Tag: Inec

  • INEC clears 19 for Edo governorship poll

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Thursday cleared Osagie Ize-Iyamu of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and 18 other candidates to participate in the September 10 governorship election in Edo State.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Mr. Godwin Obaseki of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Amos Areloegbe of the Labour Party (LP) and Oronsaye Richard of Mega Progressive Peoples Party (MPPP) were also cleared for the election.

    The commission released the list of political parties and candidates eligible  for the election on Thursday.

    INEC said the decision to clear PDP’s Ize-Iyamu for the poll was based on a court order.

    Other candidates listed for the governorship election were – Mr. Ishaka Ofemile (Action Alliance), Mr. Andrew Igewmoh (Advanced Congress of Democrats), Mr. Cosmos Irabor (Allied Congress Party of Nigeria), Onaiwu Osaro (All Progressives Grand Alliance), Mr. David Okoror (Citizens Popular Party), Mr. Tobi Adeniyi (Independent Democrats), Thompson Osadolor (KOWA Party), Peters Omoragbon (National Conscience Party) and Akhalamhe Amiemenoghena (People for Democratic Change).

    Mr. Thomas Sadoh (Progressive People Alliance), Mrs. Agol Ebun (Peoples Party of Nigeria), Omorogieva Gbajumo (Social Democratic Party), Shadrach Efogie (United Progressive Party) and Nurudeen Inwanefero (Young Democratic Party) completed the list.

     

  • ‎INEC issues APC, Uwajumogu certificate of return

    ‎INEC issues APC, Uwajumogu certificate of return

    The Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) has issued Mr. Benjamin Uwajumogu – Imo North senator-elect, the certificate of return.

    Uwajumogu of the All Progressive Congress (APC) was declared the winner in the Imo state rerun election.

    Ambassador Lawrence Nwuruku‎ – INEC commissioner representing South East, presented the certificate of return to him.

    Speaking after receiving the certificate, he said his election was a confirmation that APC has acceptance the South East contrary to what the opposition party in the state was claiming.

    He said, “It is a mere speculate.  Igbo has proven that it can vote APC. What happened in 2015 election was that we have a sitting president from PDP and there was no election. It was all violence, and security agencies against the opposition party. But in this election, it was a different people, they voted, and what it means is that the APC has a home in Imo State, and that they support President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.”

    Uwajumogu who was accompanied to the Abuja INEC Headquarters by a large number of supporters said it now time for the state and the nation to move on.

    On the violence that necessitated the rerun, he said, “this is now in the past, the election has come and gone, the election was free and fair and we are grateful to people of Okigwe who conducted themselves well. A winner has emerged, let’s move forward.

    On his mission at senate, he said “I will be one of the 109. Am coming there as one who will work with establishment.  I am not going there to take anybody’s position. I hope when I get to the senate I will effectively represent my people.”

  • INEC promises ‘conclusive’ election in Edo

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Tuesday assured that the September 10 governorship election in Edo State would be conclusive.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in the state, Mr. Sam Olumekun, gave the assurance at the commission’s voter education implementation meeting in Benin.

    “We want to assure the people that we are prepared to conduct a conclusive governorship election on September 10,’’ he said.

    Olumekun said inconclusive elections were not about INEC, attributing the problem to violence and thuggery by politicians.

    He said the meeting was to critically x-ray the effective ways to sustain voter education ahead of the election.

     

  • INEC to announce Rivers rerun date soon

    INEC to announce Rivers rerun date soon

    •Police chief decries arms’ sophistication

     

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday said the July 30 date for the conclusion of the vacant legislative seats in Rivers State was tentative.

    The electoral umpire said the main date would be announced soon.

    Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) Elder Aniedi Ikoiwak spoke in Port Harcourt, the state capital, when the Police Commissioner Francis Mobolaji Odesanya visited him.

    Ikoiwak said INEC fixed the July date with the hope that it would work.

    The REC said consultations with political and security stakeholders were on to pick a new date.

    He hailed the police chief for visiting INEC offices in the 23 local governments and his assurance to make the security of life and property a priority.

    Odesanya, who decried the proliferation of weapons in the state, assured INEC of the commitment of the police to recover them from illegal hands.

    The police chief noted that although illegal gunrunning was prevalent across the country, the guns in Rivers State were more sophisticated than in other states.

    He said the police would mop them up.

    Odesanya said: “Police have always been on ground; police have always been ready for elections. We are on ground and the state is secured. The state will be secured.

    “The problem here is proliferation of arms. What is happening in Rivers is also happening in other states. But the problem of Rivers State is that they have sophisticated weapons. So, my primary assignment, my main focus is how to mop up arms. We must mop up arms. We have started; we have been recovering arms.”

    On Governor Nyesom Wike’s allegation that Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Idris Mohammad planned to redeploy a certain officer, Odesanya said: “The governor did not mention my name or the position of CP.”

    On the crime wave in the state, he said: “The issue of kidnapping has been a recurring decimal here. In fact, kidnapping is much on the decrease now. I assure you that in a short while, people would be free to go about their lawful business without any molestation or fear of being kidnapped.”

     

  • How prepared is INEC for Edo, Ondo polls?

    How prepared is INEC for Edo, Ondo polls?

    Under the leadership of Prof Mahmud Yakubu, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has held a number of inconclusive elections in some parts of the country. Will it do better in the forthcoming governorship elections in Edo on September 10 and in Ondo on November 26? Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines INEC’s challenges and suggests what should be done to redeem its image.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is under fire. Its Chairman, Prof. Mahmud Yakubu, is on the weighing scale over the string of inconclusive elections conducted under his leadership. So far, all of them have been inconclusive; making people to doubt the capacity of the electoral umpire to organise credible and fair governorship elections in Edo and Ondo states in September 10 and November 26 respectively.

    The integrity and capacity of INEC under Yakubu was first put to task with Kogi governorship poll. It ended in a fiasco, with the cancellation of the exercise in 59 polling units due to non adherence to Card reader usage. It argued that since the number of cancelled votes was 49,953, while the difference between the votes scored by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidates stood at 41,353, the election could not yet be declared as conclusive. The matter became further complicated with the sudden death of the APC flag bearer, Abubakar Audu. Litigations over the election are still pending at the Appeal Court.

    Many thought the commission would use the Kogi experience to perfect its lapses during the Bayelsa governorship election. But, the trend persisted. In fact, it took almost a month for the final result to be released. The same trend was noticed in Rivers.

    The usual excuse by the electoral commission was that the exercise was characterised by irregularities.  Analysts are worried by the growing number of inconclusive elections in the country under the new INEC boss. The recurring question is that if the commission cannot conduct credible election in isolated cases like the above, what is the guarantee that it can cope with a nationwide contest at different levels in 2019?

    On his first day in office in full glare of cameras, Yakubu declared that INEC’s job could be considered the simplest work to do and wondered why people complain. After the Kogi and Bayelsa governorship polls, the National assembly and House of Assembly reruns in Rivers, and now in Imo, it is doubtful if the chief electoral officer still considers his job an easy one.

    It is very unfortunate that INEC, which had been making steady progress from 2011, under Prof. Attahiru Jega, is now on a path of retrogression.

    Analysts argue that if the INEC could bungle the above isolated elections, despite extensive preparations and resources at its disposal, its capacity to conduct a hitch-free exercise simultaneously in 31 states in 2019 is in doubt. According to such analysts, the increasing number of inconclusive elections conducted under Prof. Yakubu clearly suggests that the 2019 general elections may be at risk of being declared inconclusive.

    INEC has a historic duty to live up to expectations, as it prepares for the governorship polls holding in Edo State on September 10 and Ondo State on November 26. To conduct a credible and transparent exercise in the two states, observers say the commission must avoid the shortcomings witnessed so far in Kogi, Bayelsa, Rivers and other states.

    To conduct credible and transparent elections in Edo and Ondo, an election observer, Dr Elijah Edokie, said INEC should ensure that electoral materials and officials arrive promptly at the polling units. He noted that the commission failed the elementary test of credibility in Kogi and Bayelsa, as its officials reported late for the assignment in many local governments.

    Edokie said: “Where the officials reported for the assignment, they did not show up with essential polling materials. The most critical material is the voter’s register. The names of many voters were omitted from the register. Voters were disillusioned. Many returned home in protest. The implication was that many were disenfranchised. Although the poll was postponed till the next day in some units, voters did not show up, because it was on a Sunday.

    “Elections have become a burden in Nigeria. Rather than being perceived as an opportunity for political choice and change, election periods are usually dark moments when the polity is submerged in a tremor of wild politicking, do or die contest, and violence, which often make the critical contest a sort of war. The incidence of thuggery during governorship elections is higher than that of presidential and National Assembly elections. Thus, the fear of democratic elections at the state level has contributed to the fragile democracy”.

    He described the Bayelsa election as one of the worst ever conducted in this country, adding that its outcome reflects INEC’s poor preparation. He said: “Bayelsa governorship election was a total catastrophe; it was a total disgrace to the nation. Voting materials were carted away by gunmen; INEC officials were kidnapped and were not released until two or three weeks after the poll; many voters were disenfranchised, especially those living in the creeks. Yet, official results were announced by the electoral commission.

    “Yakubu should have held INEC integrity in tact by announcing total cancellation of the fatally flawed election and announce a new date for a fresh election. No amount of supplementary would make it credible or change the view of local and international observers on Bayelsa. I recall in 2011, when the electoral commission was about to wreck a monumental havoc on democracy before the immediate past INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, had to cancel the first leg of the general elections. If the polls were not abruptly stopped and postponed, it would have resulted into an avoidable electoral calamity. Yakubu should have taken a cue from that incident. He should have own up and redeem INEC’s image.”

    President, Nigeria Voters’ Assembly (VOTAS), Comrade Moshood Erubami, is worried over the number of inconclusive elections that the new INEC boss has recorded within a very short time in office. He said given the past experiences of inconclusive elections in Kogi, Bayelsa and Rivers, which were marred by unprecedented violence, mass destruction of voting materials and electoral malpractices, it will be difficult to say that INEC’s promise of credible elections in Edo and Ondo will be fulfilled.

    Erubami said INEC will always assure the public that it is on top of the situation, as long as stakeholders give undertaken that they will abide by the rules and regulations put in place for conducting the election.

    He said: “From the experience of past elections, this has not always been the case. The attitude of stakeholders has always marred the electoral process, making elections inconclusive. This is due to a number of factors: political parties usually break the law; the electorates do not equally fulfill their civic responsibilities; while the police also fail in their duty of securing the polling centres, as well as voting materials and the protection of the rights of voters.

    “The police are guiltier in this respect; there would always a large number of officers at the polling units, to assure the voters of their safety, but in the end they will be exposed to the negative consequences of electoral violence.”

    A legal practitioner, Illiyas Alkali, said it would be wrong to jump into conclusion that the new INEC Chairman is incompetent to conduct free and fair election, because he had declared some elections inconclusive. He said the Electoral Act empowered INEC to suspend elections where there was violence or threat to public peace.

    He said: “Are we saying INEC should overlook cases of violence, physical attacks, election irregularities, snatching of ballot boxes and declare results of election held in such circumstances?

    “It is not the responsibility of INEC to secure the environment, but that the security agencies. If security agencies fail to maintain law and order, which is sine-qua-non to peaceful and credible election, INEC cannot be blamed for that. The responsibility of the electoral commission is to provide logistics and manpower for the election.”

    He admitted that there were lapses in INEC preparation in the cases mentioned. The lapses, he said, include: late arrival of voting materials and electoral officers; mal-functioning of Card Readers; and omission of names in voters’ register. The lapses ought to be plugged, he added, if the commission wants to improve on its performance. “Where there are irregularities, INEC should not hesitate to cancel the election and order a re-run, no matter what it will take to have a credible result,” Alkali stressed.

    Commenting on the issue of inconclusive elections under his leadership, Yakubu explained that the commission was forced to declare the elections inconclusive, due to violence at the polling units, because it had no control over security forces. He emphasised that the commission cannot secure voting environment.

    He said: “We have a responsibility to our staff, ad hoc and regular, as well as the voters. Yes, we are challenged by it and we have been working with the security agencies to see what we can do. But, appreciate the constraints. INEC cannot guarantee the security of elections. The responsibility belongs to another agency of government. But, if the environment is not secured, there is no way we can guarantee elections.”

    Yakubu noted that control of violence is the responsibility of security agencies, not that of the election management body. He hinted that a stakeholder meeting involving all the political parties participating in the coming elections will be held with security agencies. He added that the commission is also holding a meeting with inter-agency Consultative Committee on Election Security to brainstorm on security, as well as election risk management.

    Ahead of Edo and Ondo polls, Yakubu said: “We are going to identify the flashpoints and give the information to the security agencies to deploy accordingly. We don’t expect that there will be any breakdown of law and order, but where it happens, I am sure that with the work that we are doing with the security agencies, they can quickly deploy their officers to bring the situation under control.”

    On whether the commission is empowered to declare elections inconclusive, he said that it was provided for in the Electoral Act. “Nobody has said that we have declared any election inconclusive outside the provision of the law. Section 26 of the Election Act is clear. Where you have threats or natural disaster, INEC has the powers to suspend elections,” he said.

    For INEC to excel in the coming Edo and Ondo governorship polls, stakeholders have urged the commission to go back to the drawing board and come up with strategies that would correct the lapses of the past exercises.

    A political scientist, Prof. Ayo Olukotun, said INEC must close the logistical gap that has afflicted other elections, such as those of Kogi and Bayelsa. Olukotun, a lecturer at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State, stressed the need for the commission to plan ahead and ensure that everything was in place before the polling day.

    He said: “This boils down to ensuring that voting materials arrive on time, Card Readers work and INEC officials are up and about. Special preparation must be made for challenging landscapes, such as riverine parts of Ondo State.  Collaboration with security agencies is required to prevent intimidation of voters and outright violence.”

    Erubami also advised INEC to double its efforts, to convince the populace that the results of Edo and Ondo would not follow the pattern recorded in Kogi, Bayelsa and Rivers states. He added: “INEC should work diligently with the security agencies to ensure that peaceful electoral environment prevails during the elections. They must prevent the movement of politicians who pretend to be monitoring electoral process.”

    The civil rights activist also enjoined INEC to improve its processes, to ensure that the usual transport logistic problems become a thing of the past. “Its officials must arrive early enough with adequate voting materials to conduct the elections; it must ensure that Card Readers function well; it also has the responsibility of create a conducive atmosphere for credible collation of results and the safety of the ballot boxes,” he added.

  • INEC begins distribution of PVCs in Lagos

    INEC begins distribution of PVCs in Lagos

    THE Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Lagos State, is distributing Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    Registered voters in the state, who did not collect the voter cards before the 2015 general election, are to visit INEC offices where they registered with their temporary cards for the collection of the PVCs.

    The collection is at no cost to the registered voters and holds between 8 am and 4 pm from Monday to Friday.

  • INEC issues certificate of  return to Obayemi of Ekiti PDP

    INEC issues certificate of return to Obayemi of Ekiti PDP

    THE Independent National Electoral Commission has issued certificate of return to Mr. Toyin Obayemi of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as a member of Ekiti State House of Assembly.

    He replaces Musa Arogundade of the PDP, representing Ado Constituency 1 in the assembly.

    This followed a Federal High Court ruling on July 4, 2016, which resolved the issue of the party’s  authentic candidate in the last April election in the favour of Obayemi.

    INEC’s Commissioner in charge of Publicity and Voter Education, Mr. Solomon Shoyebi,  handed over the certificate of return to him on behalf of the commission in Abuja.

    He said the commission was doing it in obedience to court ruling and, therefore, urged politicians to play by the rule of the game.

    Obayemi had approached the court to challenge the substitution of Odunayo Talabi with Arogundade, who served as his (Obayemi’s) agent during the November 29, 2014 PDP primary elections.

    Talabi, who won the primary election in which Obayemi came second, was allegedly disqualified for certificate falsification.

    In his judgement, Justice Taiwo Taiwo berated the PDP for fraudulently acquiring the judgement before the now late Justice Evoh Chukwu of the Federal High Court in Abuja through which Arogundade was fielded as replacement to Talabi in Ado Constituency 1.

    Speaking after receiving the certificate of return, Obayemi expressed fear that some forces might still work against his swearing in. He stressed that already, they have started peddling falsehood that he was going to defect to another party.

    He said: “There were people who were telling me that they heard that I was going to defect to another political party. That is wrong.”

    “I have been a member of the PDP since 1998 and I have no plan of leaving. I can’t join another party at all.

    “I was the candidate of the PDP in the same election in 2011, but was defeated by the Action Congress of Nigeria. If I was going to defect, I would have defected since then.”

    Obayemi said he has instructed his lawyer to write the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Mr. Kolawole Oluwole, on the need to respect the court judgement.

    His lawyer  Mr. Olayinka Sokoya has written to the Speaker of the Assembly  to obey the judgement by swearing in his client.

    The letter read in part: “Sequel to the judgement of the Federal High Court in the above revered suit, I hereby request for the immediate swearing in of our client in line with the judgement of the court.

    “It is worthy of note to appraise you that a certificate of return has been issued to our client by INEC. Attached herewith is a copy of the certificate of return and a certified true copy of the judgement and or enrolment order.

    “Accept our profound gratitude in anticipation of your prompt and swift compliance with the said judgement and the content of our letter.”

     

  • INEC postpones Rivers rerun election

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has postponed the scheduled rerun elections in Rivers State over security concern.

    INEC has therefore fixed July 30 for the rerun elections in some parts of the state.

    In a statement signed by its Secretary, Mrs. Augusta Ogakwu, INEC maintained that it was ready to conclude the rerun election within the shortest possible time but the enabling environment must be provided by the political actors.

    The commission cited last Saturday’s attack on its office in Khana local government area of the state as a sign of prevailing danger.

     

  • INEC, Microsoft to monitor NBA election

    •e-voting’ll curb rigging, says Alegeh

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has invited the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the National Democratic Institute of America and Microsoft to monitor its election and verify the process.

    Its president, Augustine Alegeh (SAN), said the body introduced electronic voting and universal suffrage to end rigging and inducement of voters.

    He said e-voting, to be used in NBA’s election on July 30 and 31, would check the practice of branch chairmen selecting lawyers and inducing them to vote for a particular candidate.

    With the new system, Alegeh said, all lawyers could vote over the internet from anywhere in the world rather than gathering at a single location.

    Alegeh denied that he was working to impose a candidate as NBA president.

    Although he was entitled to vote, he said he did not anoint one nor can he compel all lawyers to vote for a particular candidate.

    Vowing to ensure a credible election, he said his role was only to set up an electoral committee and provide it with support services.

    “Our hope is that when we finish this election, Nigeria will use this method for the next general elections. I have a pact with the association to deliver a good election.

    “No threats will make us do what is wrong. The only time I am worried is when I am wrong, so I won’t be intimidated by threats that NBA will disintegrate,” he said.

    The NBA president urged lawyers to update their records on the website to be able to vote, adding that close to 15,000 people had updated their records while close to 40,000 lawyers had paid their fees.

    On lawsuits against NBA, Alegeh said dissatisfied candidates ought to appeal to the NBA Dispute Resolution Committee first, in line with Section 16 of the NBA Constitution before going to court.

  • Rivers rerun: INEC office bombed in Ogoni

    Rivers rerun: INEC office bombed in Ogoni

    Barely a week to the July 30 inconclusive rerun in Rivers State, the office of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was bombed yesterday in Bori-Ogoni, the traditional headquarters of Ogoniland and the seat of Khana Local Government Area of the state.

    Rivers Elected Councilors Forum in the 8th Legislative Assembly, through its Secretary, Ekine Nkrokeokia, accused desperate politicians of being behind the arson, and urging security agencies to ensure thorough investigation.

    The elected councilors described the bombing of INEC office as very unfortunate, condemnable, wicked and ungodly, while accusing desperate politicians of trying to create unnecessary tension and crisis in the state, thereby preventing the election of popular candidates.

    Also speaking, the state Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Felix Obuah, through his Special Adviser on Media, Jerry Needam, accused members of the All Progresives Congress (APC) in the state of bombing the INEC office in Bori, in view of their unpreparedness for the polls.

    But, the state Chairman of APC, Chief Davies Ikanya, through the party’s Publicity Secretary, Chris Finebone, declared in a telephone interview that Obuah, Needam and other members of the PDP in the state should be held responsible for the arson, insisting that APC members were fully prepared for the elections.

    The rerun will hold in eight LGAs, spread across the three senatorial districts of the state.

    Investigation yesterday in Port Harcourt revealed that the INEC office was bombed in the early hours of Friday by yet-to-be identified persons.

    The Rivers Police Public Relations Officer, Nnamdi Omoni, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), disclosed that investigation into the incident had been ordered.

    The PDP chairman claimed that bombing of the INEC office was part of APC’s plots to ensure that the July 30 rerun was postponed, alleging that the party (APC) was not ready for the elections.

    “It is another deliberate action by the APC to create a state of insecurity, not only in Khana LGA and the Ogoni area, but in Rivers State as a whole, apparently to justify their demand for the postponement of the election, having realised that its candidates in the election from the area will not succeed in the poll.

    Interestingly, Governor Nyesom Wike, while addressing the party’s supporters on Thursday at the Rivers East senatorial campaign rally at Okehi, Etche LGA of the state, declared that anyone posted to Rivers State, with the aim of rigging the elections, should inform his family the location of his hidden wealth, stating that the person would face the treatment reserved for armed robbers.

    He accused the INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmud Yakubu, of concluding plans to postpone the rerun, allegedly in deference to the fear of defeat expressed by the leadership of Rivers APC.

    Rivers APC’s Publicity Secretary, yesterday in Port Harcourt, asked to stop threatening everyone.

    “The callous and mindless mudslinging by Wike is true-to-type, especially when he wants to stir the water muddy, in order to create a smokescreen to perpetrate his evil machinations. The potpourri of blackmail, threats and empty bravado are all part of his curious style of politics.”