THE Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal has begun committal proceedings against Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Mahmud Yakubu for disobeying its judgment directing the commission to issue a certificate of registration to Young Democratic Party (YDP) as a registered political party as at May 2, 2015.
Form 49 has already been issued against the INEC Chairman Prof. Mahmood Yakubu by the appellate court asking him to show cause why an order of committal to prison should not be made against him.
The party is pressing for an order committing Yakubu to prison for refusing or neglecting to obey the order of the Court of Appeal dated December 8, 2015, affirming and confirming the judgement of the trial court delivered on March 4, 2015 and dismissing the appeal by the electoral body.
The court has fixed June 19, to hear the committal proceedings against the INEC Chairman.
Tag: INEC Chairman
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YDP: Appeal Court begins committal proceedings against INEC Chairman
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INEC inaugurates Election Project Plan Committee (EPPC)
The Independent National Electoral Comission (INEC) has inaugurated the Election Project Plan Committee (EPPC).
The Commission also approved the 2017 – 2021 Strategic Plan for immediate implementation, following its validation by stakeholders.
The committee which is headed by Prof. Okechukwu Ibeanu, National Commissioner (Chairman) is charged with the responsibility of coordinating all Departmental and State inputs into the planning of elections.
The committee is also charged with the responsibility of monitoring the performance of the two-year budget estimates for the general elections, identify gaps and advise the Commission appropriately.
Other term of reference include, Produce a comprehensive, costed Election Project Plan (EPP) for the Commission’s approval; Ensure the integration of the EPP and the EMS for effective implementation and monitoring; and to Provide quarterly progress report on implementation of the EPP up to the Election Day.
INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu at a brief ceremony to inaugurate the Committee, yesterday tasked the members to immediately devote themselves to ensuring that the 2019 general elections are better than the previous ones. He also charged them to commence the implementation of the Strategic Plan 2017 – 2021 and to ensure the actualization of all its envisaged goals. He proclaimed that with the inauguration of the Committee, and the approval of the Strategic Plan, the Commission “is now in an election mode.”
Chairman of the Committee, Prof. Okechukwu Ibeanu while thanking the Commission for the opportunity to serve, promised that the members would immediately devote themselves to the onerous task of making the 2019 general elections a successful one. He said the members regard the assignment as a great honour and privilege for which no stone will be left unturned to achieve the Commission’s goals.
Other members of the Committee are: Dr. Adekunle Ogunmola, National Commissioner, Engineer Abubakar Nahuche, National Commissioner, Prof. Bolade Eyinla, Chief Technical Adviser to Hon. Chairman, Prof. Mohammad Kuna, Special Adviser to Hon. Chairman, Mr. Rotimi Lawrence Oyekanmi, CPS to Hon. Chairman, Prof. Abubakar Momoh, Director General, Electoral Institute, Mr. A.T Yusuf, Director, Operations, Engr Chidi Nwafor, Director ICT, Mr Iro Gambo, Director, Voter Registry, Mr Aminu Idris, Director, EPM, Mrs. Oluwatoyin Babalola, Director, Legal Services, Mrs Ruth Endeley, Director, Estate & Works, Mr Oluwole Osaze-Uzzi, Director, Voter Education & Publicity, Mr. Kenneth Ukeagu, Director, Procurement and Mr Ndeche Okechukwu, Director, Planning & Monitoring (Secretary)
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No electronic, diaspora voting in 2019 elections – INEC
The Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) on Monday ruled out electronic and diaspora voting in 2019 general elections.The electoral umpire told the Senate that until the Constitution was amended and necessary logistics put in placed, the commission cannot delve into electronic and diaspora voting.It said that electronic and diaspora voting do not only lack constitutional backing but were also expensive to execute.The commission said that work was in progress to develop a strategic plan with a view to coming out with the financial requirements for the 2019 poll and other pending elections including the Anambra governorship election and Anambra Central Senatorial District by-election.INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, stated this when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Finance to defend the commission’s 2017 budget.The committee had demanded to know the preparedness of the commission ahead of the 2019 general elections.A member of the committee, Senator Yakubu Abubakar, wanted to know if INEC would key into the reported breakthrough of by the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure, (NASENI), in the invention of electronic voting in the 2019 general election.Professor Yakubu noted that since the news of the electronic voting machine invention came up, he had not been either formally or informally informed by NASENI.The INEC boss said that even if he was formally informed, to adopt electronic voting in the election, the possibility would not be feasible because the device should be tested to certify the efficiency.He added that the device should also be produced in large quantity to cover the country’s numerous polling units.On whether INEC would incorporate diaspora voting in the election, the INEC boss answered in the negative.He said that there was no provision for diaspora voting.Yakubu noted that for INEC to adopt the system the constitution needed to be amended to give it legal backing.He also said that the cost of running the method was very high.The INEC boss said that adopting the method at this time of economic recession occasioned by the problem of currency exchange rates would deeply and negatively affect the country’s finances.Yakubu noted that for the past three years, INEC’s annual budget had stood at N45 billion.He said the commission was yet to know how much the 2019 general election would gulp.The commission, he said, was already embarking on a strategic plan with a view to coming out with the actual financial figure the 2019 elections and others would cost the country.He said that INEC’s purse had been deeply drained following “unscheduled elections” in the last one year caused mainly by deaths of 13 national and state assembly members.He said, “For instance, in the last one year, we have conducted 13 unscheduled by-elections caused by deaths of some members of national and state assembly, meaning that on the average, a member of the national or state assembly dies every month. ”Chairman of the committee, John Owan Enoh, explained that the purpose of the session was to avail federal government agencies that come under statutory transfer the opportunities of interacting with the committee on their revenue framework before approval for their various committees. -

Edo poll: We don’t envisage any problem – INEC
…Says election going to be historic
With all the arrangement put in place ahead of Wednesday’s governorship election in Edo state, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has said that it was not envisaging any problem that could lead to an inconclusive election.The election which was earlier scheduled for September 10th was however postponed on the advice of the security agency to Wednesday.
Speaking to our Correspondent, Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, Mr. Rotimi Oyekanmi said report from all quarters have been encouraging, despite the allegations by both parties.
Oyekanmi also based the confidence of the commission on the assurances from the security agencies that Edo election will be historic.
He said, “My dear brother, by the special grace of God there shall be no incident that will lead to inconclusive election. We have assurances from security agencies. The Nigerian police has promised to deplore 25000 men and they also have other agencies that are also co tributing men for the purpose of the election and I believe in the new commissioner of police in Edo, who gave assurances yesterday that they will decisively deal with anybody that tries to engage in any act that is capable of derailing the election in all the 18 local government areas of the state.
“And so far we have not seen any intention of from the political gladiators to cause mayhem. There has been exchanges here and there, allegations and also of that, but we hope that this will not degenerate.
“From the point of INEC, we have prepared for this election since March, remember that September 10th was the initial date, and we were for the advices from security agencies that persuaded us to postpone the election.
“So we are really keen and hoping that as I speak, a lot of deployment is going on, a lot of personal and materials deployment. We are monitoring everything in real time and there had been no problem and I hope that tomorrow we will have a fantastic time and it will be a historic election. So we don’t envisage any problem.”
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Amended electoral law ready before 2017, says Saraki
- Inconclusive elections to end next month-INEC boss
Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, Monday gave a matching order to the Senate Committee on Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that all amendments to the 2010 Electoral Act are concluded before the end of 2016.
Saraki’s directive came even as INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, assured that all pending inconclusive elections would be concluded before the end of next month.
Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, on his part canvassed that institutionalization for early and direct primaries by political parties to make the country’s electoral process more credible and to deepen her democracy.
Saraki, Yakubu and Ekweremadu spoke at a summit on elections with the theme “Legislating for electoral reform” organised by the Senate Committee on INEC.
The summit specifically seeks to amend the 2010 Electoral Act (as amended).
The Senate President noted that the necessity to end amendment to the Electoral Act before 2017 was informed to ensure that the amendment did not run into the electioneering period.
He noted that it becomes more difficult to amend the Act at the period of politics.
Saraki said: “I have given the matching order that we must conclude the amendment on or at the end of the 2016. My view is that once politics starts it becomes more and more difficult to amend the Act. Especially these days that politics starts early, it is my expectation that by the end of 2016 we shall have amended the Electoral Act.”
He said that the country’s electoral successes in the last general election has created the impression that “we have achieved electoral universality and integrity, but recent events and emerging issues have served as a reminder to us that there is still a lot of work to be done.”
Describing the retreat as both timely and critical, Saraki said that the Senate should be aware that more than ever before the Nigerian people wanted a responsible government whose fate, they alone can determine.
“It all starts with having a virile electoral system with impeccable integrity and universal application must be the minimum standards. We must fashion out an electoral scheme that does not disenfranchise any Nigerian, one that does not have room for ballot tampering and manipulation.
“Electoral process must become routine and inviolable. This is attainable. The current National Assembly is poised to provide the missing gaps through its legislative interventions but we will be best served with the advice coming from your recommendations through the committee,” Saraki insisted.
He asked the committee to consider the demand of Nigerians in the Diaspora to be included in the electoral process and the germane issue of the voting opportunity of IDPs and people living in severely challenged hard to reach areas either due to security or other unforeseen challenges.
He added, “It will be important to take another look at the role of our security personnel from the Police, to the Department of State Security and the Military. This is especially so in the light of certain revelations to the effect that the previous government had signed into law an amendment to the Electoral Act empowering the military to be used during elections for a variety of reasons.
“It should be borne in mind that the Electoral (Amendment) Act, 2015 had in fact made far reaching amendments on the role of the Police before and during elections especially the issue of holding of rallies and meetings by political parties (S.94) and the role and operational deployment of the Armed Forces during elections (S.29). These provisions were designed as an attempt to ensure the democratic character of free and fair elections.”
He said that the retreat will be expected to deliberate on and come up with a clear direction for the Senate on issue of the card reader and the desirability or otherwise of using the card reader exclusively for accreditation and voting in the electoral process.
He also talked about a framework for Independent candidature – how best to operationalise and ensure that no candidate is placed in a vulnerable or compromised position by a party or external factors but rather ensure that the electoral system provided to all equal access and a chance to aspire as they deem fit.
According to Ekweremadu, late conduct of primaries by political parties owing mainly to constitutional restrictions posed serious challenges to the electoral system, while the parties’ penchant for indirect primaries had undermined internal democracy in the political parties.
Stressing the need for Nigeria to learn from international best practices, Ekweremadu said: “In the United States of America, presidential primaries for presidential candidates start about 12 months to the election, culminating in the convention, which is usually a celebration of an already known candidate of the party.
“In Ghana, although neither the Constitution nor the Electoral Act gives any specific period for the conduct of presidential and parliamentary primaries, individual parties have provisions in their respective constitutions for early primaries.
“For example, Article 11 (2)(b) of the NPP Constitution provides that “parliamentary candidates shall be elected at least twelve (12) months before the National General Election” while Article 12 provides that the party’s primary election for the nomination of the presidential candidate shall be held not later than twenty-four (24) months from the date of the national elections”.
He described the benefits of early primaries as manifold.
He said early primaries would allow the winning candidates in the early primaries the foothold to raise sufficient campaign funds for the larger contests.
He added: “Early primaries afford parties and candidates the time to visit every part of the country/constituency.
“It also allows them to initiate and shape the national conversation about their identity and future direction, defining ideologies and manifesto.
“Early primaries will help the judiciary to conclude all pre-election litigations and assist the election management body to have ample time to plan and deliver credible elections”.
Ekweremadu further argued that with early primaries, “resources expended on conduct of bye-elections over the fielding of the wrong candidates or omission of candidates will also be drastically reduced”, adding that knowing early enough whether they have their parties’ tickets or not would also enable elected political office holders to plan ahead for life after their tenure.
The lawmaker, who also canvassed staggered primaries, said that holding primaries in different states on different dates for presidential aspirants, for instance, would “allow the optimization of the use of resources such as security forces and increases the possibility of closer scrutiny and transparency and management”.
On the imperatives of direct primaries, Ekweremadu regretted that while Section 87 (2) of the Electoral Act provides for the nomination of candidates by political parties for the various elective positions through direct or indirect primaries, parties had always favoured indirect primaries, which, according to him, were less transparent, participatory, and democratic.
To this end, he suggested the amendment of Section 87 of the Electoral Act to make the conduct of direct primaries compulsory for all political parties, noting that presently, mandatory direct primaries only apply to the election of councillorship candidates.
While further noting that direct primaries were the sure way of “returning power back to the people, Ekweremadu also said “Such would ensure that the process of nominating candidates is credible, transparent, fully participatory, and democratic as well as reduce electoral disputes within the party and restore confidence and internal democracy”.
Prof, Yakubu cited some challenges confronting INEC since the 2015 elections as part of the reasons for the .inconclusive elections.
The INEC boss also noted that said since the conclusion of the 2015 general election, the electoral empire had conducted a total number of 129 elections including 49 rerun elections out of the 80 nullified polls by elections petitions tribunals; 10 bye-elections in various constituencies resulting from the death of members of state and national assemblies; 68 elections in Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and two end of tenure elections in Kogi and Bayelsa States, among others.
He said that 23 election certificates were withdrawn in accordance with court rulings and such certificates re-presented to rightful winners of elections in both the Senate and House of Representatives.
He canvassed the need for an amendment to the 2010 Electoral Act with a view to ensuring that candidates whose elections are nullified as a result of improper nominations by their parties should have their certificates re-issued to the runners-up.
Doing so, he said, would save the nation the huge cost of conducting fresh elections in such circumstances.
Prof. Yakubu urged the committee to ensure the inclusion of card readers in the Electoral Act ahead of the conduct of the next general elections.
Such provision, he said, should also cover the use of other forms of technology to enable INEC have the full fledged power to deploy any technological innovation it deems fit without any legal hindrance.
The INEC boss who accused political parties of compounding electoral challenges by failing to properly nominate candidates, recalled how some elections were cancelled because parties nominated ex-convicts, under-age candidates, certificates forgers, among other renegades in the country.
In the same vein, he asked the National Assembly to consider an amendment which will name a specific candidate to inherit the result of an election if a candidate at an election dies before the announcement of election result as was the case in Kogi State following the death of All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Abubakar Audu, at the November 2015 Kogi governorship election.
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Buhari writes Senate on INEC chairman, commissioners
President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday wrote the Senate over the appointment of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu and INEC commissioners.
The President asked the Senate to confirm the appointments.
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INEC CHAIRMAN No PVCs distribution in Ijoko-Ota
I AM writing this to complain that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is not distributing the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) in Ijoko-Ota, Ogun State.
People daily trooping to an office at Reverend Gabriel Onifade Street in the town to collect their PVCs are always disappointed. They go to the office with enthusiasm, thinking they will collect their PVCs, but return to their homes in sorrow for not getting them.
The INEC must swing into action by starting to distribute the PVCs in Ijoko-Ota.
We need the cards to vote. We should not be disenfranchised. The INEC must handle this case with care.
Akin Idowu,
Ijoko-Ota,
Ogun State.
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Jega and security
We support the call by the INEC Chairman that hooded men have no place during elections
Professor Attahiru Jega’s assurance that never again shall the “unknown security official” be a feature of the nation’s electioneering process comes as a soothing relief. As the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) pointed out, the practice in the recent Osun State governorship election was a deviation from the norm and an attempt to rob the process of transparency, fairness, honour and integrity. These are qualities every electoral system is expected to have to be adjudged in line with global standards.
Following the Delta Central Senatorial election and the Edo and Anambra governorship polls, the electoral commission had come under heavy criticisms by domestic and international observers, the media and political activists, for falling short of expectations. As usual, materials arrived late at the polling units, officials were poorly trained and remunerated, while INEC officials were easily compromised by desperate politicians. The commission then promised to return to the drawing board before the Ekiti and Osun polls.
As key stakeholders have pointed out, the commission largely lived up to its promise in conducting the elections in Ekiti and Osun states on June 21 and August 9, respectively. Yet, it was pointed out that there was confusion in coordinating the activities of security agents drafted for the assignment, while some displayed open partisanship. The three arms of the military- the Navy, Air force and Army were made to send troops, while the Police and Nigeria Civil Defence Corps also deployed officers, men and materials, ostensibly to ward off trouble makers.
For the first time in the history of elections in the country, the Department of State Security (DSS) also played a visible even if detestable role as its men were seen menacingly armed and pointing guns at innocent citizens. Worse still, the men were masked, thus making it difficult to differentiate them from hoodlums who could have procured the military uniform. The use of hoods, now common with the Boko Haram insurgents, was first noticed as some gun-toting men accompanied the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) candidate on his campaign. It was condemned. But, the practice continued as, a few days to the election, some of the men were seen at the Osogbo Township Stadium where they refused organised Labour that had booked its use for a rally entry.
Then, on Election Day, some men wearing masks turned up at strategic nooks and crannies of the state, threatening the same peace they had apparently been deployed to secure. In a nocturnal raid on the eve of the Osun election, prominent members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) had also been picked up for no justifiable reason, with some released three days after the election. In none of the abductions was any reason adduced for the action.
The defence put up by the service’s spokesperson, Ms. Marilyn Ogar, is not only ludicrous but an indication that the high command might have instructed the men on the field to align with a particular party. Her linking the APC to attempted rigging is an indication that she knew more than she volunteered and her men would gladly do anything to pervert the process. This trend must stop.
The introduction of hooded security men on Election Day is a dangerous development as we earlier pointed out in an editorial after the election. It is commendable that Professor Jega has come out boldly, not only to condemn the development but assure that the commission would not accept them for future elections.
We call on the INEC chairman to insist that the security functions during polling can only be coordinated by the commission. This is the practice in many parts of the world today. Part 1, Paragraph 15 of the 1999 Constitution as amended saddles the electoral commission with the power to “organise, undertake and supervise all elections to the offices of the President and Vice President, the Governor and Deputy Governor of a state, and to the membership of the Senate, House of Representatives and the House of Assembly of each state of the Federation.”
We also call on the National Assembly to accord priority to reforms needed to restore honour to the electioneering process. Six months to the 2015 general elections it is to be noted that the needed fund, legislative cover and administrative rules should be made expeditiously available to empower INEC perform its role without fear or favour. The electorate needs time to get familiar with the rules and the terrain.
Hooded security men must be removed from the scene; the military has no business participating in elections. It is a civil responsibility with which the Police and Civil Defence should be saddled while the military men should be left with tackling the more damaging threat posed by the Boko Haram insurrection.
