Tag: card-reader

  • No going back on use of card reader, says Abia REC

    Abia State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Joseph Iloh has stated that the commission was prepared to ensure that there was credible election in the state on Saturday.

    This is as he warned that any community that refused using the card reader may not have their votes counted.

    Iloh who spoke to reporters at the INEC headquarters on Thursday said that the commission has enough technical manpower to address any technical challenges that may arise from the card reader.

    According to Iloh, “Our card readers are highly functional. The battery lifespan has been improved that they can last for 48hrs. When politicians want to circumvent issues, they create problem. But this time around they know that it won’t be easy for them. Any community that refuses the use of card reader shall have a score of zero and their votes may not count.

     “Please, I am appealing to all citizens, stakeholders of Abia State to please make use of the card reader. It is a very cardinal instrument. We classified it as a sensitive instrument. For in a special case where one of the card readers starts malfunctioning, we have reserves in all the RAC and Local Government Areas in this state. We have reserves.

     “The RAC techs are there. If a card reader is mal-functional in a particular unit, the polling officer should call the RAC tech or the supervisory officer there. The senior supervisory officer should as a matter of fact call the RAC tech that will come and rectify them. We have provided them with vehicles to enable them move around to rectify issues. That the card reader failed to identify one person doesn’t render it invalid. If it becomes malfunction and the technical staff couldn’t effect the repairs, they will replace the card reader.

     “For Aba North and Aba South Federal Constituency, there will be a rerun and there will be a rerun in Abia South Senatorial district. We have scheduled them to go on at the same time with the elections for the state house of assembly and Governorship. We are doing this to ensure that we don’t have influences from adjoining local governments. Everybody should be in his or her wards to vote and then do the things that are necessary to keep our democracy moving.

    “There was a meeting on Wednesday between the Inter-agency Consultative Committee on Election Security and Inter-party Advisory Council. We met and sorted out identified areas that we could be classified as flash points and security agencies will focus more in such areas. We are calling on you; journalists to please let us know where you observe things going wrong.

    “However, I am promising that this time around everything is going to be set according to specification.”

    On the case of over voting as witnessed in the just concluded Presidential and National Assembly election, Iloh said “where the card reader and the manual votes failed to correspond, it is not going to be a problem. The consequences are there. So every stakeholder should work to ensure that the card reader and the manual voting correspond. It doesn’t see where a community will reject the use of card reader and conduct manual voting.

     “The result for Saturday election will be announced by Saturday night or by Sunday morning by the special grace of God. It is not going to be delayed. We have perfected our arrangement to make that this things run parallel. The structure for the collation this Saturday’s results are very clear to us and may not be known to you people as of now.”

    Iloh stated five hundred and seventy four candidates from 43 political parties would feature in March 9, Governorship and House of Assembly elections in Abia State.

    He added that 39 of the candidates are for governorship election while 535 candidates are for the House of Assembly poll.

  • INEC to make card reader mandatory for 2019 polls

    •‘No new polling units’

    Card Reader will be mandatory in the conduct of the 2019 election, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said yesterday.

    A top official of the commission said yesterday tha card readers helps the Commission in three ways that is, helping to confirm that the Permanent Voter Card (PVC)  was issued by INEC, that the biometrics of the holder are correct and that the identity of the holder is authenticated though the fingerprints.

    The official said the Commission would soon begin a process of upgrading the Card Readers such that whatever was experienced in the past would not occur in the 2019 election.

    The official stated that part of the challenges the Commission had in 2015 was the violence that led to the stesling or loss of card raders. He said in Rivers state alone, the Commission lost 1,321 Card Readers during the 2015 elections.

    The official reiterated that the Commission never had any plan to create 30,000 new polling units before the 2019 elections as being speculated in some quarters.

    He said although the commission was able to uncover through its checks that a lot of communities and settlements had outgrown the current number of polling units in the country, the controversy generated around the plan made any Nigerians to misconstrue the intention.

    The official cited the example of Gwarinpa Estate I Abuja which is regarded as the largest estate in Africa but which he said has only nine polling units adding that such examples abound across the country.

    “One thing the commission has ruled out is the possibility of creating new polling units before the 2019 elections. No polling units will be created before the 2919 elections. If you create polling units, you have to populate them, then it will create confusion and you will have to replace the voter cards,” the source said adding that what the commission had resolved to do is to decongest the existing polling units by creating voting points where voters exceed 500 in a particular point.

    According to the official, the Commission prior to the administration of  Prof Attahiru Jega had no record of the number of the Polling Units in the country but that the audit conducted under the previous INEC Chairman yielded 119,793 polling units. He also stated that the commission would not add any unit to that existing units before the 2019 elections.

    “Under Jega, the commission conducted an audit of all polling units. Before then, some polling units were located in shrines and different places. But with the audit, we now have 119,973 polling units across the country and there is no more obscure polling units nationwide,” the official stated.

     

  • ‘Card reader will be the only option in 2019’

    ‘Card reader will be the only option in 2019’

    Chairman Committee on Housing, Ahmad Babba Kaita (APC, Katsina) has said that Nigerians will soon be left with no option than to vote with the card reader only. In this interview, following a recent public hearing on 12 Bills on electoral reform, Kaita, who sponsored one of the bills told Dele Anofi that those planning to disrupt release or announcement of election results were adequately taken care of. Excerpts:

    WE have had some elections conducted under the extant electoral laws declared credible, so what is the need for these amendments?

    The most important thing in any democracy is a credible, free and fair election because that is what gives legitimacy to the winning party and individuals. Once there is a deficit of legitimacy, then it is a recipe for disaster that might turn to a political crisis which may in turn lead to economic crisis. We have seen this in some sub-Saharan West African countries. Since the most important factor in our political agenda is election, once there is a valid election that is acceptable to the citizens, then we are in for a great ride. The lessons from 2015 general elections has broadened our scope to identify some lapses we are highlighting today. So, we want to capture those lapses and make amend which is the process that has commenced with the public hearing because it is our responsibility as lawmakers to do that.

    For instance, take the case of Rivers State in the last General Elections where card readers were deliberately discarded, not because the voters don’t want it to be used but just because the power that be in that area did not want it and so it was abandoned for the usual manual option. The aggrieved went to court but the beneficiaries pointed out that there is nowhere it was expressly stated in our Constitution that card reader must be used. Of course they were right as at that point in time but the fact is that there was a constitutional lacuna which they explored to get what they wanted but to the detriment of the people and our democracy.

    So, my intention here is to make our electoral process watertight and fool proof to avoid all these manipulations and make the card reader the only way the electorate can exercise his right and pick his candidate except on extreme circumstances. Instances of rejection of thumb print by the card reader may due to reason of age and other factors and of course the case of amputates can be viewed as extreme. Amputees are Nigerians with every right to vote and be voted for. These are extreme cases but we are talking of situation where people just deploy all manners of tactics to discard the use of card readers in order to manipulate the outcome of the election. We all know that the card reader generates a lot of information like the number of accredited voters in the first instance as well as the number of expected votes at the end of the day. At the end of voting, if those that voted outnumbered the figure on the card reader, definitely it becomes clear that there is a fraud. So, my intention for bringing up this bill is to block such situation where someone would just refuse to use the card reader. Manipulations happen everywhere but the case of Rivers State was more popular because of the unbelievable result due to the refusal to use the card reader.

    The intention of the amendment is to make our electoral process fool proof and make the winners accountable. Winner of a credible election is liable to be appreciative and accountable when the actual number of people that got him into office is ascertained, unlike when he cheats his way into office. Such a candidate will care less about the people since they did not get him into office in the first place.

    Are these enough to make the card reader the sole means of voting?

    The multiplier effect of this bill is not only on the electoral process but political stability and socio-economic progress of the polity.

    Though I believe that we should not be in a rush to deploy it until we are ready because what is worth doing is worth doing well; Nonetheless, we should rather have a legitimate candidate voted in by the people rather than one which the people do not want because of the enormous impaction involved. We have seen in this country where chaos followed the announcement of election results with destruction unleashed on the people, including the innocents. Thus, once there’s a suspicion of fraud, no one is safe, especially the innocent ones, who just want to exercise their voting rights. These are the kinds of issues this bill wants to check because a free and fair election produces a credible and legitimate government while a fraudulent election produces a fraudulent government that comes with its own baggage. Because of our own peculiarities, religious coloration often become a factor in the electoral process in which often times religious crisis always trail some of these wrong electoral process. But if this bill eventually becomes law, all these mundane factors would fizzle out with time. The use of card reader should not be a problem for us because even some African countries have done well with it.

    While working on the bill, did you consider the posibililty of conspiracy by officials to manipulate the machine?

    Yes, the card reader can be manipulated with connivance with politicians or government of the day since the card reader has to be manned by human beings. These are assumptions because so far we have no history since 2015 where card readers were manipulated by INEC officials.  The point you have raised is valid but it’s still an assumption, before we get to that bridge, we have to work with the real life situation that we have dealt with around the country but with particular reference to Rivers State. Nigerians should be assured that, as a House we are determined to give the country a credible electoral process.

  • Senate okays e-voting, card reader for elections

    Senate okays e-voting, card reader for elections

    THE use of electronic voting (e-Voting) system, electronic transmission of election results and the deployment of Electronic Card Reader (ECR) were some of the amendments to the Electoral Act, 2010, passed by the Senate yesterday.

    With the amendments, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will, beginning from 2019 general elections, electronically transmit election results to collation centers.

    The passage of the bill followed the consideration of the report of the Senate Committee on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on a Bill for an Act to amend the Electoral Act No. 6, 2010 and for other related matters (SB 231 and SB 234).

    The bill has provision for the use of e-Voting by INEC during future elections, use of ECR and INEC power to modify the voting process if there is a challenge.

    The Senate also approved a provision to enable INEC transmit the result of elections electronically in an encrypted and secured manner to prevent hacking.

    To address the incident that happened in Kogi State, during the last governorship election, the amended Electoral Act provides that if a candidate dies before results of elections are declared, the results will not only remain valid but belong to the political party that lost its candidate.

    It also added that in such a scenario, the INEC should suspend the elections for 21 days to allow the affected political party conduct fresh primaries to choose a new candidate.

    The Bill also gives political parties power to adopt direct or indirect primaries in choosing their flag bearers, while qualification or disqualification of candidates for elections will be solely based on the Constitution.

    In his comments after the adoption of the report, Senate President Bukola Saraki, thanked his colleagues for a job well done and expressed optimism that the Bill would further improve the nation’s electoral system and also contribute to good governance.

    Saraki said: “Distinguished colleagues, let me thank all of you for this job well done. I want to particularly thank the members of the Committee on INEC and particularly the former chairman of the Committee, Abubakar Kyari, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege and all the members of the committee who have worked very hard to ensure the passage of this very important bill which addresses our electoral process and goes on to strengthen our democracy.

    “We have touched on new areas which I believe will improve the credibility of our elections and by so doing, definitely improve our democracy and good governance.

    “Most importantly, I think, are some of the new sections we have added, in the area of technology, the smart card reader, and particularly the area of collation which has been an area of great concern.

    “Collation of results after the polling units and some of the additions we put on the electronic way by which the compilation of results can be done, I think will go a long way to reduce some of the irregularities we have seen before.

    “This is a great work you have been able to put together today and I want to commend everybody. I am also happy that we have passed the amendments very early. My concern has always been that if we don’t do it now, it will get more difficult as we get close to the 2019 elections.

    “We hope that with this Bill that we have passed, very soon, we will sit together with the House of Representatives to be able to get the copy to the President for assent.

    “I think when signed into law, it will enable INEC to have something to work early enough. I think what we have done today will really put our electoral law among the best that we have and it will go a long way in improving our electoral process,” Saraki said.

  • Council poll: LASIEC won’t use card reader

    Council poll: LASIEC won’t use card reader

    Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) Chairman Justice Ayotunde Phillips (retd) has said it would not use the card reader machine for the conduct of the forthcoming council elections.
    She disclosed this during a meeting with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officials at LASIEC office, Sabo, Yaba, Lagos.
    Justice Phillips (retd) gave the closeness of the date of the elections as reason for their action.
    At the meeting, both parties resolved to constitute a joint committee on the distribution of about 1.47million Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) that are still awaiting collection by registered voters in the state.
    LASIEC Chairman Justice Ayotunde Phillips (retd) said it was imperative for the two commissions to ensure that more registered voters obtain their PVCs so that more eligible voters could participate in the forthcoming council elections.
    The partnership, she said, would, reduce voter apathy.
    INEC Administrative Secretary Mr Clement Oha, said the commission had decentralised the distribution of the PVCs from the headquarters of the 20 Local Governments to the 245 Registration Areas in the state to make it accessible to the people.
    He said INEC would soon embark on Continuous Registration of Voters in the state to enable eligible people register, adding that people who lost their PVCs would be issued Temporary Voter Cards.

  • Tackling menace of card reader

    Tackling menace of card reader

    The Ondo State governorship poll was adjudged peaceful, free and fair. There were no major hitches, except the malfunctioning card readers that slowed down voting in some polling units. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines the performance of the card reader in the accreditation and how it could be improved.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has improved on its performance with the conduct of a peaceful and transparent governorship election in Ondo. Stakeholders commended the commission for improving on its preparation, compared to its outing in Edo State.
    In spite of the success recorded in Ondo, observers believe INEC has not found solution to the malfunctioning of smart card readers (SCRs) in the electoral process. For instance, the major contestants were unanimous in their observation that the card readers failed in some polling units. They expressed disappointment at the malfunctioned card readers.
    The governor-elect, Mr Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN), expressed worry over the development, saying INEC had enough time to prepare for the poll. He said: “there are few hitches here and there, which have to do with the failure of the card readers in some polling units. I expect INEC to have properly overhauled the card readers because we are having only one election.
    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) flag bearer, Mr Eyitayo Jegede (SAN), alleged that INEC conspired to rig the election by disenfranchising voters in the PDP strongholds by deliberately using bad card readers. The Alliance for Democracy (AD) candidate, Mr Olusola Oke, expressed similar view on the malfunctioning of the card readers in some polling units in Ilaje Local Government Area. He alleged that most of the SCRs were pre-loaded while many eligible voters were denied accreditation.
    Perhaps, the major casualty of the malfunctioned card reader machine was Governor Olusegun Mimiko. The machine rejected his finger print. But, he was allowed to vote after filling the incident form given to him by INEC officials at his polling unit. Irked by the development, Mimiko alleged it was a plot to rig the election.
    However, the Ondo State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr Olusegun Agbaje, debunked the allegation that INEC planned to rig the election through the use of malfunctioned card readers. He said the problem had to do with the punching of the devices, which he described as a minor problem and not fraud. He said the commission had more than 250 spare smart card readers to replace the bad ones.
    Agbaje said wherever he received complaints about the card readers, he sent his men to rectify the error promptly. “I called on the Head of ICT to get smart cards for areas with smart card challenges and they were replaced instantly. Card reader is not a major challenge because it can be addressed within 10 to 20 minutes; we had over 250 smart card readers for exchange in case of malfunction.
    “There was no booth where election didn’t take place because of the card reader; it only delayed the process a little bit. In the 3,009 polling units, the units I was told that they had problems with card readers were not up to seven. Politicians are just making noise to cause unnecessary confusion. There was no place in the entire state where election did not hold because of the card reader, it was only delayed”.
    Agbaje said the card readers were not pre-loaded as alleged by the AD candidate. According to him, they displayed figures were not properly punched saying that nothing was designed to perpetrate any electoral fraud.
    Observers are worried that two years after the introduction of card reader , INEC is yet to perfect the operation and maintenance of the machine such that every election it creates moment of anxiety in the voting process. What should be done to improve on the application of card reader in election process.
    A lawyer and human right activist, Mr Monday Ubani is disturbed that INEC has not been able to find permanent solution to the problem of card reader failure. According to him, there is no election that people have not complained about the malfunctioning of the card reader.
    Ubani, the second National Vice President of the Nigerian Bar Association, pointed out that the card reader failure is not wide spread. it occurred in isolated cases in most elections since it was introduced. “Even though it is minimal, we have to correct the error, it is technological error; we should make it error-free even if we have to pay for it”.
    “Though the INEC procured the card readers from China nothing stops us from getting remedy through European technology. We should approach European countries that have the technical know-how instead of relying on China. I am not condemning Chinese technology but what I am saying is that we can get remedy on the card readers elsewhere, we should go for it.”
    To Professor Ayo Olukotun, we should find out the cause of card reader failure before we can proffer solutions. According to him, the problem could be from the manufacturer side or lack of organisational control or poorly trained INEC ad-hoc staff.
    Olukotun, who teaches Political Science at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, believes the ultimate solution to the problem of card reader failure is to embrace electronic voting as being practised in advanced countries.
    He said if we must avoid the embarrassment card reader failure cause us in every election, the way to go is electronic voting which will necessitate a review of the electoral act.
    But, an electronic engineer, John Ezechukwu said Nigeria lack facilities for electronic voting. According to him, the epileptic power supply would make non-sense of the electronic voting. Besides, lack of maintenance culture has always made it impossible for technological innovations to survive in Nigeria, he said.
    Ezechukwu sees nothing wrong with the card reader but lack of maintenance. INEC should not wait for another election to ensure the card readers are in perfect condition. It is a machine that must be serviced regularly.
    On his part, Dr Ajibola Basiru blamed the card reader failure on the lack of diligence preparation for election on the part of INEC. He said election is not an emergency thing, we don’t conduct election every day, it is periodical, INEC has ample time to prepare for any election.
    Basiru, a legal practitioner, advised the electoral body to always put in place quality control measures in terms of checking the card readers before the voting day to know those that are functioning and those that are not. Besides, the commission should engage in simulation ahead of election, he suggested.
    “Card reader is a simple machine, there is no complication. If INEC had prepared diligently they should have known the state of the card readers before deploying them to the field. Lack of diligence on the part of INEC is what is causing card reader failure. When the card reader failed in a polling unit where a major contender in an election is to vote, they accuse INEC of conspiracy to rig the election”.
    Youth activist AbdulKadir Musa observed that some of the ad-hoc staff employed by INEC do not know how to operate the machine either because they were not properly trained or they were incompetent to handle the new technology.
    Musa narrated his experience in the last Kogi governorship election at a polling unit where he voted. He said voters had queued as early as 7.30 a.m. to perform their civic duty.
    “The INEC officials opened the poll at 8 a.m. The card reader rejected the finger print of the first 35 people that presented their permanent voter’s cards (PVCs) for verification. The officials had to stop the election process until one of the INEC Information Communication Technology (ICT) personnel came to put them through. It was a minor error. It was discovered that the man operating the card reader didn’t know how to punch it. That was what made us to spend almost two hours on queue before we could cast our votes.”
    He advised INEC to give adequate training to its staff on the use of the card reader. It is not all of them that do not function, but for the ignorance of the operators. INEC, he said, should deplore excess card readers to the field in order to replace the non-performing machines.
    Proffering solutions to the problem of card reader failures, the President of Nigeria Voters Assembly (VOTAS) Comrade Moshood Erubami said with adequate and proper training of the handlers the equipment can improve for effective usage in future elections.
    Erubami said the card must not be left idle when not in use as it must be serviced regularly while it should not be kept in humid environment but kept in accordance with conditions stipulated in its manual.
    On the importance of the card reader, Ubani said it was an innovation that has sanitised our electoral process. “We should continue o use card reader. It has eliminated rigging to certain extent, particularly multiple voting. It has exposed the difference between the number of registered voters and the real eligible voters. For instance, about 1.5 million people would have registered in a state but when the election is held, you find less than 500,000 casting votes. May be, the others are ghost voters that could not come out for fear of being apprehended.
    Ubani said we should go fully technology in our election process; full scientific electoral process which is the trend in modern democracy. I know it has to be gradual because of the poverty of infrastructure like power supply; we shall get there, he stated.
    The youth activist observed that what made the last general elections to be adjudged free and fair by international observers was the use of card reader. “There was no room for multiple voting as it was the practice before then and if the data on your PVC do not correspond with those on voters’ register, you can’t vote and such person stand the risk of being arrested by the police to face criminal charges in the court of law. The politicians that encourage multiple voting have abandoned the course”.
    Musa noted that, where the card reader failed, the polling officer allow the voter’s to vote through the manual accreditation. This is on condition if the data on his PVC tally with those on voter’s register. He said INEC is improving in the use of card reader particularly in the just concluded Ondo governorship poll where cases of card reader failure, according to the resident electoral commissioner, were only experienced in only seven polling units throughout the state. INEC should continue to use card reader in future elections, he suggested.
    Aligning with the suggestion, INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner for the Federal Capital Territory Professor Jacob Jatau promised that the commission will continue to use the SCR in order to improve on our elections.
    Jatau said: “During the last FCT elections, we didn’t encounter much problems and we have kept on improving on the use of the card readers. We want to say that they have actually helped us to conduct these elections transparently and freely, so we will continue to use card readers so that we will be able to improve on our elections”.

  • 2019 elections: INEC to drop manual voting – Yakubu

    2019 elections: INEC to drop manual voting – Yakubu

    The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC may have decided to drop manual conduct of voting in 2019 general elections, it was learnt Tuesday.

    The commission, it was gathered plans to phase out manual conduct of elections in the country.

    INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu made the disclosure during a meeting with Executives of the Forum of State Independent Electoral Commission SIECs who payed  him a courtesy call at the Commission’s Headquarters in Abuja,

    Prof. Yakubu noted that commission was working assiduously to replacing the manual process with modern technology in the conduct of local in elections.

    He said, “We can no longer continue to conduct elections manually in Nigeria, we must introduce modern technology as being done in other countries, very soon the use of technology for the conduct of local elections in the Country will be mandatory

    “It will make the process transparent and very open as it should be, the use of smart card, otherwise known as Card reader machine has come to stay, though it requires a lot of resources, we see we can do it because it adds value and more credibility the electoral process in the country, some states have been using it in the conduct of their elections, we are seeing how we can make it to go round,” he added.

    He also assured the SIECs of the Commissions collaboration during his tenure as part of efforts to deepen democracy in Nigeria. “We will continue to collaborate and cooperate with SEICs and other Organisations in improving elections management in the country,” he added.

    Speaking earlier, the Chairperson of the Forum Mrs. Gloria Ukpong who is also the Chairperson of the Akwa -Ibom State SIEC said the forum can learn from INEC chairman.

    She said, “We all had great and beautiful memory under the former Commission and we want the relationship to continue. We can learn many things from the Commission under you and take them to our states. The introduction of Card reader at the National level is a welcome development one, only Sokoto State had implemented it, it allows for more transparency. If we use the same voters Registers to conduct elections at the State levels, why can’t we come together for discussion on how we can also be using the Card readers? It requires a lot of resources which the states may not be able to bear the cost.”

     

  • Card reader not a substitute for manual voting, says Supreme Court

    Card reader not a substitute for manual voting, says Supreme Court

    The Supreme Court has resolved the controversy over card reader and its status in electoral jurisprudence. It has held that the machine has not effectively replaced manual accreditation of registered voters in an election.

    It also said the card reader’s report alone was insufficient to prove allegations of over voting and non-compliance.

    The court is of the view that for a petitioner to prove electoral irregularities or non-compliance with the Electoral Act, he must call at least a witness from every polling unit affected, who must tender election results from the polling unit and be cross-examined.

    The court gave this explanation while making public its reasons for upholding the election of Dave Umahi as governor of Abia State in its earlier January 27, judgment. It gave its reasons on February 5 in the appeal marked: SC/1004/2015 brought against Umahi by Labour Party’s Edward Okereke.

    Okereke had, in his petition at the election tribunal, alleged non-compliance and over-voting. The tribunal and the Court of Appeal dismissed the petition on the ground that the petitioner failed to prove his case –  a decision the Supreme Court upheld on January 27.

    Justice Nweze said the apex court chose to uphold the lower court’s decision because Okereke failed woefully to prove his case. He noted that the appellant failed to tender, along with card reader reports, voters’ register.

    He said Okereke failed to call witnesses from each of the voting points affected, but merely dumped result sheets from the polling units on the trial tribunal without calling the makers of such documents as witnesses.

    Justice Centus Nweze, who read the lead judgment, explained that since the National Assembly has not deleted the provision of Section 49 of the Electoral Act (2010), which allows manual accreditation, it would be wrong for any petitioner to seek to rely solely on the report of the card reader (which is intended as a supplementary measure to the already provided means of accreditation) to prove over-voting.

    “Even with the introduction of the said device, that is the card reader machine, the National Assembly, in its wisdom, did not deem it necessary to bowdlerise the said analogue procedure in Section 49 of the Electoral Act so that the card reader procedure would be the sole determinant of a valid accreditation process. It stands to reason that the card reader was meant to supplement voters’ register and was never designed or intended to supplant, displace or supersede it.

    “Put differently, what the lower court was saying, in effect, was that the petitioner failed to prove his allegations of non-compliance because he did not tender the voters’ register, statement of results in the appropriate forms, which would  show the number of registered accredited voters and the number of actual voters; and he did not relate each of the documents (he tendered) to the specific areas of his case in respect of which the documents were tendered, and show that the figures representing the over-voting , if removed, would result in his victory,” Justice Nweze said.

    Justice Nweze’s position in the Okereke case was earlier taken by the court in its January 8, 2016 judgment in the appeal marked: SC/907/2015: Shinkafi and another vs Yari and others (over the Zamfara governorship dispute).

    Justice John Okoro, who gave the lead judgment in the case, noted that the grouse of the appellants was mainly that there was over-voting and that because of that there was substantial non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    “To prove over-voting, the law is trite that the petitioner must tender the voters’ register. The court must also see the statement of result in the appropriate forms which would show the number of registered accredited voters and number of actual voters, and  must also relate each of the documents to the specific area of the case in respect of which documents were tendered,”  he said, adding that an appellant must also show that figures, representing over-voting, if removed, would result in victory for the petitioner.

    “There is no doubt that a petitioner is entitled to contend that an election or return in an election be invalidated by reason of corrupt practices or non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act.

    “For a petitioner to succeed on this ground, he has to prove (a): that the corrupt or non-compliance took place: (b): that the corrupt practice or non-compliance substantially affected the result of the election.

    “There is need for a petitioner, who alleges over-voting to lead concrete evidence to show that there was indeed over-voting and that it inured to the winner of the contest.

    “Without doubt, over-voting in an election can be in favour of either the appellant, the respondent or other contestants, who participated and lost out at the election, but are not parties to the petition.

    “Therefore, the onus is on the petitioner to show that the over-voting was in favour of the respondent and that it was as a result of the over-voting that the 1st respondent won the election. This is why the law requires the petitioner to lead evidence right from the polling unit in order to show that the alleged over-voting was solely to the advantage of the respondent,” Justice Okoro said.

    Although many petitioners have complained abourt the inadequacy of time, lawyers have however agreed with the apex court’s position on the requirements of proof, but disagreed on the time limitation for the determination of election petitions.

    Joseph Nwobike (SAN) blamed the appellants for their failure to make strong cases before the court. Sebastine Hon (SAN) suggested a relaxation of the time limit for the determination of election petitions.

    Nwobike was of the view that the Supreme Court’s decisions so far amounted to an endorsement of INEC’s improvement in the conduct of election. He said the apex court deserved commendation.

    “To my mind, INEC did  a wonderful job in 2015. I say so because apart from being a voter myself, I participated in a number of election petitions, both those involving the National Assembly and governorship elections. So, I can say with all sense of responsibility that INEC did a wonderful job.

    “It is some of the tribunals and some of the panels of the Court of Appeal that were trying to confuse issues. But what the Suprme Court did was to validate what INEC did, in most cases, and to encourage INEC to continue to do a better job.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the card reader is not part of our electoral system as set out in the provisions of the Electoral Act. Card reader accreditation regime was introduced as an addendum. And the Supreme Court stated that point very clearly – to the effect that the none-use of the card reader cannot be used to support an allegation of the none-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    “The non-use of the card reader cannot, in any way, be a basis for an election to be nullified.  So, I think what the Supreme Court did is fantastic and we must continue to pray for them and to bless them so that they will continue to render good judgments in Nigeria,” Nwobike said.

    He disagreed with those who think the 180-day provision limits the opportunity for petitioners to prove his case. He argued that a serious petitioner should always maximize the time allocated to him.

    “The primary responsibility of proving allegation of commission of crime is that of the person who alleges. So, if you are a petitioner and the ground of your petition is that there were malpractices at the polling stations or voting points, it is your responsibility to prove. How you go about it is not the business of any person.

    “The time limit is sufficient. There is no time constraint at all. I was involved in it. In fact, some tribunals sat from 9am to 9pm, with only an hour break. So to suggest there was insufficient time is to beg the question,” Nwobike said..

    On his part, Hon argued that decisions reached by court of law are based on many factors, which include the quantum of proof (which is the most decisive of all the factors), the position of the law, and the idiosyncrasies of the Justices.

    “My experience shows that there could be public outcry against certain decisions, but when it comes to tendering of evidence and proving and disproving of facts, it is a different ball game. For instance, the court has held several times that, for you to prove electoral malpractices, you must  call witnesses from each of the polling units affected, either voters or people, who witnessed what you are complaining about.

    “What we have seen are instances where a petitioner calls just one witness to prove irregularities in several local governments or polling units. Clearly, that was insufficient.

    “In spite of public outcry, the Justices cannot use their private knowledge of certain facts to reach decisions. Connected to that is that precedents have been laid down. They have to follow these precedents, except they are formally invited to overrule themselves. In none of these cases have the Supreme Court been invited to overrule its previous positions on those issues.

    “Looking at the issue from the surface, one may query why it appears the Supreme Court is giving a stamp of authority to what INEC did. But you should know that what happens on the field is different from what happen in the courtroom.

    “Sometime, you could field your star witness and when he gets to the witness box, he messes you up.  He messes up the entire case. But, the man on the street, who did not know what happened within the courtroom, thinks that these things actually happened, why is this particular decision being reached this way?

    “So, that is the best explanation I can give. I do not think the Supreme Court has decidedly resolved to toe a particular line by refusing to remove a sitting governor, or so. I believe that when a strong case is made, the court will decide otherwise,” Hon said.

    On the argument that there is little a petitioner could do within the few days allocated to him within the 180 days the tribunal has to determine a petition, Hon argued for the need to review this provision to allow parties sufficient time to present cases.

  • Appeal Court: Faulty card reader can’t invalidate an election

    A faulty card reader cannot be a ground for invalidating an election, the court of Appeal in Lagos said yesterday.

    The court held that the Electoral Act (2010) as amended does not recognise the malfunctioning of a card reader as one of the factors that can lead to the nullification of an election.

    This, the appellate court held, is because the Electoral Act predates the introduction of the card reader.

    The Court of Appeal stated this in a verdict on a cross-appeal filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC) challenging parts of the Governorship Election Tribunal’s verdict in the case of Jimi Agbaje versus Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and others.

    APC  filed the cross-appeal  on two grounds. In the first ground, it said the tribunal erred in law when, having held that Paragraph 14 of Agbaje’s petition challenged Ambode’s nomination, went ahead to hold that it was a valid ground.

    The party said any complaint about a pre-election issue falls within the jurisdiction of the Federal or Lagos State High Court, therefore, the tribunal ought to have declined jurisdiction.

    The party also asked that Agbaje’s petition be struck out because its paragraph 13b which complained about faulty card readers did not qualify as a ground to challenge the April 11 election.

    The Court of Appeal, in a judgment by Justice Obande Festus Ogbuinya, resolved the first issue in Agbaje and PDP’s favour, and the second issue in APC’s favour.

    A copy of the judgment, delivered on August 26, was obtained by our correspondent yesterday. Other justices on the panel were A. J. Abdulkadir, Mohammed Danjuma, Emmenuel Agim and Saidu Hussaini.

    Agbaje, the PDP, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Ambode and the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) were the cross-respondents.

    The appellate court held that both the High Courts and the tribunal have concurrent jurisdiction over the issue of a candidate’s qualification/disqualification.

    Justice Ogbuinyi held: “The cross-appellant (APC) implored this court to declare the paragraph 14 a pre-election matter cognisable only in the regular courts because it alluded to 21 days notice decreed in Section 85 (1) of the Electoral Act. The cross-appellant made heavy weather of this point.

    “The paragraph 14 of the petition qualifies as a valid ground for querying the qualification of the fourth cross-respondent (Ambode) to contest the election.

    “The trial tribunal is the forum competens for the first and second cross-respondents (Agbaje and PDP) to ventilate their grouse on his (Ambode’s) qualification/disqualification. Put simply, the trial tribunal was clothed with jurisdiction over paragraph 14 of the petition.

    “In the end, I have no option than to resolve issue one against the cross-appellant and in favour of the first and second cross-respondents.”

    Resolving the second issue in APC’s favour, the appellate court held: “The paragraph (13b) displays a vitriolic attack on the irregularities germinating from the improper or non-use of the smart card readers in the polling units.

    “As it is, it has no life of its own as a ground. It endeavours to introduce the defects in the use of smart card readers. The evolution of the concept of smart card reader is a familiar one. It came to being during the last general election. On this score, it is a nascent procedure injected into our infant and fledgling electoral system to ensure credible and transparent election.

    “The extant Electoral Act (2010) which predates the concept (of card reader) is not its parent or progenitor. Since it is not the progeny of the Electoral Act, fronting it as a ground to challenge any election does not have its (the Electoral Act’s) blessing, nay Section 138 (1) of it.

    “Put simply, a petitioner cannot project the non-presence or improper use of smart card reader as a ground for questioning an election. It does not qualify as one.

    “On the whole, having resolved the two issues for and against the cross-appellant, the fate of the cross-appeal is obvious. It is partially-meritorious and succeeds in part. Consequently, I allow the cross-appeal in part.

    “Accordingly, I affirm the portion of the trial tribunal’s decision declaring paragraph 14 of the petition as competent and triable by it. I set aside its part of the decision which approved paragraph 13 (b) as a competent ground for presenting a petition.”

    The Court of Appeal had upheld the Governorship Election Tribunal’s decision which struck out Agbaje’s petition and upheld Ambode’s victory.

     

  • Faulty card reader cannot invalidate election – Court

    The Court of Appeal in Lagos has held that a faulty card reader cannot be a ground for invalidating an election.

    The court held that the Electoral Act (2010) as amended does not recognise the malfunctioning of a card reader as one of the factors that can lead to the nullification of an election.

    This, the appellate court held, is because the Electoral Act predates the introduction of the card reader.

    The Court of Appeal stated this in a verdict on a cross-appeal filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC) challenging parts of the Governorship Election Tribunal’s verdict in the case of Jimi Agbaje versus Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and others.

    APC had filed the cross-appeal based on two grounds. In the first ground, it said the tribunal erred in law when, having held that Paragraph 14 of Agbaje’s petition challenged Ambode’s nomination, went ahead to hold that it was a valid ground.

    The party said any complaint about a pre-election issue falls within the jurisdiction of the Federal or Lagos State High Court, therefore, the tribunal ought to have declined jurisdiction.

    The party also asked that Agbaje’s petition be struck out because its paragraph 13b which complained about faulty card readers did not qualify as a ground to challenge the April 11 election.

    The Court of Appeal, in a judgment by Justice Obande Festus Ogbuinya, resolved the first issue in Agbaje and PDP’s favour, and the second issue in APC’s favour.

    A copy of the judgment, delivered on August 26, was obtained by our correspondent on Monday. Other justices on the panel were A. J. Abdulkadir, Mohammed Danjuma, Emmenuel Agim and Saidu Hussaini.

    Agbaje, the PDP, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Ambode and the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) were the cross-respondents.

    The appellate court held that both the High Courts and the tribunal have concurrent jurisdiction over the issue of a candidate’s qualification/disqualification.