation". The Punch. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  78. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun 2022: Babayemi, Adeleke settle rift despite claims, law suits". Daily Post. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  79. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun APC: Adamu steps up efforts to reconcile Aregbesola, Oyetola factions – Sources". Daily Post. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  80. ^ Martins, Baba. "How Govs' Revolt Will Affect PDP In Osun Gov'ship Poll". Daily Trust. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  81. ^ Omofoye, Tunji; Agbor, Timothy. "Osun guber: Oyetola, Adeleke, Ogunbiyi, Lasun in front row". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  82. ^ a b "Osun govnorship candidates debate dia plan ahead of July 16 election". BBC Pidgin (in Nigerian Pidgin). Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  83. ^ Abubakar, Shina. "Osun gov poll: Oyetola, Adeleke, Ogunbiyi, others trade words in BBC debate". Vanguard. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  84. ^ Agbor, Timothy. "Oyetola, Adeleke, Lasun, Ogunbiyi, Omigbodun in debate, reveal plans if elected". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  85. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun: Adeleke absent as Oyetola, others participate in debate". The Punch. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  86. ^ Igwe, Ignatius. "Osun Debate: Adeleke Tackles Oyetola On State Helicopter, Use Of Amotekun". Channels TV. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  87. ^ Akpan, Samuel. "Gunmen 'invade' Yusuf Lasun's residence — hours after Osun guber debate". TheCable. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  88. ^ "Osun Guber: 13 Parties Sign Peace Accord". ThisDay. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  89. ^ Alabi, Mojeed; Akinlotan, Olasunkanmi. "ANALYSIS: OsunDecides: Events, issues that may shape governorship election". Premium Times. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  90. ^ Oluwole, Josiah. "Osun Decides: Judgment day nears for Oyetola as Adeleke, other challengers eye seat". Premium Times. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  91. ^ Odufowokan, 'Dare. "Osun 2022: Who wins Oyetola, Adeleke return match?". The Nation. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  92. ^ "It's two-horse race as Osun elects governor". The Nation. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  93. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun poll: Return match among familiar foes". The Punch. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  94. ^ Adio, Waziri. "The Proxy Battles in the Osun Poll". ThisDay. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  95. ^ "Osun Gubernatorial Debate 2022". YouTube. Arise News. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  96. ^ "Osun Governorship Debate [Full Video]: Five Candidates Tackle Key Issues". YouTube. Channels TV. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  97. ^ "OSUN STATE GOVERNORSHIP 2022 TIMETABLE AND SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES". Independent National Electoral Commission. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  98. ^ Adenekan, Samson. "Osun: Security, vote buying our major concerns – INEC". Premium Times. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  99. ^ Odeniyi, Solomon. "Osun 2022: IGP deploys four AIGs, others, redeploys CP". The Punch. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  100. ^ Ezeama, Victor. "Reports of vote buying emerge for Osun election". BBC Pidgin (in Nigerian Pidgin). Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  101. ^ "Oaths, Coupons Used To Threaten Osun Voters Before Paying Them Money – Situation Room Laments Widespread Vote-buying In Governorship Poll". Sahara Reporters. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  102. ^ "OsunDecides2022: 97% of INEC workers arrived polling units at 8:30 a.m. – CDD". Premium Times. News Agency of Nigeria. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  103. ^ YIAGA Africa [@YIAGA] (16 July 2022). "Yiaga Africa notes the significant improvement in logistics management for #OsunDecides2022. The personnel and essential materials such as the Voter Register, BVAS, voting cubicles and ballot box were deployed early in a majority of the polling units" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  104. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final results for Ayedade LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  105. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Ayedire LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  106. ^ a b c d e f g "#OsunDecides2022: Official results from local govts (LIVE UPDATES)". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  107. ^ Majeed, Bakare. "#OsunDecides: Corps member hospitalised, polling unit result cancelled". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  108. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "CORPS MEMBER'S HEAD SMASHED IN ATAKUNMOSA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  109. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Atakunmosa West LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  110. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Boluwaduro LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  111. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final Results for Boripe LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  112. ^ Adenekan, Samson. "#OsunDecides2022: Oyetola wins landslide in own LGA". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  113. ^ "Ede North LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  114. ^ a b c d "#OsunDecides2022: Final results announced by INEC (LIVE UPDATES)". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  115. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "EDE SOUTH LGA FINAL RESULT" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  116. ^ "Egbedore LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  117. ^ Izuaka, Mary. "#OsunDecides: PDP wins Ejigbo LGA". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  118. ^ Premium Times [@PremiumTimesng] (17 July 2022). "Ife Central LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  119. ^ The Nation [@TheNationNews] (17 July 2022). "Ife East LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  120. ^ "Ife North LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  121. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "FINAL RESULTS, IFE-SOUTH LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  122. ^ a b c d "Osun: Results of 30 LGs declared by INEC". The Punch. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  123. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Ifelodun LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  124. ^ Premium Times [@PremiumTimesng] (17 July 2022). "Ila Local Government" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  125. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Ila LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  126. ^ Adeyemi, Ibrahim. "#OsunDecides22: INEC cancel election at polling units as thugs disrupt process". Premium Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  127. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "According to the returning officer for Ilesha, the RA officer said the results of PU007 and PU008 were cancelled because the election was disrupted and some ballot papers were destroyed" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  128. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Ilesha East LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  129. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Ilesha West LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  130. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final Results for Irepodun LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  131. ^ The Nation [@TheNationNews] (17 July 2022). "Irewole LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  132. ^ "Irewole LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  133. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "FINAL RESULTS, ISOKAN LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  134. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final Results from Iwo Local Government" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  135. ^ TheCable [@thecableng] (17 July 2022). "OFFICIAL RESULT Obokun LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  136. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final collated result for Odo Otin LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  137. ^ "Ola-Oluwa LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  138. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final Results for Olorunda LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  139. ^ "Oriade LGA results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  140. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Orolu LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  141. ^ Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development [@CJIDAfrica] (16 July 2022). "Final Results for Osogbo LGA" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  142. ^ a b Olaniyi, Olufemi; Bamigbola, Bola; Nejo, Abiodun; Dada, Peter. "Osun gov election: Adeleke's camp jubilates, anxiety in Oyetola's, INEC announces results". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  143. ^ Silas, Don. "Adeleke dedicates Osun governorship victory to Isiaka Adetunji". Daily Post. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  144. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun: APC'll respond to results after consultation – Oyetola". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  145. ^ Oyeleke, Sodiq. "Osun poll: Aregbesola breaks silence after Oyetola's defeat". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  146. ^ Oyeleke, Sodiq. "Osun poll: Why Aregbesola's post was deleted -Aide". The Punch. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  147. ^ Erezi, Dennis. "Osun election: Adeleke's victory reflects will of the people, says Buhari". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  148. ^ Shuaibu, Muawiya. "We Never Anticipated To Lose Osun Election – Adamu". Daily Trust. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  149. ^ Atiku Abubakar [@atiku] (17 July 2022). "Light has come to Osun. Congratulations, Sen. @AAdeleke_01, on a well-fought victory. Also, hearty congratulations to the @OfficialPDPNig family and all stakeholders who came together to make this possible" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  150. ^ Okonoboh, Rita. "Obi congratulates Adeleke — but asks LP supporters to strengthen resolve to rescue Nigeria". TheCable. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  151. ^ YIAGA Africa [@YIAGA] (17 July 2022). "CONSISTENT AND VERIFIED" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  152. ^ Nasiru, Jemilat. "Osun election: Results announced by INEC reflect ballots cast, says YIAGA". TheCable. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  153. ^ "Yiaga Africa's Situational Statement On The 2022 Osun Gubernatorial Election". YIAGA Africa. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  154. ^ Chiedozie, Ihuoma. "ANALYSIS: After Osun, opposition parties will go into 2023 elections with high hopes". International Centre for Investigative Reporting. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  155. ^ Hanafi, Afeez. "How Osun Guber Election Has Been Setting Tone For Presidential Poll Since 2014". Daily Trust. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  156. ^ Akinboyo, Temidayo. "#OsunDecides2022: Another Adeleke returns as governor, 31 years after". Premium Times. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  157. ^ Ayeni, 'Tofe. "Nigeria: Star singer Davido pushes PDP's Senator Adeleke over the top in Osun election". The Africa Report. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  158. ^ Adeyemi, Muyiwa; Olumide, Seye; Omofoye, Tunji; Agbor, Timothy. "Inside story of how Adeleke rode to victory in Osun". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  159. ^ Adeyemo, Adeolu. "Election Petition Tribunal Constitutes Panel To Address Complaints On Osun Guber". Nigerian Tribune. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  160. ^ "APC heads to tribunal over Osun governorship poll". Premium Times. News Agency of Nigeria. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  161. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Osun: PDP faults APC's move to approach tribunal". The Punch. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  162. ^ Obarayese, Sikiru. "We are not worried – PDP reacts as APC challenges Osun guber poll". Daily Post. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  163. ^ Dada, Joshua. "Osun Gov'ship Poll: APC, Oyetola File Case At Election Petition Tribunal". Leadership. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  164. ^ Obarayese, Sikiru. "Osun election: Tribunal fixes Monday for hearing Oyetola's application". Daily Post. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  165. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Adeleke vs Oyetola: Osun Tribunal begins sitting Monday". The Punch. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  166. ^ "Appeal Court Rejects Governor Oyetola's Request To Relocate Osun Tribunal To Abuja". Sahara Reporters. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  167. ^ Ezediuno, Francis. "Osun Election Petition Tribunal adjourns sitting to October 4". Daily Post. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  168. ^ Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "Osun election petition tribunal adjourns for judgement". Premium Times. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  169. ^ Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "Oyetola vs Adeleke: Osun Governorship Election Tribunal fixes date for judgement". Premium Times. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  170. ^ Yakubu, Dirisu; Tolu-Kolawole, Deborah; Ibrahim, El-ameen; Bamigbola, Bola; Dada, Peter. "Osun gov sacking: Adeleke, PDP cry foul, plan appeal as Oyetola hails tribunal". The Punch. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
  171. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Adeleke receives certificate of return". The Punch. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  172. ^ Anuku, Williams. "Adeleke constitues [sic] transition committee". Daily Post. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  173. ^ Abubakar, Shina. "Get me agenda for 100 days, one year in office, Adeleke tasks transition committee". Vanguard. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
  174. ^ Adedeji, Toba. "Assembly begins hearing of bill ahead Adeleke's swearing-in". The Nation. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  175. ^ Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "Amidst protest, Osun electoral commission announces date for LG elections". Premium Times. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  176. ^ Are, Jesupemi. "Amid low voter turnout, APC wins all seats in Osun LG poll". TheCable. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  177. ^ Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "Court nullifies Osun LG elections". Premium Times. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  178. ^ Igwe, Ignatius. "Davido, Ooni Grace Adeleke's Inauguration As Osun Governor". Channels TV. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  179. ^ Ogundapo, Abdulqudus. "In inaugural speech, Adeleke tackles Oyetola, freezes govt accounts, vows probe". Premium Times. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  180. ^ Okocha, Chuks; Kolawole, Yinka. "Adeleke Assumes Office, Abolishes State of Osun, Reverses Oyetola's Appointments". ThisDay. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  181. ^ Bamigbola, Bola. "Adeleke sacks three monarchs, orders staff audit". The Punch. Retrieved 28 November 2022.

Read other articles:

Henri Bergson adalah tokoh aliran Intuisionisme Intuisionisme (berasal dari bahasa Latin: intuitio yang berarti pemandangan) adalah suatu aliran filsafat yang menganggap adanya satu kemampuan tingkat tinggi yang dimiliki manusia, yaitu intuisi.[1] Tokoh aliran ini diantaranya dalah Henri Bergson.[1] Intuisionisme selalu berdebat dengan paham rasionalisme.[1] Teori Intuisionisme adalah sistem etika yang tidak mengukur baik atau buruk sesuatu perbuatan berdasarkan hasiln...

 

English nobleman and courtier Grey BrydgesBaron Chandos of SudeleyGrey Brydges, 5th Baron ChandosTenure18 November 1602 – 10 August 1621PredecessorWilliam Brydges, 4th Baron ChandosSuccessorGeorge Brydges, 6th Baron ChandosBornc. 1580Died10 August 1621 (aged 41)Spa, BelgiumBuriedSudeley CastleNationalityEnglishResidenceSudeley CastleSpouse(s)Lady Anne StanleyIssueAnne BrydgesElizabeth Brydges, Countess of CastlehavenGeorge Brydges, 6th Baron ChandosWilliam Brydges, 7th Baron ChandosParentsW...

 

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Oktober 2022. Divisi Infanteri ke-64 (64. Infanterie-Division)Aktif? August 1944 - November 1944Negara JermanCabangAngkatan Darat Jerman (Wehrmacht)Tipe unitInfanteri CadanganPeranInfanteriJumlah personelDivisiMarkasBonnPertempuranPerang Dunia II Divisi Infante...

كارجاسكارجاسالغاز الطبيعي للسياراتالشعارمعلومات عامةالتأسيس 1995النوع شركة مساهمةالمقر الرئيسي الماظة، القاهرة،  مصرموقع الويب ngvc-eg.com المنظومة الاقتصاديةالشركة الأم الهيئة المصرية العامة للبترولالصناعة الغاز الطبيعيمناطق الخدمة جمهورية مصر العربيةأهم الشخصياتالما

 

Олівер Кюлінгтон Народився 19 травня 1997(1997-05-19) (26 років)м. Стокгольм, Швеція Зріст 183 см Вага 82 кг Позиція захисник Кидок лівий Клуб ШХЛКол. команди Фер'єстад КарлстадАІК Стокгольм Драфт НХЛ 60-й загальний, 2015Калгарі Флеймс Ігрова кар'єра 2013 — зараз  Олівер Кюлінгтон у Вікіс

 

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada April 2016. Wiser.org logo Wiser.org, yang sebelumnya bernama WiserEarth, adalah ruang komunitas dalam jaringan (daring) untuk pergerakan sosial dan lingkungan.[1] Wiser.org melacak kegiatan lembaga nirlaba di berbagai belahan dunia.[2] Situs ini mem...

Fictional character Simon BellamyMisfits characterFirst appearanceSeries 1 Episode 1Last appearanceSeries 3 Episode 8Created byHoward OvermanPortrayed byIwan RheonPowerInvisibility (series 1-2)Power immunity (series 3)Precognition (series 3)Time travel to the past (series 3)In-universe informationAliasSuperhoodie, The Guy In The MaskNicknameBarryGenderMaleOccupationUnemployedSignificant otherAlisha Daniels (girlfriend; deceased) Simon Bellamy is a fictional character from the British Channel ...

 

هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (يوليو 2019) هيو إيرفاين ويلسون معلومات شخصية تاريخ الميلاد 13 نوفمبر 1879  تاريخ الوفاة 3 فبراير 1925 (45 سنة)   مواطنة الولايات المتحدة  الحياة العملية المهنة مهندس المن

 

Infectious disease, often just the flu For other uses, see Influenza (disambiguation), Flu (disambiguation), and Grippe (disambiguation). Flus redirects here. For the diagnostic class of thyroid nodules, see FLUS. Not to be confused with Flue. Medical conditionInfluenzaOther namesflu, the flu, grippe (French for flu)Influenza virus, magnified approximately 100,000 timesSpecialtyInfectious diseaseSymptomsFever, runny nose, sore throat, muscle pain, headache, coughing, fatigueUsual onset1–4 d...

Town in East Sussex, England This article is about the town in East Sussex. For other uses, see Eastbourne (disambiguation). Town and borough in EnglandEastbourne Borough of EastbourneTown and boroughBeach huts on the front, the main railway station, historic bandstand, Sovereign Harbour, town hall and the pierCoordinates: 50°46′N 0°17′E / 50.77°N 0.28°E / 50.77; 0.28Sovereign stateUnited KingdomConstituent countryEnglandRegionSouth East EnglandNon-metropolitan...

 

Indonesian television network This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: TVRI TV channel – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Television channel TVRICountryIndonesiaBroadcast areaIndonesia, Singapore, parts of Malaysia, Timor-...

 

Microsoft cloud gaming service This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (November 2020) Xbox Cloud GamingDeveloperMicrosoft GamingTypeCloud gaming serviceLaunch dateSeptember 15, 2020; 3 years ago (2020-09-15)Preview version1.0 / November 14, 2019; 4 years ago (2019-11-14)Platform(s)Cross-platformOperating system(s)Android,[1] Windows,[2] iOS, iPadOS,[3]...

River in Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany For other uses, see Sauer (disambiguation). SauerThe Sauer in EchternachPath of the Sauer [1]LocationCountriesBelgiumGermanyLuxembourgReference no.DE: 262Physical characteristicsSource  • locationSource region: In the Ardennes on the soil of Libramont-Chevigny near the Planchipont farm (Belgium) • elevationca. 510 m (1,670 ft) Mouth  • locationBetween Wasserbilligerbrüc...

 

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: 406th Air Expeditionary Wing – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) 406th Air Expeditionary Wing A pararescueman from the wing's 82nd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron drags a litter during ...

 

Indian actress Soha Ali Khan PataudiPataudi in 2018BornSoha Ali Khan Pataudi (1978-10-04) October 4, 1978 (age 45)New Delhi, IndiaNationalityIndianEducationMasters in International RelationsAlma materLondon School of EconomicsOccupationActressYears active2004–presentSpouse Kunal Khemu ​(m. 2015)​Children1ParentsMansoor Ali Khan Pataudi (father)Sharmila Tagore (mother)FamilySee Pataudi family Soha Ali Khan Pataudi (born 4 October 1978) is an Indian...

Cet article concerne un gratte-ciel de New York. Pour les autres bâtiments, voir World Trade Center (homonymie). Ne doit pas être confondu avec 4 World Trade Center (1977-2001). World Trade Center 4150 Greenwich StreetHistoireArchitecte Fumihiko MakiIngénieur Leslie Robertson (en)Complexe World Trade Center (en)Construction 2008-2013Ouverture 13 novembre 2013Statut ConstruitUsage Bureaux, commercesArchitectureStyle ModerneHauteur Toit : 297,2 mètresSurface 167 000 m2Étages 74[1]...

 

American actor (born 1970) For the mathematician, see Michael Rapoport. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Michael Rapaport – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2...

 

Species of rodent Merriam's Kangaroo Rat Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1] Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Rodentia Family: Heteromyidae Genus: Dipodomys Species: D. merriami Binomial name Dipodomys merriamiMearns, 1890 Subspecies Dipodomys merriami ambiguus Dipodomys merriami annulus Dipodomys merriami arenivagus Dipodomys merriami atronasus Dipodomys merriami brunensis Dipodomys merriami co...

Deftones discographyDeftones performing live on April 14, 2007 at the Brixton Academy, London. Left to right: Stephen Carpenter, Chi Cheng (foreground), Frank Delgado (background), Chino Moreno and Abe Cunningham.Studio albums9Compilation albums3Video albums1Music videos31EPs3Singles22B-sides52Promotional singles7 The discography of Deftones, an American alternative metal band, consists of nine studio albums, three extended plays, three compilation albums, five demo albums and 22 singles. The...

 

Foram assinalados vários problemas nesta página ou se(c)ção: As fontes não cobrem todo o texto. Texto necessita de revisão, devido a inconsistências e/ou dados de confiabilidade duvidosa. Ucranianos(українці/ukrayintsi) Bandeira da Ucrânia Mapa da diáspora ucraniana ao redor do mundo. População total 39 100 000 [1][2][3] Regiões com população significativa  Ucrânia 37 541 700  Rússia 2 942 961  Canadá 1 209 805  Estados Unidos 961 113  Brasil ...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!