Tag: Inec

  • Emi la ni yo si (Why won’t we gloat?)

    Ara san, ategun fe, iji ja ko gbe wa lo o ye ka dupe- translated loosely, this means it thundered, winds roared, but here we are, standing. God be praised. Hallelujah!

    I am writing this a whole 36 hours before the 16 February, 2019 Presidential election, and without a scintilla of doubt, I am writing it like Inec has already called the election for sitting President Muhammadu Buhari.

    I am doing so because, barring an event with seismic consequences comparable to that of Hiroshima at the drop of the A- bomb on August 6, 1945, President Buhari is guaranteed to win.

    (On that horrible day during World War II (1939-45), an American B-29 bomber dropped the world’s first deployed atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The explosion wiped out 90 percent of the city and immediately killed 80,000 people; tens of thousands more would later die of radiation exposure. Three days later, a second B-29 dropped another A-bomb on Nagasaki, killing an estimated 40,000 people).

    Nigeria will never see or know such. Amen.

    But how on earth was Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the PDP expected to win a presidential election in a country whose greatest challenge is corruption?

    In an unbroken 16 years, his party, the Peoples Democratic Party, completely ran Nigeria aground, stealing all stealables; moveable, as well as immovable, physical and not so physical.

    So bad was it that British Prime Minister, David Cameron, in a conversation with Her Majesty the Queen described Nigeria as ‘fantastically corrupt’, and one of the most corrupt countries in the world.

    Rather than list a catalogue of PDP’s thieving armada in its ruinous 16 year rule, let us, in brevity, capture that depraved party in the words of Joe Igbokwe, APC’s Publicity Secretary in Lagos state. Wrote Igbokwe: “We wonder what legacy a failed and corrupt party like the PDP is talking about if not the legacy of corruption, shameless looting, infrastructural wreckage, ineptitude, decay, disease, hunger and want. One question Nigerians have been asking is if anything good can ever come from a PDP that in its 16 year rule, notoriously looted the country’s treasury and left every sector of the Nigerian economy bare. If in 16 years and with oil averaging over $100 per barrel, the PDP presided over the total ruination and bankruptcy of the country, we have no doubt that its legacies are only the negative fallouts of its corrupt acts which brought Nigeria to its knees”.

    PDP might even have possibly have a chance if the above were all it had to contend with. Unfortunately, given former President Obasanjo’s destructive politics, and happily for Nigeria, he told Nigerians the truth, and nothing but the truth, about Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, his Vice for eight years, the way nobody else could ever have done. Both in words and published works, he very meticulously presented Atiku as the one politician a country known all over the world as ‘fantastically corrupt ‘ must do everything to avoid, if not consign to the rubbish heap of the country’s political history. Amongst others, he had the following to write about Atiku in his book, MY WATCH: “From the day I nominated Atiku to be my Vice, he set his mind not for any good, benefit or service to the country, but on furiously planning to upstage, supplant or remove me at all cost and to take my place… “What I did not know, which came out glaringly later, was his parental background which was somewhat shadowy, (many Nigerians believe he is a Cameroonian and an Abuja based lawyer is contemplating going to court on same), his propensity to corruption, his tendency to disloyalty, his inability to say and stick to the truth all the time, a propensity for poor judgment, his belief and reliance on marabouts , his lack of transparency, his trust in money to buy his way out on all issues and his readiness to sacrifice morality, integrity, propriety truth and national interest for self and selfish interest.”

    No wonder the Guardian of London describes the election as one between a “stingy dictator (Buhari is a retired military general) and an established thief.”

    I have no doubt, whatever, that by these words, Obasanjo contributed not a little to what must certainly be Atiku’s worst electoral shellacking, even though this is about his 4th or 5th trial. If anything defines Atiku’s desperation about becoming the Nigerian president, it must be his sheer inability to appreciate that he has no worse enemy than Obasanjo anywhere in the world; not even the U S Congressman man Jefferson, whose bribe landed in jail could manage to hate him more than Obasanjo; the same man he now believes truly endorsed his candidacy for the election.

    Standing as the candidate of the rival party, the APC, to the man Obasanjo literally reduced to rubble, is the ramrod standing 7-footer of integrity; a man of incandescent incorruptibility, known as such home, and abroad, that the entire African Union appointed him its continental Anti- Corruption Tzar. After 3 attempts trying to become President he was 4th time lucky in 2015 when he entered into an alliance with the main political group in Southwest Nigeria. I have written my fingers sore, criticising President Buhari for his ill-advised, nepotistic appointments as well as his needlessly delayed action on the activities of the murderous Fulani herdsmen. But while those are obvious negatives, President Buhari has chalked up incredible achievements all of which combined to win him the election. . Despite the fact that crude oil prices bottomed out at 28 dollars when he assumed office, Buhari has achieved infrastructural achievements that easily dwarf what PDP achieved in its 16 years of the locust during most of which crude oil prices never went below 100 dollars per barrel. In each and every geo-political zone of the country, massive road construction, and reconstruction, are ongoing while, for the first time ever in the history of Nigeria, new rail lines are being constructed just as some are being commissioned. Those already commissioned include the Abuja- Kaduna, the Lagos – Abeokuta rail lines and the Itakpe rail line commenced some 20 years ago to serve the Ajaokuta steel company has finally been commissioned and in use

    The roads on which work is currently ongoing include the Aba-Port-Harcourt, Yenagoa-Kolo-Otuoke-Bayelsa Palm-Lokoja-Benin,Lagos-Ibadan-Oyo-Ogbomoso-Ilorin, Onitsha-Enugu-Port-Harcourt, Lagos-Ota-Abeokuta, Auchi – Okene etc, and in the words of ace columnist, Duro Onabule, the fact that rail lines will now be extended to Ijebu-Ode, Ondo and Ekiti, really sounds like a modern miracle.

    The 2nd Niger bridge which Ebelechukwu, whose cabinet Igbos dominated, did not even as much as start, like its cousin, the East-West road in the Ijaw heartland, which PDP turned to a sink hole, are now both receiving maximum attention with needed funds already paid up front.

    Security, though still with some challenges here, and there, has received tremendous attention and unlike in Jonathan’s days, not a single Nigerian Local Government Area is under Boko Haram control as against almost 20 Borno State LGAs during the Jonathan era during which nearly 200 Chibok school girls were stolen under his watch. Unlike under the PDP when 2.1 Billion U S dollars meant for equipping the army was stolen, and the Central Bank became an ATM, appropriated funds are now being judiciously spent, and the same U S government they lied won’t sell arms to Nigeria has since sold war planes to the Nigerian air force.

    Finally, although naysayers describe the Buhari anti corruption war as selective and ineffective, I am sure that Mrs. Deziani Maduekwe, the former minister of Petroleum who couldn’t visit Nigeria since Buhari came on board, would certainly have a different story to tell. Ditto, those who have been going the rounds of courts, trying to protect billions which EFCC says are corruption related from being forfeited to government. That is not to talk of those from who over a trillion naira have been retrieved alongside eye popping mansions. Those being rapidly separated from their ill-gotten wealth will never trivialise the Buhari anti corruption war. He has promised much more and I am sure we would soon see some of these high profile rogues right where they truly belong.

    Finally, that PDP could turn off a Damkwabo, the ambitious Tambuwal or even the diminished Kwankwaso – all from Buhari’s Northwest zone, and settle for an Atiku who had been irretrievably damaged by Obasanjo because of almighty dollar, and since he was the candidate of some insecure retired generals who were represented at the dollarised primaries in Port Harcourt, should surprise any rational being. That he suffered such a humiliating defeat, together with his party was, therefore, a conclusion foretold.

  • Lagos lawyers fault election postponement

    Some lawyers in Lagos have expressed mixed reactions to Saturday’s postponement of the Presidential and National Assembly elections, saying it would work against the nation’s democracy.

    In separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, the lawyers said the recent burning of some INEC offices and materials in some parts of the country could have contributed to the postponement.

    Mr Ogedi Ogu, a Lagos-based legal practitioner said: “It would rather work against our democratic progression.

    “Whatever reason INEC has cited for the postponement would not likely strengthen participation in the rescheduled date.

    “Many voters traveled to their respective homes for the election. Such voters would be discouraged from further participating”.

    According to Ogu, INEC had about four years to prepare for these elections and this should not be happening if they prepared well.

    For Mr Chibuikem Opara, another legal practitioner, the recent burning and disruptions of INEC offices pointed to the fact that some people were bent on manipulating the system.

    “In that situation, INEC may have done the best thing under the circumstances by postponing elections to ensure they conduct a credible election.

    “Though, I think it is a disgrace that after so many months of planning INEC appears not to be ready.

    “However, INEC must make sure they are no longer taken unawares”.

    Another Lagos-based lawyer, Mr Chris Ayiyi, advised Nigerians not to make any statement to discredit INEC on the issue of postponement because of the recent happenings at the INEC offices.

    He, however, said that the timing was wrong because some peope had already travelled for the elections.

    “To a large extend what the nation need now is a free, fair and credible election. There is always room to accommodate shortcomings, this is the beauty of democracy,” Ayiyi said.

    Another legal practitioner and Coordinator, Girl Child Foundation, an NGO, Mrs Helen Ibeji, said what Nigerians should yearn for is a credible election.

    “The postponement is not an issue so far there is a good reason behind it. What is most important is for INEC to conduct a free and fair election.

    “We witnessed similar postponment in 2015, it is not the first time election is being postponed in Nigeria,” Ibeji said. (NAN)

  • Ajimobi urges Nigerians to accept INEC’s reasons for election postponement

    Oyo State Governor, Abiola Ajimobi of  has urged Nigerians to give INEC the benefit of the doubt by accepting the reasons it gave for postponing Saturday’s election.

    The Governor’s Special Adviser on Communications and Strategy, Mr Bolaji Tunji made this known in a statement made available to newsmen in Ibadan on Saturday.

    Ajimobi advised against speculations and spreading fake news capable of igniting crisis in the country, calling for sober reflection among the players to ensure the sanctity of the electoral process.

    “Having come this far in the country’s democratic experience, no sacrifice should be too much for individuals and institutions to pay to protect the sanctity of democracy as an all-inclusive and best form of government.

    “Painful as the last minute decision taken by INEC is, I appeal to Nigerians to give the commission the benefit of the doubt by accepting the reasons they have enumerated as valid and genuine.

    “I have no doubt in my mind that the INEC Chairman has his integrity at stake and would not dabble into anything that would rubbish his many years of meritorious service in the public service.

    “Instead of needless hysteria and blame games, this unfortunate development should be an opportunity for key players in the election process to go on sober reflection on how good governance could be further enshrined in the country,” he said.

    The governor admonished INEC to ensure that the new dates remained sacrosanct so that the confidence reposed in them by Nigerians who believed that they have the best of intention will not be eroded.

    The governor called on the leaders and followers of the party to remain calm. (NAN)

  • I hope INEC overcomes logistics challenges – Abdulsalam

    Former Head of State General Abdulsalam Abubakar (Rtd) has lamented postponement of Saturday’s Presidential and National Assembly polls by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) but hopes the Commission overcomes the logistics challenges it encountered.

    Abdulsalam, who spoke in Minna with reporters, also expressed his disappointment over the sudden postponement of the elections urging the people to remain peaceful and law abiding.

    “It is disappointing that the elections had to be postponed after a lot of preparations had been made, after all the politicians have campaigned and for one reason or the other the election is postponed.

    “You are very much aware that elections were scheduled to have taken place today, but because of logistical challenges the INEC in their wisdom decided to postpone the elections to Saturday next week.

    “I want to appeal to Nigerians to bear with the INEC and let us try to help them to overcome the logistical challenges they are saying.

    “Let us hope and pray for INEC that they overcome their problem so that the elections will hold on Saturday next week.

    READ ALSO:  Postponement is national embarrassment, setback-CAN

    “I appeal to Nigerians to remain peaceful and not to resort to any form of disturbances capable of breaching the peace as a result of the elections postponement.

    “Let us keep the peace and not resort to any violence act.  Let us hope and pray that INEC will put its house in order and get it right next Saturday.”

    The former Head of state pleaded with Nigerians to bear whatever disappointment that came with the postponement.

    “As much as possible, you try to bear the disappointment because a lot of Nigerians traveled to their various locations for the election to be able to do our civic right, but unfortunately here we are today.”

    He asked Nigerians to keep hope alive and remain optimistic of INEC performing better next weekend.

     

  • Lawyers: Poll shift lawful but damages INEC’s credibility

     

    Lawyers on Saturday affirmed the powers of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to reschedule elections but noted the Commission damaged its credibility with how it shifted presidential and national assembly polls.

    Chief Niyi Akintola SAN observed the Electoral Act permitted the Commission to make polls adjustments in the national interest.

    Section 26(1) of the Electoral 2010 (As Amended), says: “Where a date has been appointed for the holding of an election, and there is reason to believe that a serious breach of the peace is likely to occur if the election is proceeded with on that date, or it is impossible to conduct the elections as a result of natural disasters or other emergencies, the Commission may postpone the election and shall in respect of the area, or areas concerned, appoint another date for the holding of the postponed election, provided that such reason for the postponement is cogent and verifiable.”

    Akintola said: “INEC has powers to postpone polls. But the sad thing about this postponement is that it waited till very late at night, an unholy hour, disrupting the economy, the political lifeline of the country, the social traffic of the country.

    “To make matters worse, INEC National Commissioner in charge of Information and Voter Education, Mr. Festus Okoye, denied around midnight that there was any postponement.

    “People have travelled far and wide, Mr President travelled to his state, the Vice President had travelled. Practically everyone that is somebody had travelled back to their constituencies.

    “See what it has caused the country? Yet there was no apology from INEC. It’s a big disappointment and has cast doubt on the credibility of the election.”

    READ ALSO: Why we postponed polls, by INEC

    He urged INEC to learn from its mistakes and up its game.

    Activist-lawyer Ebun-olu Adegboruwa noted that notwithstanding INEC’s powers, the postponement was “totally unacceptable.”

    He invited the national assembly to audit and probe INEC through a Commission of Inquiry.

    Adegboruwa said: “The postponement has unwittingly eroded the credibility of the elections and the capacity of INEC, in spite of the huge resources committed to it and the length of time available for planning and logistics.”

    He argued: “INEC should not have waited till the dying minutes before announcing the postponement, since it was well aware of all its handicaps long before now.”

    The lawyer appealed to “all Nigerians to be patient and give room for a proper election at the times rescheduled for it by INEC. No sacrifice should be too great for us as a people to get us to the destination of our dreams.”

  •  Postponement is national embarrassment, setback-CAN

     

     

    Leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) on Saturday expressed shock and described the postponement of the general elections as a setback and national embarrassment to the nation.

    The development, CAN said, is sad because the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had enough time to prepare for the electoral process but failed.

    It said: “It is most embarrassing and shameful that a nation as big as Nigeria with many highly qualified professionals to organise elections will be postponing elections in the early morning of that election. It was never this bad for us before.

    “This unexplainable postponement is reprehensible, condemnable and unacceptable when smaller nations are doing better.

    “With the 2015 election, the whole world is expecting a better electoral process but it seems the INEC is not ready to build on the 2015 foundation. What a pity!”

    CAN said economically, the shocking postponement has led to the loss of billions of Naira in terms of movement of election materials nationwide and the closure of our borders, seaports and airports adding that many local and international observers have already come and would either be forced to go back and come again next week or stay for one week at extra cost.

    READ MORE: Election Postponement: Plot to enthrone Interim Government – CNPP

    CAN in a statement in Abuja by its Director of Legal and Public Affairs of CAN, Barr Samuel Kwankur, faulted the Chairman of INEC for not apologising to Nigerians and the international community over the postponement.

    It called on Nigerians especially Christians to pray and stay calm as they look forward to the rescheduled date.

    The body added: “No excuse is strong and good enough to justify its postponement in the early morning of an election.

    “This development has led us almost losing confidence in INEC and its chairman.

    “INEC has disappointed Nigerians and the international community. We hope we would not hear of another postponement again after this.

    “From all indications, INEC unilaterally postponed the elections without any input from other stakeholders such as the leading Presidential candidates, their parties, the National Council of States and others.

    “We recalled that when it happened in 2015 for “security reasons”, the National Council of State was carried along.

    How can you justify the ‘logistics issues’ excuse that came when all stakeholders were already in the fields?”

     

  • Breaking: INEC holds press conference in Abuja

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission is currently having a press conference with journalists in Abuja

    This is in connection with the postponed general elections

    Details shortly……….

     

     

  • Buhari expresses disappointment over shift in general elections

    *To immediately return to Abuja

     

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday in Daura, Katsina State expressed his disappointment over the postponement of the 2019 general elections by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Buhari was in his home state since Thursday for the All Progressives Congress Presidential campaign rally and to vote for the presidential election earlier scheduled for Saturday.

    But INEC, in the early hours of Saturday had announced postponement of the elections by another one week due to some challenges.

    The President in a statement on Saturday said “I am deeply disappointed that despite the long notice given and our preparations both locally and internationally, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) postponed the Presidential and National Assembly elections within hours of its commencement.

    “Many Nigerians have traveled to various locations to exercise their right to vote, and international observers are gathered.

    “INEC themselves have given assurances, day after day and almost hour after hour that they are in complete readiness for the elections. We and all our citizens believed them.

    “This administration has ensured that we do not interfere in any way with the work of INEC except to ensure that all funds were released to the commission.”

    He urged INEC to ensure that materials already distributed are safe and do not get into wrong hands.

    He also charged the electoral umpire to do everything to avoid the lapses that resulted in this unfortunate postponement.

    Read Also: Buhari’s statement on postponement of elections by INEC

    Buhari tasked INEC to ensure a free and fair election on the rescheduled dates.

    He added “While I reaffirm my strong commitment to the independence, neutrality of the electoral umpire and the sanctity of the electoral process and ballot, I urge all political stakeholders and Nigerians to continue to rally round INEC at this trying national moment in our democratic journey.

    “I, therefore, appeal to all Nigerians to refrain from all civil disorder and remain peaceful, patriotic and united to ensure that no force or conspiracy derail our democratic development.

    “I have decided to move back to Abuja to ensure that the 14.00 hrs meeting called by INEC with all stakeholders is successful.

  • Buhari’s statement on postponement of elections by INEC

    STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT BUHARI ON THE POSTPONEMENT OF GENERAL ELECTIONS BY INEC

    I am deeply disappointed that despite the long notice given and our preparations both locally and internationally, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) postponed the Presidential and National Assembly elections within hours of its commencement.

    Many Nigerians have traveled to various locations to exercise their right to vote, and international observers are gathered.

    INEC themselves have given assurances, day after day and almost hour after hour that they are in complete readiness for the elections. We and all our citizens believed them.

    This administration has ensured that we do not interfere in any way with the work of INEC except to ensure that all funds were released to the commission.

    We now urge INEC to ensure not only that materials already distributed are safe and do not get into wrong hands, but that everything is done to avoid the lapses that resulted in this unfortunate postponement, and ensure a free and fair election on the rescheduled dates.

    While I reaffirm my strong commitment to the independence, neutrality of the electoral umpire and the sanctity of the electoral process and ballot, I urge all political stakeholders and Nigerians to continue to rally round INEC at this trying national moment in our democratic journey.

    I, therefore, appeal to all Nigerians to refrain from all civil disorder and remain peaceful, patriotic and united to ensure that no force or conspiracy derail our democratic development.

    I have decided to move back to Abuja to ensure that the 14.00 hrs meeting called by INEC with all stakeholders is successful.

    Muhammadu Buhari

    Daura, February 16, 2019

  • PDP rejects postponement

    The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Prince Uche Secondus, has rejected the postponement of the general elections by one week.

    He claimed in a statement moment after the confirmation of the polls postponement that the alleged  shoddy arrangement for the election by the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC) was  a “deliberate pre-determined agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari to cling on to power even when it’s obvious to him that Nigerians want him out.”

    Secondus asked the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu to resign.

    He also said the postponement was part of a grand design by the All Progressives Congress, (APC), to thwart the will of Nigerians at all cost.

    His words: “The PDP leader warns that the party will not accept anything short of a well- organized electoral process devoid of manipulation,   harassment and intimidation of voters and the opposition particularly members of the PDP.

    “Having failed in all their nefarious options to enable them cling on to power, the APC and the INEC came up with the idea of shifting election an action that is dangerous to our democracy and unacceptable.

    “The National Chairman said that the APC in connivance with the INEC have been trying all options including but not limited to burning down INEC offices in some states and destroying of electoral materials to create artificial problems upon which to stand for their dubious act.”

    The PDP chairman, in the statement signed by his chief spokesman, Ike Abonyi said, the PDP  was ” privy to all the pressures from the APC and the federal government to arm-twist the INEC, to dance to their new strategy after their earlier ones failed.

    He added:: “With several of their rigging options failing, they have to force INEC to agree to a shift in the election or a staggered election with flimsy excuses pre-manufactured for the purpose.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the PDP sees this action as wicked and we are also aware of other dubious designs like the deployment of hooded security operatives who would be ruthless on the people ostensibly to scare them away.”

    He said that by the action of the President he has further demonstrated his insensitivity costing the huge cost after Nigerians including those who came home from abroad have all mobilized to their various constituencies.

    The National Chairman said his party had earlier raised the alarm about alleged rigging strategies by the APC including burning down of INEC offices and engineering crisis in PDP stronghold areas to scare away the people.

    Secondus said “the wicked killing of over 60 persons mostly women and children in Southern Kaduna on the eve of election is a copious ploy by the APC to frighten the people away from voting knowing too well that they were not going to record any vote from the area.

    “Recall that the Governor of Kaduna state, Mallam Nasir El Rufai had earlier threatened international election observers of going to their country in body bags and with the fatal violence in the state on the eve of  election, it’s clear what the motives are, to frighten the observers from the state so that he can carry out his nefarious acts.

    The National Chairman also drew the attention of all lovers of democracy to the statement of President Buhari in the international media that nobody can unseat him from office as an indication of what he wants to do.

    Secondus also regretted that President Buhari who made a promise at the signing of peace accord that the election will be conducted in a fair and transparent atmosphere  has gone ahead in breach of the peace agreements to send soldiers and other security agencies to arrest, harass and intimidate opponents in Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Kwara, Kano, Kaduna states.