Tag: elections

  • ‘Elections, opportunity for youths to make impact’

    Founder of the All Blending Party (ABP) Archbishop Samson Benjamin has called on youths to consider the elections as an opportunity to make positive impact.

    Benjamin spoke at the opening of the party’s secretariat in Badagry Local Government, Lagos State, and unveiling of its candidates from the area.

    The party chieftain lamented that the country had been recycling old politicians and sidelining youths.

    He said: “This country has been bedevilled with recycling the same kind of people in the political arena. What happens to the generation who they are depriving?

    ‘’What the younger generation needs is somebody with a sacrificial heart, devoid of a selfish interest, who will fight on their behalf and bring them together to reclaim what has been taken from them.

    “ABP is not out to do magic at the governorship or centre, but we have a vision to grow the young people, and concentrate on certain areas as Badagry, which we know we’ll conquer.

    ‘’They should give the young people an opportunity. Fresh blood has to be injected into the system, people that have not been there before, people with a lot of energy, that have passion, who have been through what the older generation have consciously and deliberately put them in.

    Read also: Man to die by hanging for killing Okada rider

    “It’s pathetic in a country as ours that we still use money to buy votes. That’s to tell you that the people’s hearts and choices are not what they express. They are voting based on the desire to feed and survive.”

    Benjamin reiterated that ABP was out to correct past mistakes, and it deliberately gathered young and energetic candidates to be part of leadership to contribute meaningfully and ensure development for the people and their communities.

    “Many of those ruling are from the analogue generation, it’s time to give way for the digital generation to step in and hasten development,” he added.

    The governorship candidate, Idowu Sesi Michael, said: “The youth and every community here are fed up with the old people. That’s why you see them turned out here en masse to support the party.”

    He called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to strengthen the electoral process by preventing rigging and ensuring that every vote counts.

  • Elections: Don’t nominate partisan academic staff, Yakubu urges vice chancellors

    •INEC to screen lists of academics before deployment 

    INDEPENDENT National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Mahmood Yakubu has urged vice chancellors not to nominate partisan academic staff for deployment in the forthcoming general elections.

    The commission has already requested each university for a specified number of academic staff. A letter to that effect, Yakubu said, has already been sent to the vice chancellors.

    Since 2011, the electoral body has been engaging the services of the academic community in the collation and declaration of election results across the country to give more credibility to the electoral process.

    This year’s general elections will involve the highest number of registered voters, which stand at 84,004, 084. Ninety-one political parties will be vying for elections and 73 candidates will be contesting for the presidency. Also, 1,904 candidates are gunning for the senatorial seat and 4,680 for House of Representatives.

    Hence, the collation of results will take place in 8,809 registration areas and wards, 774 local government areas and 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). The commission, therefore, requires some 10,603 staff to support the various collation and declaration of results.

    At a meeting with the Committee of Vice Chancellors in Abuja, Yakubu said it would have been difficult for the commission to conduct credible elections without the involvement of the tertiary institutions.

    The INEC Chairman said: “Without the involvement of our tertiary institutions, especially the universities, the commission will find it extremely difficult to conduct credible elections,” he said.

    Consequently, the INEC boss said the academic staff that will be deployed for the elections must not be partisan. This, he said, was crucial to the credibility of the elections.

    “As in previous elections, we have requested each university for a specified number of academic staff as contained in my letter to the Vice Chancellors. Staff, who are card-carrying members or have participated in partisan politics should not be nominated.

    “Similarly, those who may not be involved in partisan political activities, but are known to have obvious political leanings should not be nominated.

    “The commission will carefully scrutinise the lists, which must be submitted confidentially in the manner prescribed by commission in my letter to the vice chancellors.”

    Yakubu stressed that for the polls, the commission would draw the required collation and returning officers for governorship and presidential elections.

    The forthcoming general elections, he said, will hold in 1,558 constituencies across the country.

    The INEC Chairman noted that the presidential and National Assembly will hold in 991 state constituencies and 68 area councils.

    Reacting on behalf of the vice chancellors, Prof. Kyari Mohammed of University of Yola assured the country and INEC that the academic community would not let the country down.

    He noted that the vice chancellors were committed to the Nigeria project and would ensure the success of the country’s democratic process.

    “We will give you all the support that you will need for a successful conduct of the 2019 general elections,” he assured INEC.

    Executive Secretary, Nigeria University Commission (NUC) Prof Abdulahi Rasheed noted that it was “important that vice chancellors act with integrity”.

    He warned that if any vice chancellor misbehaves, it would affect the credibility of the country’s academic community.

    He warned them not to allow any academic staff to lobby them for nomination.

  • Elections: Clerics urge youths to shun violence

    Youths have been urged to shun violence before, during and after the 2019 general election.

    Most Rev. Obafemi Adeleye, who gave the advice yesterday while addressing reporters in Yaba, Lagos, ahead of his enthronement as the first Archbishop of the newly-created Archdiocese of Lagos Mainland tomorrow, said youths should not allow themselves to be used by unscrupulous politicians to foment trouble, in order not to disrupt the elections.

    He said: “We should allow peace to reign in the country. Election is not a do or die affair. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should ensure a free and fair poll devoid of controversies. It should improve on its performance in 2015.

    “In Methodist Church Nigeria, we empower our youths to dissuade them from crimes and reduce the rate of unemployment in our society.”

    The cleric said Archdiocese of Lagos Mainland was carved out of Lagos Archdiocese to further boost evangelism and spread the good news, adding that creating the new archdiocese was normal and indicated progress and development in the work of God.

    According to him, in the last five years, not fewer than six of such archdioceses had been created.

    “Besides my enthronement on Saturday by the Prelate Methodist Church Nigeria, Dr. Samuel Kanu Uche, the respected man of God will also inaugurate Archdiocese of Lagos Mainland and present the Lay President of the archdiocese, Sir Benjamin Oshadiya,” he said.

    Rev. Adeleye said other officers of the archdiocese would be dedicated at the event.

     

     

  • Elections: waterways remain safe, navy insists

    The Nigeria Navy (NN) has said it was keeping watch on the seas and creeks to ensure they remained safe ahead of the elections.

    The NN added that several vessels have been arrested and a criminal international syndicate which specialised in hijacking vessels dismantled.

    Commander of the Nigeria Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT, Rear Admiral Goerge Eyo, stated this at a thanksgiving for his promotion. Eyo said the NN was resolute in keeping away pirates and other criminals who might want to use the waterways to forment trouble for the country.

    According to him, various operations were being “because it is our duty to do so, operations against maritime illegality are the mandate of the base.”

    Eyo said: “Maritime crime is not peculiar to Nigeria alone. It happens all over the world and in my command, we have made lots of arrest. That is why you not hearing anything about criminals on the sea.

    “We have been arrested many of these bad guys and they are being questioned while some have been charged to court. Some of these guys belonged to an international network from Senegal to Gabon. We have been able to arrest a lot of these people and this will deter others.”

    Eyo added that one of the legacies he would leave behind are efforts made to address the perennial Apapa gridlock, saying that a permanent solution was possible but will require drastic actions from political masters.

    “Ending the gridlock will mean moving against so many factors. I have developed a blueprint and presented to the Governor of Lagos State and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) too,” he added.

     

  • Is judiciary ready for 2019 polls?

    In Nigeria, elections usually end at the tribunals. With the general elections around the corner, is the judiciary ready for the disputes which may arise therefrom? ROBERT EGBE asks.

    THE elections will start on February 16 with those of the President and the National Assembly.

    Governorship and State Assembly/Federal Capital Territory (FCT) council elections follow on March 2.

    The presidential contest will pit President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC) against no fewer than 13 other candidates. His main challenger, however, is former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    According to analysts, so far, electioneering has been heated, but largely non-violent. They submitted that a credible vote would strengthen democracy.

    But they warned that a tight contest followed by controversial election tribunal rulings could fuel events that would test the country’s stability, especially where such decisions conflict with legal precedents.

    Election-related matters are usually contentious and are often considered and treated by politicians and other stakeholders as do or die.

    To some, the bitter exchanges between party loyalists and claims of fake news and hate speech are signs that the elections will be contentious.

    A January 3 report by Time Magazine listed the polls among the five global elections to watch this year. The others are in India, Israel, Ukraine and the European Union (EU), where parliamentarians would be elected.

    On December 15, the United States Government expressed fear that the elections might be marred by violence.

    It noted, however, that the public disturbance that the elections would cause might not be “large-scale nationwide conflict” but “localised violence.”

    The US Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of African Affairs, Tibor Nagy, made this known in his presentation at the US Congress hearing on Nigeria’s forthcoming elections in Washington DC.

    Nagy said: “I can tell you from my impressions during my travels and my previous service in Nigeria that I fear there will be some violence around these elections, as has been the case with previous elections.

    “I do not anticipate large-scale nation-wide conflict, but rather localised violence. We are already seeing increased tensions and polarization as the election approaches.

    “We assess that politicians are turning to narratives of identity politics in an attempt to improve their popularity, with potentially serious consequences for national unity.

    “However, Nigeria’s political system and society have weathered such tensions before.”

    INEC’s alarm

    On January 18, last year, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Mahmood Yakubu said the commission was hamstrung by conflicting court orders.

    He told the Chief Justice Walter Onnoghen that the commission was served with six conflicting judgments and orders from courts of coordinate jurisdiction within a short period of three months in 2016, during the PDP leadership crisis.

    Yakubu said: “Similarly, the commission was confronted by conflicting pronouncements by the lower courts on matters already decided by the superior courts, including the Supreme Court. This is making the work of the commission very difficult and creating unnecessary negative publicity perception for INEC and, I must say, the judiciary as well.”

    INEC’s Director, Legal Services, Mrs. Oluwatoyin Babalola noted several cases where lower courts failed to be bound by decisions of superior courts or their own decisions on similar facts.

    Babalola observed that in Labour Party vs. INEC (2009), the Supreme Court decided that where an election was nullified on the ground that the winner of an election was not qualified to contest the election, the disqualified candidate and the political party that sponsored him are not allowed to participate in the fresh/re-run election.

    But Hassan Abdullahi v. Abdul Ogwu Alhassan, as well as Idoko Moses Ododo v. Oshodi Isaac Ausa, both delivered on January 2, 2016, the Court of Appeal nullified the election of the disqualified candidates and ordered INEC to conduct fresh elections with the same disqualified candidates and their political parties.

    Babalola said: “Where the courts depart from precedents, it creates uncertainty as to the state of the law and consequence of particular conduct. Where courts of coordinate jurisdiction give conflicting decisions/orders, it can lead to disobedience of court orders, cause confusion in the polity and to the Election Management Body.”

    ‘Deluge of litigations’

    According to the Yakubu, INEC has been subjected to more litigations than any public institution.

    He said within two years (2016 and 2017), the commission was involved in 1,134 court cases, comprising 454 outstanding cases and 680 determined cases, arising from the 2015 general elections.

    In the party primaries of the 89 registered political parties contesting next month’s general elections, the commission said 396 petitions are already pending in court.

    At a two-day training workshop for INEC correspondents in Abuja, the INEC chair described the primaries as most acrimonious in the nation’s recent history.

    He said apart from the 396 petitions filed, INEC had also received 302 requests for Certified True Copies (CTCs) of reports of party primaries and copies of personal particulars of candidates.

    Yakubu added: “These requests are obviously a prelude to more court actions. In addition, we have also received 52 petitions and protests from aggrieved party aspirants.”

    Election tribunals

    As in previous elections, the courts, beginning with election tribunals, will play a major role in resolving election disputes.

    Their role is as defined in the Electoral Act, 2010 (As amended), which provides that appeals arising from governorship and presidential elections terminate at the Supreme Court while the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly appeals also end at the Court of Appeal except where they are pre-election matters.

    Section 134(2) and (3) of the Act provides a 180-day time limit for election petitions to be concluded, while similar provisions are contained in Section 285(6) and (7) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

    Section 285(6) reads: “An election tribunal shall deliver its judgment in writing within 180 days from the date of the filing of the petition.”

    Subsection (7) provides: “An appeal from a decision of the election tribunal or court shall be heard and disposed of within 60 days from the date of the delivery of judgment.”

    Following the 2015 polls, the judiciary set up 110 Election Petitions Tribunals manned by 255 judges.

    Seven hundred and forty-nine appeals emanated from the tribunals’decisions, while the Abuja division had an additional 75 appeals in the year 2016/2017.

    Seven hundred and thirty of the petitions from the 2015 polls were heard by the Court of Appeal.

    They consisted of 39 governorship elections petitions, 79 Senatorial petitions, 179 House of Representatives and 380 State Houses of Assembly petitions.

    In addition, 32 election petitions were filed in 2016 which included Bayelsa and Edo States and other re-runs, and 21 petitions were filed in 2017, including Anambra State governorship and other reruns.

    Judges’ work suffer for election duties

    Following their appointment to hear election petitions, judges will shoulder these extra duties for almost three months.

    One implication of this is that it might slow work in the judges’ courts, thus swelling backlog of cases.

    This is a cause for concern because in some court jurisdictions across the country, 10 to 15 year-old cases are still on the cause list.

    Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President Paul Usoro (SAN) noted this last September 24 at a special Supreme Court session to mark the beginning of the 2018/2019 legal year.

    He said apart from the expected election-related appeals. “There is still a huge backlog of appeals, mostly civil appeals that are pending before Your Lordships. We note with deep appreciation, Your Lordships’ efforts, notably in the last Legal Year, to clear the deck of these backlog of matters. But then, the pile still remains.

    “We know that there are still appeals pending before Your Lordships that were filed in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 – appeals that remain outstanding for more than 10 years. When this time-span is added to the time span that it takes for the appeals to journey from courts of first instance to Your Lordships, then the delays in our judicial process becomes quite pronounced, frightening and discouraging not only to litigants but also to the Bar and other stakeholders in the justice administration sub-sector.”

    What should the judiciary do?

    Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen, the NBA and other members of the Bar have suggested ways to help the judiciary better cope with elections fallout, backlog of cases and judicial delays.

    The CJN also recently met with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof Mahmoud Yakubu, where he assured him that the appellate system of the judiciary will serve to correct anomalies created by lower courts in election petitions.

    According to him, conflicting court orders were bound to arise as a result of multiple court cases filed by politicians at different courts, which were bound to have different facts and interpretations by judges.

    ‘Judges must stick to judicial precedents’

    The CJN also warned judicial officers against giving decisions on election petitions that conflict with legal precedents.

    Justice Onnoghen, who spoke at a recent training for justices of the Court of Appeal, said judges must stick to the principle of stare decisis, i.e. the legal principle of determining points in litigation according to precedent.

    The CJN noted that there is a need for re-orientation of judges’ attitudes towards their obligation to stare decisis, “thereby creating a legal environment built on certainty of the law’’.

    He added: “On judicial precedents as it relates to election and pre-election matters, I want to remind us that the Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases that the principles of judicial review, such as Mandamus, Certiorari, Prohibition, etc, do not apply because election and election related matters, such as pre-election causes are suis generis (of its own kind).”

    ‘Professionalism, integrity required’

    According to the NBA, judges must maintain standards of professionalism, if the judiciary is to successfully weather the coming electoral storm.

    Usoro noted that judicial pronouncements in contentious and difficult political appeals “in no small way worked to maintain the peace and cement the unity and indivisibility of Nigeria, our great country’’.

    “Riots, unrests and political chaos in different parts of our Federation have been averted consequent upon Your Lordships’ decisions and pronouncements in some of these matters.”

    “These are very weighty responsibilities and functions which Your Lordships continue to carry out and fulfill selflessly and without any self-adulation or self- exaltation’’.

    According to him, the Bar and other Nigerians “expect Your Lordships to maintain, in the coming National Election season, the standards of decorum, professionalism, discipline and integrity that have always been the hallmark of Your Lordships and also ensure that those standards percolate to and are fully and strictly replicated by Their Lordships of the lower courts’’.

    Usoro advised: “Any judicial officer that is found wanting in that regard, we respectfully posit, must be swiftly and decisively punished and routed out from the pack of judicial officers.”

    ‘Prioritise digitalisation’

    Prof. Yemi Akinseye-George (SAN) urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) to prioritise the digitalisation of courts to reduce delays.

    “Court digitalisation must be a matter of priority. Locally developed software for e-recording of courts should be deployed. This will enhance speedy dispensation of justice as judges can have access to e-recorded proceedings both audio and video.

    “It will also help to address the problem associated with de-novo (repeat) trials following transfer of judges, death, promotion or retirement,” Akinseye-George said.

     

     

  • Elections: There’ll be surprises in 2019 – Ituen

    Popular cleric and spiritual leader of the Christ Deliverance Ministries Inc. (CDM) Lagos, His Grace, Prophet Ekong Ituen, has predicted that President Muhammadu Buhari will be re-elected in 2019 on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). The seer, who had predicted some national events correctly in the past, in this impromptu chat with Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, also made some other political predictions as regards the next general election. excerpts.

    YOU have predicted election results in the past with some degree of accuracy. What do you see happening in 2019 in the presidential race?

    Let me start by telling Nigerians that election result will spring surprises but in my revelation, it has been established that President Muhammadu Buhari of All Progressive Congress (APC) will win 2019 presidential election. You may not like him but that is the truth. I therefore urge the religious leaders in the country to refrain themselves from making inflammatory utterances that promotes conflicts and disunity because God gives power to whoever He pleases.

    But many are saying President Buhari has nothing to offer again if elected for a second term. Do you agree with this?

    The second coming of President Buhari on the platform of APC will be traumatic for looters, as he is going to be ruthless in fighting corruption. He will also revisit the issue of power infrastructure because of the inefficiency in that sector that has hindered the expected economic growth. Furthermore, I foresee heads rolling in the power sector, as Buhari will look into the fraudulent way privatization process was carried out, some licenses might be revoked. In furtherance to my earlier prediction, former President Olusegun Obansanjo should be prayerful, he may go back to jail before he dies.

    Do you belong to any political party?

    No, absolutely no. I am very neutral and a spiritual father to all. I am a messenger who conveys message from God to humanity and Nations. A true Prophet should not be seen as being partisan. I advise our leaders to see prophecy as a warning and a clue to the plan of God which can be prevented if the right steps are taken. Prophecy should not be seen as hatred or criticism but as part of intelligence reports because even in the bible God used Prophets to warn leaders of impending crises and defeat.

    What don you have to tell politicians across the country as the election draws nearer?

    The politicians should not consider politics as a do-or-die affair because whatever anyone becomes in life is exclusively in the hands of God. I urge them not to overheat the polity on account of their desperation to get elected. Similarly, Nigerians should take note that the following governorship candidates will win in their respective states;  Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, David Umahi of Ebonyi State, Abubakar Bagudu of Kebbi State and Nsima Ekere of Akwa Ibom State. State.

    Let it be on record that though Adebayo Adelabu of Oyo State will win his first term in office, I am led by the spirit of the living God to inform him that he may find it difficult to make it for second term. In another development, Governors Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu State and Samuel Ortom of Benue State need fervent prayers to avert impending defeat. It should be noted that the second term ambition of the incumbent governor of Delta State, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa, is very dicey.

    The political crisis in your home state is worrisome. Your take on this.

    I want to simply appeal to the gladiators in that state by repeating what I have said before. This is a warning from God to all those seeking power and position in 2019. They should not see the next general election as a do-or-die affair because whatever anyone becomes in life is exclusively in the hands of God. I urge them not to overheat the polity on account of their desperation to get elected.

    Let me also add without fear that to the best of my knowledge, that Senator Godswill Akapbio is a natural giver, an ardent advocate to the poor. I am impressed by the veracity of his generosity. It must be noted, that one of the cardinal attributes of our Lord Jesus Christ is love, which Senator Akpabio has demonstrated. It is my prayer that, others should emulate him because God takes pleasure on those who practises love and kindness.

  • Elections: CAN declares Jan 10 national day of prayers

    PRESIDENT of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), the Rev. Samson Ayokunle yesterday declared January 10, 2019 as national day of prayers for free, fair and credible election. The prayer session, Ayokunle said, is also for the freedom of Leah Sharibu and others in the captivity of the Boko Haram terrorists. CAN disclosed that the prayer will be organised in Abuja and all the State capitals nationwide between 11:00 in the morning and 2:00 in the afternoon.

    A statement issued in Abuja by the acting General Secretary of CAN, Joseph Daramola said: “Christian politicians especially those contesting for any of the elections, all Christian groups or organisations and all stakeholders are invited to participate in the programme. CAN urges all Christian groups, denominations, churches,blocks and leaders of CAN or their representatives to assemble at the National Christian Centre, Abuja on 10th January for this all important prayer meeting.

    “All Christian candidates for all the elective offices or their representatives are also invited as they will be prayed for to be good ambassadors of Christ before, during and after the election. CAN asks all State Chairmen and all denominational leaders to organise similar programme and Christian candidates who could not make it to  Abuja, especially those who are contesting for State Assembly or positions of Governor to attend the one being organised at the State level.

    “We are to pray for all Christians contesting for one post or the other for the will of God to be done concerning their ambition. That the powerful in our nation will not be able to manipulate the election and edge them out. We will also pray for all captives in the den of the terrorists like Leah Sharibu and the Chibok girls, to be set free immediately. That the general election should be free, fair and credible. That it should be violence – free and without any bloodshed.

    “That God should use the process to give the country good and godly leaders at all levels. That every evil plan against Nigeria be frustrated. That 2019 should be a New Dawn for Nigeria. That God should stop all groups behind the killings in Nigeria and their financiers. We urge you to please attach utmost importance to this prayer programme for 2019 elections.”

  • ‘Don’t compromise your assignment in the elections’

    The General Officer Commanding (GOC) 6 Division, Port Harcourt, Gen. Jamil Sarham, has warned officers and men not to get involved in next year’s elections beyond their statutory duties.

    Gen. Sarham gave the warning at the weekend when he unveiled a 25-bed space structure and gunboat built by the Commander of Sector 3, Operation Delta Safe (OPDS) at Okrika in Rivers State, Ismailhil Oloyinde.

    The GOC said the military’s role in the exercise had been handed down to them, and so officers should not go beyond ensuring a secured environment for successful elections. He insisted that any personnel, who violates the mandate, would be sanctioned.

    He said: “Let me remind us that as 2019 is approaching, and our roles are spelt out, the Army must remain apolitical, non-partisan and neutral, and only provide a conducive, secure atmosphere for the election.

    “Let me warn officers and men of 6 Division to steer clear of partisan politics; you must concern yourself only to your assigned duties; you must not compromise your position under whatever guise.”

    Gen. Sarham praised Oloyinde for the initiative and lauded his foresight to motivate troops to do better in their assignment.

    He added: “Soldiers will want to perform, but if you want them to perform ultimately, take time to take care of their welfare and you will get the best of them.  I think the outgoing commander of Sector 3, Ismailhil, understood this very well, and that is why he took up the giant project to make sure that they have a place to sleep when they are on transit.”

    Oloyinde said he took the step of improving on the four bed-space accommodation he inherited from his predecessor to motivate the troops to better service delivery.

    “The mandate of OPDS is to protect oil and gas infrastructure and deter militancy, sea robbery, crude oil theft and other forms of crime within the JOA that could impact negatively on economic activities in the Niger Delta.

    “The attainment of this mandate, among other factors, is incumbent upon rapid deployment of professionally-responsive and motivated personnel in a conducive environment for administrative and operational exigencies.”

  • Reflections on Nigeria’s past national elections

    Nigeria has had series of elections both at its pre and post colonial existence as a country. The first countrywide election in Nigeria was the 1954 federal elections into then House of Representatives in Lagos, then capital of the country. The country was under British colonial rule and the system of government was the Westminster parliamentary system. The total number of seats in the House of Representatives was 184 and  the election was contested by three main parties, the Northern Peoples Party (NPC),  the National Council of Nigerian Citizens and Cameroons  (NCNC) and the Action Group (AG). The standing of these parties after the election showed that the NPC and its allies had 79 seats , the NCNC and its allies had 61 seats and the AG and it’s allies won 33seats. After the results were announced, the NPC from the north subsequently formed a coalition government with  the NCNC, while the Action Group became the opposition party. This election which was conducted by the colonial administrators was deemed to be fair with little acrimony although the elections were held at different days in each of the component regions of the country.  In the election, the NCNC won in the West which was the stronghold of the Action Group.

    The 1959 federal elections into the federal House of Representatives was keenly contested as this was the election to usher in the country’s independence on October 1960. The leaders of the NCNC, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe and the leader of the Action Group, Chief Obafemi Awolowo decided to leave their bases in the south to go to the federal level in Lagos. They both took part in this federal election with their desire to become the first prime minister of  an independent Nigeria. The Sardauna of Sokoto, the leader of the NPC did not leave his base, thus leaving the federal level to his deputy, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa. Both  the southern leaders especially Chief Awolowo campaigned vigorously in this election. Chief Awolowo toured all the four corners of the country in an helicopter and for the first time election campaigns were reluctantly allowed in the  far northern part of the country whose populace was then  under tight control of the Emirs.  At the end of the elections, the southern leaders could not achieve their ambition because the NPC which was northern-based won the highest number of seats because more than half of the seats in the House of Representatives was in the north dominated by the NPC. The final results showed that the NPC and its allies won 148 seats, NCNC and its allies 89 and the Action Group despite its vigorous campaign and well articulated manifestos could only win 75 seats with its allies. Again, the NPC and the NCNC formed a coalition government in which Balewa, the deputy to Sarduna became the prime minister of the independent Nigeria while Azikiwe became the ceremonial Governor-General. Awolowo who had the best plan of all the three had to settle for the position of Leader of Opposition.

    The 1964 federal election to the House of Representatives which was the last election held the parliamentary system in the country was held  when Nigeria was under intense political turmoil as a result of the dispute of on the released 1963 census figures. Added to this,  there were political upheavals in the Western,  Middle Belt and Niger Delta parts of the country. The parties coalesced into two main groups, United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA) and Nigeria National Alliance (NNA). The UPGA was made up mainly of NCNC  and the NNA made of NPC , MDF, and  the newly formed NNDP in the west. The elections were held on December 30, 1964 in the northern  and western parts of the country. However, it was boycotted in the Eastern and  Midwestern  parts  of the country as a result of the call by UPGA party which controlled these parts of the country  on that day. Elections were later held on March 18, 1965 in these parts and when the dust settled, the results showed that the NPC again had the highest number of seats, by winning 164 of the total 312 seats, while the NCNC, NNDP and Action Group won 84, 36 and 21 seats respectively. The conduct of the elections showed that political party could only boycott an election at its own peril as it has no legal basis.

    Although a broad based national government was formed after the election, the political violence and instability continued in the country unabated and eventually led to the incursion of the military into the country’s governance for the first time in 1966. This unfortunate incursion with its attendant stunting of democratic growth lasted lasted for a little over 13 years. During this unforgettable period, the country suffered a debilitating civil war which shook the country to  its foundation.

    The long stay of the military in the governance of the country did not dent the enthusiasm of Nigerians for participatory democracy. Immediately the ban on politics was lifted by Obasanjo military administration, Nigerians entered the political fray with eagerness and presidential system of government patterned after the USA system was introduced. The presidential election to usher in this new political dispensation was held on August 11, 1979.  The result of this election which generated a lot  of controversy is still reverberating in our country up till today.  Under the Nigerian constitution, to be elected as the president of the country on the first ballot, the candidate need to have the highest votes and to receive 25% of votes in 2/3 of the states . At the time of this election in 1979, Nigeria had 19 states. Although Shehu Shagari of the NPN had the highest votes (5.6 million) and had at least 25% in 12 states, he could only muster 19.9% in  Kano State, the 13th  state and he was declared the winner of the election. Awolowo who came second with 4.9 votes felt that Shagari could not be declared a winner because he did not get 25 % of the votes in 13 states and subsequently challenged the declaration of Shagari as the president-elect in the court. The Supreme Court ruled in favour of Shagari who was subsequently sworn in as the first executive president.

    The presidential election which followed in 1983 ended in a fiasco. It was characterized by massive rigging by NPN, the ruling party. As a result,  the military again came back to govern the country with the then General Muhammadu Buhari as the head of the new military government in January 1984

    The military administration of General Babaginda which came aboard in 1985 decreed into existence in October 1989  two parties wholly run and financed by the state. The parties so decreed were the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the National Republican Convention (NRC) . These two parties  contested the presidential election of June 12, 1993 and the SDP candidate, Chief M.K.O. Abiola,  Muslim with his Muslim vice-president  Baba Gana Kingibe won the election convincingly. Abiola’s  team won 58% of the votes while his opponent Alhaji  Tofa won 41% of the votes. The votes obtained by Abiola cut across ethnic, religion, and geographical boundaries. It was the freest election ever conducted in Nigeria and it was a glorious moment in Nigeria’s march to a respected democratic country. Unfortunately, this unique election was annulled  without any sane reason on June 24, 1993 by General Ibrahim Babaginda.

    The crisis generated by this unfortunate annulment of the freest election ever conducted in the land led to series of political events that culminated  in the  emergence of the sadist  Sani Abacha as the Head of State from 1993 to 1998. General Abdulsalam Abubakar who took charge after the demise of Abacha ushered in the present democratic dispensation in 1999.  In the present exercise, the country has witnessed five presidential elections in 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, and 2015. The People Democratic Party (PDP) won the elections in 1999 and 2003 with Chief Olusegun Obasanjo as its presidential candidate. The 2007 election was also  won by party with Umaru Yar’dua as the presidential candidate. Yar’dua  unfortunately died in his office and his place was taken by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan his vice president, who won the election as the party’s candidate in 2011. The party met its waterloo during the 2015 presidential election when its candidate Dr. Goodluck Jonathan was beaten by Buhari the candidate of the then newly formed All Progressive Party (APC).

    The result of the 2015 presidential election in Nigeria where an incumbent president was beaten by the opposition candidate  was unique not only in Nigeria but  in the whole of Africa. There was heightened tension in Nigeria during and after this election but Jonathan to his eternal credit diffused the tension by conceding victory to Buhari even before the final results were still being  collated. By this action, Jonathan had his name cast in gold not only in Nigeria but throughout the world as a true democrat, who should be emulated by  the sit-tight dictators who dominate governance in Africa now.

     

    • Professor Lucas writes from Old Bodija, Ibadan.
  • Elections, interference and migrations

    In  his new  book  on conceding power  in the 2015 Nigerian presidential  elections,  the gallant loser former President Goodluck Jonathan accused  the former US President Barak  Obama of interfering in the election with his body language in wanting the opposition to Jonathan  to win. That  too, obviously was one of the serious  and patriotic  reasons  that  made  the losing president to make the phone call  that sealed  his place in history  as  a peaceful  and loving Nigerian  leader, and the first  to lose power and transfer it peacefully  after losing  an election.

    Subsequent  events in both the US and  elsewhere  have shown  that Obama’s role in Nigeria was not an isolated event or  peculiar  to our shores. The successor to Obama, President Donald  Trump  is fighting for the  life of his presidency over allegations and investigations by the Mueller Probe that  Russia intervened in the US 2016  presidential  elections in a way  that helped  Trump  defeat his Democratic Party  opponent  Hillary  Clinton.  Of  course  Trump is furious and unrelenting in denying any  such claim shouting each time that the probe was a witch  hunt  and  there  was  indeed  no collusion. Trump  is  in  his third  year in office and he is stoutly denying collusion with  Russia  because his legitimacy is at stake.

    Equally,  the legitimacy  of the Buhari Administration  could be at stake  over  this unsubstantiated  claim of a loser getting wise after the event  and seeing  the  gloom  of defeat in a different light on the eve of another election in which he is trying frantically, like a sinking man grasping at a straw, to save the fortune of his party  the  PDP  in the coming 2019 presidential elections. The peaceful  transition  leader  should be brought back to earth  with statistics  and  media  reports  that  showed clearly that on the  eve of the 2015  elections,  massive  insecurity  and blood curling  terrorism typified  by  a boisterious Boko Haram assault, lack  of electricity  and incompetence to find  the Chibok girls  had made the PDP government  of  President Goodluck  Jonathan one of the most  hated  and incompetent government Nigerians    had ever  seen    or  experienced,  and its reelection  or  even un electability was a forgone conclusion that  needed  no foreign prodding from Obama’s American  government.

    Again  that is not to say  that  elections  are  simply national issues  nowadays. Far  from it,  and it  is  becoming  even easier to interfere  in elections  and blame Face  Book  or  social media for something that is a creation of technological innovation and creativity. For example  US  President Donald  Trump  has turned twitter into a potent weapon of both domestic and diplomatic politics for both policy making and adversarial campaigns against  both  real and potential opponents and  this  helped  the Republicans to increase  their  majority in the senate  in the last November 16  Mid Term elections in the US.

    More  ominous  however    is  the use of elections to  explain a naval and diplomatic  tussle between Russia  and Ukraine  this week  by the ubiquitous Russian President Vladmir  Putin  who  cheekily said Ukraine President  Poroshenko  is trying to escalate  an incident in which Russian  navy  ships rammed Ukrainian vessels  it said violated its sea borders  and territory,  thus violating Russia’s territorial integrity.  President  Putin  of  Russia  said that  his Ukranian counterpart  President  Poroshenko  is trying to divert attention away  from  his unpopularity at home in the next presidential elections slated  for March  2019  in  Ukraine. The President of Ukraine on his part  has asked the  EU  and  NATO  to deploy their ships in the waters between Ukraine  and Russia to deter  further Russian  aggression. Undoubtedly  the  Russian president  is enjoying himself  at the expense of international  law  and order in the way he  has attacked Ukraine  and gone on to  brazenly    suggest  an electoral  excuse for Ukraine in defending its territorial  integrity on international  waters in consonance with the Law  of the Seas.

    Putin  had said Russia interfered in the US 2016  presidential elections against Hillary  Clinton  because  she was Secretary  of State  in 2011  when the US  sponsored  protests  against  his election for  president in Russia  and that  the 2016  hacking in favor of Trump was  a retaliation against  the Democratic  Party presidential  candidate.  Which  boils down  to a tit  for tat  or what  the  Israelis  call an eye  for an  eye, which  is the law  of Moses.  Yet that has not  brought  peace or  security  to the  any nation      more  especially  Jews either in history  or even in modern times.

    Indeed  according to  new  reports including a CNN survey  this week Anti  Semitism  is on the rise in  Europe  and the US  and  even  in Germany which  is  Hitler’s  nation in which 6m  Jews  were eliminated in the Holocaust. In  Germany, Holocaust  denial  is a punishable crime.  But  nowadays Anti  Semitism  in the west  comes from  two  major  angles. One is  from those in Europe and US who feel  Jews  are  running  western civilization  to the detriment  of other  whites,  which  was what Hitler whipped  up  leading to the Holocaust. The  second  is  the Anti Semitism  of  Arabs and migrants  in EU nations and US  against  the  state  of Israel  and the denial  of Palestinian rights  and nationality  by the state  of Israel.  Yet  paradoxically it was Angela Merkel  the German chancellor  – who  was blamed by Trump  especially – for allowing over 1m Arab refugees into  Germany in 2015  that  her opponents claim will not integrate  – but threaten European  security.  Angela  Merkel had  since paid  a steep electoral price for what  was  an  act  of mercy  and has even lost  her leadership of  Germany as she has said she would not seek  reelection to her office again. But  then  the EU  and  the rest of Europe  and even  the US except  its president must  acknowledge  that  the migration  issue  is the issue  of the day polarising their  people  and  reinventing  nationalism  and populist leaders  like Trump  and the leaders in Poland, Hungary, Czech and  Slovak  Republics.  Some  have claimed it is at  the heart of even Brexit.

    In  a pragmatic  sense  however  what  is unsettling Europe is  also not far  from Africa. Angela Merkel  visited Nigeria, Kenya  and some  African nations in the hope of giving economic aid so  that Africans will  not flee their nations and risk  dying on the Mediterranean  and high seas  to  Italy,  where they  are not wanted on their  way  to  Europe.  Incidentally our  own  version of EU  migrants’ fear is the resort to ethnicity and tribalism  in the competition for power in 2019.  The  Igbos now  look to  the PDP  and Peter Obi  who is the presidential  running mate to the PDP presidential  candidate. The  Yorubas  as we have seen are following the APC  and  Buhari  because  you  don’t bite the finger that feeds you. Both  are a mixture of nationalism  and  populism  the  two ideologies bedeviling  western  civilization at the moment. Yet  in colonial  times we were  told that tribalism or  love of the nation state,    was abhorrent. Nowadays  it is the vogue in both former colonial  and colonized  nations. Once again  long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.