Tag: Inec

  • Senator Remi Tinubu overwhelmed by high turnout

    The senator representing Lagos Central, Mrs Oluremi Tinubu has expressed satisfaction with the large turn or of voters at her polling unit.

    Tinubu, who voted at Ward 9, Unit 34, Ikoyi arrived at the polling booth at 8.35 am while the INEC officials and voting materials berthed at 9.10 am.

    Read Also: Senator Tinubu opens library

    The senator she was not worried by the  late arrival of INEC officials because in 2015 voting didn’t start here until 12 noon.  She said after casting her vote at 10. 10 am that there was an improvement on the part of the electoral body.

    She thanked the voters for staying on the queue for  long time in anticipation of the arrival of INEC officials.

     

  • Kogi: Faulty card readers stall Gov. Bello’s accreditation

    Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State was unable to get accredited at his Agassa Uvete Unit 11 polling Unit, Okene LG, due to faulty Card Reader Machine.

    Bello who along with his wives, Hajia Rasheeda and Hajia Amina, stood on line for over an hour, while INEC officials went in frantic search for replacement, expressed  his disappointment at the development.

    Read Also: Why we dumped Atiku, PDP – Bello

    He however expressed the hope that his was an isolated case.

    “I am disappointed at INEC, and I hope my own is an isolated case,” he said.

    INEC as at the time of filing this story had secured a replacement, and the governor was able to cast his vote.

  • INEC clears Zamfara APC for 2019 polls

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared the All Progressives Congress in Zamfara State eligible to present candidates for the general elections, following a ruling by the Court of Appeal.

    The APC in the state had previously been barred from presenting candidates for the elections following the internal crisis in the party on account of which it could not carry out its primaries wihin the time span set by INEC.

    The Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja on Thursday overruled the lower court on technical ground.

    There had been two conflicting rulings from two courts of the same jurisdiction, one sitting in Zamfara and the other in Abuja.

    While the Zamfara court ruled in favour of the ruling party, the Abuja high court ruled against the party, which therefore forced INEC to take a decision.

    However, the Appeal Court ruling on Thursday has changed the narrative as INEC, in a statement signed by the National Commissioner in charge of Information and Voter Education Committee, Festus Okoye, said that the commiasion has complied with the court order.

    The statement reads: “The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has consistently maintained that it will always obey court judgments and orders.

    “ln the case of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Zamfara State. the Federal High Court Abuja and the Zamfara State High Court issued conflicting orders relating to the participation of the APC in the two strands of elections scheduled for 23rd February and 9th March, 20l9.

    “While the former ruled that the APC, having failed to conduct party primaries, could not field candidates in the said election, the latter decided that it could field candidates, having conducted valid party primaries.

    “However, the Court of Appeal, Abuja Judicial Division on 21st February 2019 set aside thejudgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja for “lack or want of jurisdiction on the part on the lower court.”

    “This, in effect, means that the Zamfam State High Court’s decision that the APC can field candidates for the National Assembly, governorship and State Assembly elections is the only valid and subsisting order.

    “Consequently, the Commission has today, in compliance with the said order, restored the APC to the ballot in the National Assembly, govemorship and State House of Assembly elections scheduled for 23rd February and 9th March, 2019. “

  • Cross River APC has no candidates, says INEC 

    Resident Electoral Commission in Cross River State, Dr Frankland Briyai, says the names of all candidates submitted by All Progressives Congress in the state are to be removed.

    Addressing reporters in an abrupt briefing in Calabar late Friday evening, he said this was pursuant to an order of court with suit number FHC/CA/CS/731/2018 between Godwin Etim John vs the APC and others.

    He said the logo and names of the APC would be retained pending the submission of the list of candidates by the Godwin Etim John led state executive by the national working committee in compliance with the order.

    Briyai did not entertain questions.

    Reading a statement, he said was from the Secretary of the Commission, Rose Orianran-Anthony, Briyai said, “The commission pursuant to the order of court in the above matter has directed that the names of candidates submitted by the APC for Governorship, Senatorial, House of Representatives and State House of Assembly for Cross River State be removed from the list of candidates for the election in compliance with the said order.”

    Reacting to the development, Director General of the APC campaign organization, Sir Maurice Effiwatt said, “It’s an open display of mischief compromise by the REC who is suppose to be an unbiased umpire. It’s also a desperate attempt  in a last minute effort to help the PDP. For us, it’s a failed attempt and our members will still go out and vote APC.”

  • INEC and conspiracy theories

    Nothing could be more inexplicable. Listen to the words of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) for Kwara State, Mallam Garba Mamdami, reportedly speaking in Ilorin on Wednesday before the commencement of the distribution of critical election materials from the office of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to Local Government Areas in the state. According to the REC, “The result sheets for Kwara were found in our FCT office in Abuja and they are going to be sent today. I will be here (CBN) till they bring it. Also the results sheet of Lagos was found here. I have sent it back, that of Lagos was also found in Nasarawa. You can see the reason the election was postponed”. It is of course reassuring that Mamdami said that the noted lapses had been corrected in the state and that the sensitive polls items were already being moved from Ilorin to the far flung Local Government Areas such as Baruten, Kaiama and Pategi as at Wednesday.

    However, against the background of these kinds of revelations across the country,  it is not surprising that assorted conspiracy theories have been espoused attributing the last ditch postponement of last Saturday’s presidential and national assembly elections till today to insider collusion by elements within INEC with external partisan interests to compromise the polls. In its immediate reaction to the postponement, for instance, the PDP and its candidate, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, alleged that INEC acted under pressure from the APC and the presidency whichallegedly envisaged the ruling party’s imminent defeat had the elections gone ahead.

    Another variant of this allegation was that the INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmud Yakubu, preferred to postpone the election rather than cave in to alleged pressure from some quarters to hold the exercise in a staggered manner purportedly designed to favour the ruling party. The forceful condemnation of the polls postponement by the APC National Chairman, comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the party’s National Caucus as well as the presidency, however, seriously weakens the plausibility of this thesis. For, they have remorselessly put down INEC as an epitome of organizational inefficiency and incompetence stressing that the electoral umpire had been provided with all the resources it required to deliver effectively on its mandate.

    Oshiomhole has vehemently interrogated the rationale for INEC to have waited till after 2am early on February 16, when most normal people would presumably be asleep, to announce its inability to conduct the elections despite assuring Nigerians virtually every day till then of its readiness for the exercise. And the Minister of State for Aviation, Mr. Sirika Hadi, has debunked the INEC Chairman’s claim that weather challenges were partly responsible for the logistical glitches experienced by the commission in delivering electoral materials to critical destinations on schedule by air.

    Given the colossal socio-economic and psychological costs attendant on the postponement as well as the grave damage once again done to the country’s international image, it is not surprising that President Muhammdu Buhari has stated unequivocally that the incident will still have to be thoroughly investigated after the polls. Indeed, the APC has gone on to allege not only that the main opposition party had penetrated and compromised critical operatives within INEC to help skew the election in its favour but also that the PDP had prior information about the impending postponement, a development which the ruling party insists caught it unawares.

    The onus is certainly on the ruling party to offer credible proof for its allegations. But then, since Atiku had alleged that INEC was pressurized by a jittery presidency to abort the polls from holding last Saturday, what explains the rather tame and seemingly kid glove treatment by the PDP of an electoral umpire it claimed worked in cahoots with the ruling party to truncate its envisaged electoral triumph through polls postponement? The PDP has inexplicably left the APC to vehemently take on INEC on this lapse as if the ruling party was the one in opposition!

    If the allegations by the APC are true, the ruling party must have naively discounted its own oft-repeated mantra as regards the capacity and desperation of corruption to fight back in the face of President Muhammadu Buhari’s unprecedented onslaught against the monster, a war that has claimed the scalp of many a top PDP big shot.

    Of course, one must sympathize with the INEC and its leadership who are operating in a perennially charged political atmosphere of intense competition for the economically beneficial control of state power, a struggle that is all too often difficult to differentiate from war. In such a context, critical state institutions such as electoral, judicial and electoral agencies tend to be inexorably drawn from their supposedly non-partisan heights into the political fray with unsavoury consequences for their credibility and integrity as well as the efficacy and stability of the political system as a whole.

    In the run up to this year’s election, it has hardly surprising that heavy weather has been made by the opposition of the presence of one of the 12 INEC national commissioners, Mrs Amina Zakari, within the top echelon of the commission. This is because of her purported familial relationship with President Muhammadu Buhari. It has not mattered to the critics that her membership of INEC predated Buhari’s ascension to power or that one electoral commissioner in a complex organization like INEC is unlikely to be able to do much to skew electoral outcomes without extensive internal collusion.

    Yes, there should be cause for worry if there is credible suspicion of external partisan interests having access to sensitive insider information through unscrupulous INEC functionaries who violate their oaths of office. But it would appear that the critics have been most unfair to Mrs Zakari after all. It is now obvious that officials from some other parts of the country play roles even more critical than that of this woman in the elections administration process.

    It is noteworthy in this regard that in the cause of investigating the logistical failures allegedly responsible for the postponement of the February 16 elections, the Directorate of State Services (DSS), controversially invited a number of top INEC Staff to interact with its functionaries, an invitation that was later stepped down obviously for political reasons. Those earlier invited include the Director of INEC’s operations and logistics department, Professor Okechukwu Ibeano, Director of Information and Communication Technology, Chidi Nwafor, Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Osaze Uzzi and the Assistant Director of ICT, Bimbo Oladunjoye.

    The allegation that an individual was specifically planted in INEC to manipulate election for some partisan interests certainly did not take into account the organizational complexities of INEC and the details of functional allocation of responsibilities down the line. Unfortunately, the critics are unlikely to apologize to Mrs Zakari. Sure, the commissioners and staff of INEC cannot be recruited from outer space. It is also impracticable to import expatriate functionaries from purportedly neutral international agencies to conduct elections in a country of the size and complexity of Nigeria.

    Functionaries of INEC will necessarily belong to specific ethnic communities, states, regions, religious faiths and cultural entities within Nigeria. They will as human beings and necessarily political animals also have their individual political views and inclinations. How do we then ensure that officials of this critical electoral umpire adhere to their oaths of office and perform their functions devoid of ethno-regional considerations, religious bias or political partisanship?

    First, the terms and conditions of service of such staff must be attractive and generous enough to reduce vulnerability to financial inducement to sabotage elections. Secondly, the cost of violating their oath of office and succumbing to primordial or financial considerations to manipulate elections must be raised to become exceedingly high. Proven cases of election rigging and manipulation at any stage of the electoral process must attract very severe consequence.

    Election rigging enables governments to come to power in utter violation of the genuine will of the people. It is an act of violence that is the equivalent of military coup. Those who indulge in the atrocity must do so fully aware of the dire consequences if they are caught. Only the most draconian measures can help to force our errant Nigerian political elite to embrace attitudes and values conducive to any true transition to modernity. This is why this column is not unduly perturbed at the thought of ballot box snatchers being shot on sight.

     

    Buhari, Atiku and election rigging

    PMB’s directive to the armed forces and security agencies to deal ruthlessly with ballot box snatchers during today’s elections has elicited outrage in some quarters. He has been accused of exhibiting disregard for the rule law and disdain for due process. His critics insist that the Electoral Act provides sufficient penalties for ballot snatching and other forms of election rigging, which is at least two years imprisonment. But if widespread ballot box snatching provokes large scale breakdown of law and order it may be impossible even for courts to sit to enforce the Electoral Act. Draconian measures are needed to bring about some sanity in this regard.

    In siding with critics of PMB on this matter, Atiku gives the impression that he will be soft on election rigging if he is elected President. This brings to mind Atiku’s recent stunning revelation in Lagos that as Vice President, he was the mastermind behind the massive rigging by the PDP of the governorship elections in the South-west in 2003, an onslaught which only Tinubu’s Lagos was able to understand.Unapologetic, Atiku had asked his audience to give him another opportunity to repeat history perhaps on a scale of grander atrociousness. Ballot snatchers will certainly not be unhappy with an Atiku presidency.

  • We’re ready for polls, declares INEC chair Yakubu

    The Chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, declared yesterday that the commission was ready for the election.

    Addressing a press conference alongside the Inspector-General of Police IGP), Mr. Muhammed Adamu, in Abuja yesterday, he said that all arrangements had been made for the commencement of the elections.

    Speaking on the readiness of INEC for the elections, Yakubu said the commission had concluded the movement of personnel and materials ahead of the polls.

    All arrangements, he further assured, were in place for the commencement of the elections.

    He said: “We have concluded the movement of personnel and materials to the 774 LGAs and 8,809 Registration Area Centres nationwide.

    “All arrangements are now in place to facilitate the opening of polls nationwide at 8 am tomorrow.

    “Citizens can obtain locational directions to their polling units by visiting gotomypu.ng.

    “They will access the locational name of their PU and a link to a Google Map that will lead them to the PU.

    “In the last 10 days, about 190,000 voters have utilised the various social media platforms to geo-locate their polling units.”

    The commission, he added, “has engaged 825,543 adhoc staff ranging from presiding officers to collation and returning officers.

    “We have mobilised about 80,000 commercial vehicles and about 996 boats for the deployment of personnel and materials, including 707,892 ballot boxes and voting cubicles, to various land and riverine locations.

    “We have accredited 120 domestic and 36 international organisations deploying a cumulative total of over 73,000 observers.”

    He, however, warned that any underage person caught trying to vote will be arrested, saying it is illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to vote in the elections.

    He urged Nigerians to report any underage voter noticed to security agents.

    Yakubu also warned that only INEC is empowered by law to declare results.

    He warned that there will be no voting without genuine Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    Read also: Mahmood’s thankless job and sore losers

    Also, the the IGP, Adamu, said election offenders will be arrested and prosecuted.

    Voting will take place in 176,973 locations made up of 119,973 polling units and 57,023 voting points.

    Seventy-three candidates nominated by their political parties are vying for the position of the president.

    Similarly, voters will elect 109 senators from 1,880 candidates and 360 members of the House of Representatives from 4,631 candidates.

    Elections will hold in 36 States of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja.

    The duo spoke yesterday at the last media briefing on the preparedness of the commission for the 2019 general polls.

    Speaking on the issue of underage voting, Yakubu warned that it is an illegality, stressing that any underage voter found will be arrested.

    He said: “Underage voting is an illegality because there is a statutory age for registration of voters.

    “But what you should do as a voter if on election day you find anyone that is apparently underage or conclusively so, kindly report this to any official of the commission or security agencies.

    “Working with the IGP, I say any underage person caught trying to be accredited for voting on election day will be arrested.

    “Voting is only open to Nigerian citizens who are of the statutory  age of 18. It is an illegality.

    “And let me seize this opportunity to warn those who sponsor underage persons to vote on the election day that they will be arrested.

    “And the good thing is that in the numerous elections that this commission has undertaken, we have never had any incident of underage voting.”

    On announcement of results, he said: “Only INEC is empowered by law to declare election results. I urge everyone to refrain from issuing any result.

    “The Commission will work assiduously to ensure that the collation and declaration of results are done at the various levels expeditiously.”

    Also, IGP Adamu assured eligible voters, observers and INEC officials of their security.

    Adamu stressed that no armed security personnel will be allowed at the polling units, hence no need for apprehension.

    He said: “Voting proper is taking place today. I have explained several times to Nigerians that the security of the electorate, the observers, INEC staff, electoral materials are all secured.

    “Maximum security is provided before, during and after the election.

  • INEC dismisses PDP allegation of hoarding electoral sheets

    The Independent National Electoral Commission  (INEC) on Friday dismissed an allegation by Peoples Democratic Party that it was hoarding some election materials.

    The Chief Press Secretary of the INEC Chairman, Mr Rotimi Oyekanmi, said the Commission would never deliberately hoard election materials or engage in any act intended to favour any political party or candidate.

    Oyekanmi said that in the last one week, INEC had mobilised all national assets to deliver various election materials, day and night, to various parts of the country.

    “While the Commission has experienced a few challenges in the process, which is normal with the logistical operation of this magnitude, we have largely overcome these challenges.

    “The Chairman of INEC, (Mahmood) Yakubu, has been briefing the nation daily since last Monday on the progress made.

    “I think that every well-meaning Nigerian will agree that INEC needs all the support it can get to organise a successful general election starting from tomorrow, Feb. 23.

    “We want to assure Nigerians who have shown a lot of support and understanding, especially in the last one difficult week, that the Commission will never deliberately hoard election materials or engage in any act intended to favour any political party or candidate,” Oyekanmi said.

    He urged Nigerian to feel free to vote for any political party or candidate of their choice and assured them that their votes would count.

    The main opposition party, PDP, accused the Commission of withholding sensitive election materials, including collation (form EC8D) and result (form EC8E) sheets in states considered to be PDP strongholds.

    The party made the allegation in a statement issued by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Kola Ologbondiyan, on Friday in Abuja.

    Ologbondiyan said that intelligence at PDP’s disposal showed that certain compromised INEC officials were working with agents of All Progressives Congress (APC) to hold back the materials to rig results for ÀPC on Sunday in the affected states.

    “For instance, in Abia state, no collation forms and result sheets have been received for the Senatorial elections, while no result sheets for all the elections have been received in Delta and various other states.

    “Also in Kano State only 105 Senate result sheets have been received in Garko Local Government Area instead of 144 .

    Read also: One person dies as Ogun SSG survives auto crash

    ” Rogo LGA has received 106 Senate result sheets instead of 141; Danbatta has received 28 cartons of House of Representatives ballot papers instead of 29, while Tofa LGA has received 18 cartons instead of 19.

    “This scenario is playing out in many other states,” he said.

    Ologbondiyan urged the INEC chairman to immediately release the materials to their designated points, saying PDP would never allow anybody to use any means to rig it out in the elections.

    “Yakubu must note that this serious infraction is already heightening tension and would eventually lead to serious crisis in affected states ahead of the elections, if nothing was done to stem the trend,” he warned. (NAN)

  • State of The Nation: There will be massive voters turnout – Eriye

    Political analyst and Sunday Editor of The Nation Newspapers, Festus Eriye, joined by Senior Correspondent Dare Odufowokan to discuss, the rescheduled 2019 election, President Muhammadu Buhari, ballot box snatching, INEC, Mahmood Yakubu, PDP and APC.

  • The Touchstone: Bad weather saved Nigeria from compromised polls – Sam Omatseye

    Political analyst and Chairman, Editorial Board of The Nation Newspapers, Sam Omatseye, joined by Member, Online Editor, Sunday Oguntola to discuss the 2019 General election, Democracy in Nigeria, President Muhammadu Buhari, INEC, PDP, APC, Corruption in Nigeria, Atiku Abubakar, Ballot box snatching.

  • Elections begin by 8am, INEC assures

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has assured Nigerians and the international community that it has concluded arrangements to commence elections by 8am on Saturday.

    INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, gave the assurance on Friday in Abuja while addressing a press conference on the commissions preparations for the presidential and National Assembly elections.

    Yakubu said that the commission has concluded the deployment of sensitive and non-sensitive materials to the 774 local government areas across the country.

    “We engaged 825,543 ad hoc staff ranging from presiding officers to collation and returning officers. We have mobilized 80,000 commercial vehicles and about 996 boats for the deployment of personnel and materials.

    “The materials include 707,892 ballot boxes and voting cubicles, and we are mobilizing these to various locations by land and sea.

    “We have accredited 120 domestic and 36 international observer groups, deploying accumulative number of 73,000 observers.

    “We have concluded the movement of personnel, materials to the 774 local and 8809 RACs nationwide.

    “All arrangements are now in place to facilitate opening of polls at 8 a.m. on Saturday,” he said.

    He said that measures were also in place to combat vote buying and other electoral malpractice.

    He said that the national situation room would open at 6 p.m. on Friday, while the national collation centre would also be opened at 6 p.m. on Sunday, both situated at the International Conference Centre (ICC), Abuja.

    The chairman advised eligible voters to visit gotomypu.ng to obtain location to their polling units, saying in the last 10 days about 190,000 persons had utilised the commission’s various social media platforms to geolacate their Polling Units.

    He said that the election would be by simultaneous accreditation and voting system, and that only registered voters with Permanent Voter Cards would be allowed to vote.

    “As we go to poll tomorrow, I appeal to voters to be peaceful and orderly before, during and after the elections.

    Read Also: ‘We have confidence in INEC to conduct polls’

    “The police working with other security agencies have assured us of adequate security for voters, electoral officers, observers and the media.

    “May I also appeal to all to ensure compliance with the usual restriction of movement for those who are not observers or on essential dut,” the chairman said.

    Yakubu also urged members of the public to desist from issuing any results of the elections, saying only INEC was empowered by law to declare results.

    “The commission will work assiduously to ensure that collation and declaration of results are done at the various levels expeditiously.

    On his part, the acting Inspector General of Police (I-G), Mohammed Adamu, reiterated that maximum security would be provided before, during and after the election.

    Adamu said that the security personnel at the polling units would not be armed and there would be no need for apprehension while the election is going on.

    “We have some group of people who might want to disrupt the election we have put in place strategy to stop that.

    “We have tactical units of our personnel and other services that will be patrolling everywhere to ensure that the process is not disrupted.

    “The patrolling personnel will be armed and will deal with anybody who wants to disrupt the process in the course of the election,

    “If any electoral offence is committed, we will work with the INEC officials to apprehend the culprit and set up investigative team headed by Commissioner of Police in charge of legal Unit to investigate the cases and prosecute them.

    “Be it vote buying, ballot box snatching, be it thuggery, if you commit that, you will be arrested and prosecuted.

    “After the voting, movement of electoral materials to the collation centre will be protected. Armed security personnel will be posted to the ward collation centres.

    “Even when the results are announced, those people who are planning to disrupt the process, we have put strategies in place to prevent that,” he said.

    The IG said what was required from all Nigerians was to go out peacefully, cast their vote and wait for the announcement of the results.

    “If you have no business on the Election Day if you are not an accredited official, please don’t come out.

    “All the accredited officials whether domestic or foreign observers must carry their tags. You can move freely and be protected.

    “If you identify anybody that wants to infiltrate you and claim to be an observer for a group, we will appreciate you exposing such a person for us to remove him or her from your group,” Adamu said.

    The national election will hold in the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. Voting will take place in 176,973 locations, made up of 119,973 polling units and 57, 023 voting points.

    The elections will be to elect a president from the 73 presidential candidates, 109 senators from 1,820 senatorial candidates and 360 House of Representatives members from the 4,631 candidates contesting in the election.

    NAN