Tag: Inec

  • ‘INEC ready for Kogi, Bayelsa polls’

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has expressed its readiness for the Kogi and Bayelsa States gubernatorial elections.

    The Chairman of the commission, Prof. Mahmud Yakubu, stated this at the inaugural meeting of the House of Representatives Committee on Electoral Matters and Political Affairs in Abuja.

    Yakubu said people’s votes will count in the elections.

    He said although a standard had been set by his predecessor, Prof. Attahiru Jega, INEC under his watch would do very well.

    “INEC is ready for Kogi and Bayelsa elections, whatever the people decide, that is what we are committed to. We are committed to building on the success of the 2015 elections,” he stated.

    The INEC chief revealed that an additional 48, 000 people have been further registered with their Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs) ready and distributed.

     

     

  • Election: Kogi orders closure of schools

    Election: Kogi orders closure of schools

    Kogi government has ordered the closure of all public and private schools in the state from Tuesday, Nov. 18 to Monday, Nov. 23.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Ministry of Education, Alhaji Adamu Sheidu, confirmed the closure to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Lokoja.

    He said that the order affects only all primary and secondary schools in the state.

    He said that the step became necessary as many of the schools will serve as temporary camps for security agents being deployed to the state for the Nov. 21 governorship election.

    Sheidu said that the closure order which came into effect on Tuesday will last till Monday, Nov. 23.

    The PRO advised parents and guardians to take note of the development and keep watch on the movement of their children during the period of the election.

    He also warned proprietors of private secondary and primary schools in the state against violating the order.

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mr Sunday Arase, had on Tuesday in Lokoja announced that 12, 000 policemen will be deployed for the election.

    According to him, a unit of mobile policemen will be sent to each of the 21 local government councils in the state.

    He explained further that a Deputy-Inspector General of Police, one Assistant Inspector-General of Police and no fewer than three Police Commissioners will be on the ground to coordinate the operation.

     

  • INEC begins PVC distribution in Kogi

    INEC begins PVC distribution in Kogi

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has begun the distribution of permanent voter cards (PVCs) to newly-registered voters in Kogi State.

    The Head of Department, Voter Education, INEC Office, Lokoja, Mr. Daniel Kure,  in an interview yesterday in Lokoja with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the PVC distribution, which started on November 14, would continue till November 20, adding that there were over 47,000 newly- registered voters in the 21 local governments.

    He urged voters to visit INEC offices in their councils to collect the PVCs to enable them participate in Saturday’s election.

    Kure said a stakeholders’ meeting would hold today at Riverton Hotel, Lokoja, by 10 am.

    He said the dignitaries expected included the INEC Chairman, Mr. Yakub Mahmoud, the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Solomon Arase and the Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brig.-Gen. Johnson Olawumi.

  • Kogi: INEC begins  distribution of PVCs to voters

    Kogi: INEC begins  distribution of PVCs to voters

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has commenced the distribution of Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs) to newly registered voters in Kogi.

    Mr. Daniel Kure, Head of Department (HOD) Voter Education, INEC Office, Lokoja, made the announcement on Monday in Lokoja in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He said that the distribution of PVCs, which commenced on Nov. 14, would continue till Nov. 20, adding that there were over 47, 000 newly registered voters in all the 21 LGAs across the state.

    He called on registered voters to visit INEC offices in their various LGAs to collect their PVCs to enable them participate in the Nov. 21 governorship election in the state.

    Kure also announced that a meeting of all stakeholders in the election would hold on Nov. 17 at Riverton Hotel, Lokoja by 10 am.

    He said that dignitaries expected at the meeting includes; INEC Chairman, Mr Yakub Mahmoud, the lnspector-General of Police, Mr Solomon Arase, and the Director General of NYSC, Brig.-Gen. Johnson Olawumi

  • Buhari warns INEC as PDP alleges plot to rig

    Buhari warns INEC as PDP alleges plot to rig

    Presidency asks police, others to be fair in Kogi

    Ahead of Kogi and Bayelsa polls, President Muhammadu Buhari has told the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the police to ensure free, fair and credible governorship elections.

    Buhari spoke at a meeting with the INEC leadership and others, according to Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media Mallam Garba Shehu.

    To him, it is “mischievous” for the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) to read meanings into a well-intended meeting.

    In a statement, Shehu said: “The President called the meeting cited by the PDP to warn, in particular, the INEC and the police to do prepare and give the nation a credible election. He said he expected nothing short of a free, fair and credible election.

    “He said he had suffered election manipulation in 2003,2007 and 2011 and would not like to have any Nigerian to go through that again.

    “He warned against the intimidation of voters in any way and vowed that he was prepared to move with all the forces available to him against anyone who undermines the rights of any citizen.

    “The meeting was short and straight to the point. It ended after five minutes. He asked Vice President Yemi Osinbajo if he had anything to say and he added nothing.”

    The Presidency cautioned against what it called PDP’s recurring tendencies to destroy national institutions.

    It added: “Nigerians should be wary of the PDP’s fruitless attempts to destroy national institutions President Buhari is determined to rebuild.

    “They started with the courts, the EFCC, then the police and now they are on the one-week old INEC. When will PDP allow our national institutions to do their job?”

    The PDP alleged a plot by the APC -led Federal Government to rig the Kogi poll.

    The party said the Presidency, INEC and the security agencies were involved in the “plot”.

    In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, the party said the plot was to employ official and unofficial means necessary to ensure victory for the APC.

    The statement said: “We have incontrovertible records of separate meetings, late last week between the Presidency and the new INEC leadership as well as with some top security officers, which were coordinated by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF),  Babachir Lawal, who boasted that he has President Muhammadu Buhari’s orders to ensure that Kogi State is wrestled from the PDP by all means.

    “We alert all to be aware of this planned ‘coup’ against democracy again, by the now ‘new sherrif’, who though, being the biggest beneficiary of free and fair election in the history of Nigeria, is now out to corrupt the electoral system and destroy our democracy, all in the obsession to foist a one-party state in the country.

    “Intelligence information available to us shows that at the meeting with the new INEC leadership under Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, the commission was given orders regarding the posting of compromised personnel to strategic areas in the state to manipulate the card readers as well as the actual voting process in favour of the APC, with assurance of adequate protection by government security agencies, particularly the Directorate of State Services (DSS).

    “We are aware that in another meeting also held in Abuja, the Presidency directed summoned security officials to ensure that the forces are maximally used to intimidate the people with a view to pave way for compromised INEC officials to manipulate the process, alter ballot figures and announce doctored results.

    “To kick off the rigging process and underscore the desperation to take over Kogi State, the President himself is billed to be in the state on Wednesday to endorse the APC candidate, Alhaji Audu Abubakar, a man facing charges of corruption.

    “It is, to say the least, an embarrassing miscarriage of justice that the same President who rode to power on much publicized anti-corruption credentials, would not only superintend over plots to corrupt the electoral process, but also endorse a man facing corruption charges as his governorship candidate.

    “Whereas majority of Nigerians have seen through the cosmetic anti-corruption stance of the President Buhari-led APC government, the PDP wishes to state in the strongest possible terms that the people of Kogi State love their Governor and are fully in support of his re-election bid.

    “We therefore caution the President and the APC to watch their steps as their plots have not only been exposed, but will also be stiffly resisted by the people.

    “In this regard, the new INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, must note that his legacy is at stake and that the Kogi election is for him an iron test. Prof. Yakubu must immediately distance himself and the commission from this planned ‘coup’ against democracy or be ready to hold himself responsible should there be any breakdown of law and order in the state during and after the elections.

    “Let it be known to President Buhari, the APC, INEC and security forces that no amount of force, intimidation and manipulation can bend the will of the people of Kogi State in their preference for the PDP and Governor Idris Wada, and that they will not accept any results that do not reflect their wishes and aspirations at the poll.

  • Yakubu’s INEC

    Yakubu’s INEC

    The role of the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC in stabilizing democracy in this country came under focus last week when President Muhammadu Buhari swore in its new chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu and his national commissioners. Apparently drawing from our unsavory electoral experiences, the president had charged the commission to abhor external influences in their duties as they will be held accountable for their actions.

    Buhari who promised not to interfere in the affairs of the commission said the change mantra of the APC will be all embracing in electoral matters such that it will give boost to the conduct of free and fair elections.

    The president’s promises are as heart-warming as they are equally refreshing. No doubt, one of the greatest challenges to the sustenance of enduring democracy within these shores has been the glaring inability of electoral umpires and politicians to abide by the rules of free and fair competition. This has over time resulted in the subversion of the pristine values on which the wheel of democratic governance revolves.

    Before now and especially during the regime of Obasanjo, the management of elections had left so much to be desired. Rigging, falsification, outright writing of election results and all manner of malpractices were the order of the day. The bastardization and corruption of the electoral process came to an all-time high that the electorate began to lose confidence in its capacity to reflect the true will of the people as expressed at the ballot box. The conduct of the two elections that were supervised by that regime shook peoples’ confidence in their capacity to approximate the collective will of the people and cast serious doubt on the underlying philosophy behind representative democracy.

    So much damage was wrought to the electoral process that the future of democracy was put in serious jeopardy. The Yar’Adua administration had to contend with public disenchantment and cynicism on the continued relevance of voting during elections when such votes will count for nothing in determining those to emerge from the exercise. This in turn, threw up a crisis of legitimacy. Yar’Adua fought to contend with the situation as it posed obvious threats to the future conduct of elections. His successor, Goodluck Jonathan was left with no option than to make the conduct of free and fair elections a cardinal goal of his regime apparently to gain legitimacy and restore peoples’ confidence in the electoral process.

    He made considerable progress in that direction as the 2011 elections came out a substantial improvement on the ones before it. Jonathan showed serious commitment to the conduct of free and fair elections as evidenced in the technology-driven innovations of the electoral body to enhance the overall credibility of elections. For the first time in the management of elections in this country, card readers were deployed to stave off the stuffing of ballot boxes by ensuring that only those duly accredited to vote actually voted at those elections.

    The 2015 elections, despite shortcomings arising from the refusal of politicians to play according to rules, was devoid of any grand plan by the government in power to manipulate the process as was previously the case. Perhaps, that in part, accounted for why the Jonathan government lost power to the opposition.

    Even Buhari had admitted Jonathan had an option to manipulate the process but opted out in the overall interest of the country. It was for the same reason he received accolades from the international community as his action brightened the prospects for the deepening of democracy in the country. The outcome of that election was very symbolic given that it represented the first time in our political annals an incumbent will concede power to the opposition at that level.

    As a beneficiary of this goodwill, Buhari does not seem to have an alternative than to improve on the records set by Jonathan in restoring some modicum of credibility to the management of elections. That is why his promises not to interfere in INEC’s affairs and also to reflect the change philosophy of his party in all electoral matters are very timely. We say so because, in a couple of week from now, that commitment will be facing its true test. Elections are at the corner in Kogi and Bayelsa states.

    Their handling will serve as a litmus test to the commitment of the Buhari regime to institutionalizing orderly succession through the reflection of the collective will of the people in the final choice of their representatives. That is the challenge before Buhari and the new INEC. The way it is handled will point the direction to the future of democracy.

    It is true that the management of elections is the sole responsibility of the INEC. But it is no less correct also that the overall success of that electoral body will depend on the support and cooperation it gets from the government. There is therefore a whole world of difference between promises and giving effect to them when the need arises. Buhari should therefore move beyond promises to initiate actions that will imbue confidence in the electorate that INEC will remain an impartial umpire in electoral matters.

    One issue that will continue to create concerns for political observers is the tendency for people to gravitate to the winning party. This has raised genuine fears of a possible slide to a one-party state. These fears cannot be wished away especially given the awesome powers at the disposal of the central government.

    Not surprisingly, governments at the centre had through sundry contrivances encouraged this tendency. That is the danger created when undue emphasis is placed on compensation to those who voted the governments in power especially in a clime the same government controls virtually everything.

    Unfortunately, Buhari was the first to be publicly identified with this centripetal viewpoint which Nasir El-Rufai has also referenced upon in respect of the sharing of the perquisites of office in Kaduna State. Such a disposition has all it takes to increase the slide towards a one-party state that may sound the death knell to democracy. There is no reason for every voter to vote for the same political party. It is not intended to be so and the electorate must not be coerced into it. All parties should be able to win elections in their areas of strength with the right ambience provided by the electoral body. That is the objective our leaders should seek to approximate.

    But the buck for whatever finally transpires during elections will eventually stop at the table of Yakubu and his lieutenants. Buhari has told whoever cares to hear that he will not interfere in the affairs of the commission. He has promised change in its activities. He will be judged by these commitments. The new INEC management must take copious notice of these promises and conduct itself as an impartial referee despite the challenges it will encounter in the hands of government officials.

    But the government still shares vicarious responsibility in the overall management of elections. The role, manner of deployment of security personnel and the ferrying of logistic support during elections are areas government still has much work to do. Before now, allegations have been traded on the use of sundry security personnel to intimidate voters and manipulate the outcome of results. It will be interesting to see what the situation will be under Buhari and the new INEC chief.

  • Bayelsa poll:  Senior INEC official working for PDP – Sylva

    Bayelsa poll: Senior INEC official working for PDP – Sylva

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the December 5 governorship election, Chief Timipre Sylva, on Sunday alleged that a senior member of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the state is an agent of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Speaking through his campaign team, Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO), the former governor said he had been inundated with calls about a particular member of the commission who is sympathetic to the aspirations of PDP.

    SICO in a statement signed by its Publicity Director, Chief Nathan Egba, said the INEC official whose name was not mentioned worked closely with the appointees of the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, in the last National Assembly and House of Assembly elections.

    Egba said: “We have been inundated with calls and reports about a particular senior member of the commission in the state headquarters who is a PDP agent because of the role he played in the last Presidential, National Assembly and State House of Assembly elections by working closely with appointees of Governor Dickson.”

    He also asked INEC to follow the laid down rules in the accreditation of election monitors and observers for the election.

    He added: “This is coming on the heels of the purported public endorsement of Governor Seriake Dickson of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), for another term by over 400 Non-Governmental Organisations in the state.

    “We urge INEC to be wary of such NGOs that had become political and publicly identify with a particular candidate in the election.

    “The APC had obtained the comprehensive list of the NGOs and called on INEC not to make mistake in considering applications from any of their members to serve as either monitors or observers in the December 5 election.

    “While our campaign organisation is irrevocably committed to ensuring peaceful and credible poll, the electoral body must also purge some of its staff and personnel who are believed to be showing sympathy to the ruling party in the state.”

     

     

  • Buhari seeks prosecution of election offenders

    Buhari seeks prosecution of election offenders

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday called for prosecution of electoral offenders in the country.

    He made the call while swearing-in the new Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu and five National Commissioners of INEC in the Council Chambers of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The President said it is not enough for election tribunals to just cancel or order fresh elections.

    He said: “Another area of concern is the justice administration of the election tribunals. It is long overdue that our justice system addresses these shortcomings. It is not just enough for an election to be cancelled and a new one ordered.

    “It would be much better if all whose actions or inactions led to the cancellation of such election to be investigated and if culpable prosecuted whether they are individuals as candidates or party agents, Institutions such as political party, electoral body, or public officers as electoral staff or security agents.

    “Similarly, perpetrators of electoral violence and thuggery should not be spared. Unless our system stops covering up all forms of electoral malpractices we can hardly get it right. No system endures with impunity.”

    Promising to respect the independence of the Commission, Buhari said his government will not interfere with its operations.

    The Commissioners that took oath of office on Monday included Mrs. Amina Zakari, Mr. Solomon Adedeji Soyebi, Prof. Antonia Taiye Okoosi-Simbine, Dr. Muhammed Mustafa Lecky and Alhaji Baba Shettima Arfo.

    The event was attended by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President, Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara.

  • Yakubu’s new song at INEC

    Few remembered him by his real name, Moshood Folorunso Abiola. He was simply known as Prof. Peller. However, this enigma born in 1941 at Iseyin, Oyo State, was so adept at his trade that he would easily get a stadium-capacity crowd into a frenzy by his simply mesmerising acts.

    He was a friend to renowned princes, kings, presidents and the influential in the society across the world and was a known face at banquets in palaces and at official and private government functions, just in the same manner he conjured ecstatic vibrations among the ordinary folks. Prof. Peller, the magician was simply magical.

    However, fate, that unseen, but powerful force known to control everything else, was to play the fastest trick on the man known for his tricks. He died on August 2, 1997, the same day death chose to take another legend, the Abamieda himself, the iconic Fela Anikulapo Kuti.

    That was how he left the stage, completely unsung. For very few people seemed to notice his exit despite the tragedy surrounding his end, having been shot in his Lagos residence by some gunmen. Newspapers, struggling to find a space to give all the perspectives of the late Afrobeat king, could only manage to tuck his story in one corner, while radio and television stations, simply mentioned the incident in passing, as they were all consumed by the Fela fever. Such a sad story.

    One couldn’t help but recall this event in the developments that played out a few days ago in Nigeria’s upper legislative chambers, the Senate and how they seem an apt replication of that episode, almost 14 years ago. On Thursday, October 29, the Senate cleared Prof. Mahmood Yakubu as chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), alongside five other national commissioners of the electoral body. However, it was the same day that it also ended the Rotimi Amaechi saga, by confirming the nomination of the former Governor of Rivers State.

    Perhaps, the jury is still out on which is more important – the issue of alleged corruption, which is the crux of the drama in the Senate over Amaechi and that of the decades-old unsavoury electoral system, which has remained a sore point in the making of a great nation out of Nigeria.

    Anybody would have thought that the two would not only have conjured equal importance, but be seen as parallel and complimentary. But it was clear from the media attention given to both incidents that the nation has failed to connect the deafening echo about corruption in the country, especially where politicians are involved, with the absence of a sound and robust electoral system, with special focus on those who ought to make it possible, which was what the screening of the INEC wise men was all about.

    How? One peep in the media the next morning after the exercise, gives all the answers. The very media that chose to give scant regard to the screening of the INEC commissioners, enthusiastically dedicated all the time and space in celebrating the Amaechi saga. While virtually all the newspapers splashed headlines on the walkout staged by members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and how their All Progressives Party (APC), went ahead with the confirmation of the former governor, not a single radio or television station appeared convinced enough to invite guests to discuss the issues raised during the screening and, or even the quality of the INEC personnel.

    Even the social media, equally caught in the frenzy of the Amaechi affair, turned their eyes away from what, in many ways, could and indeed have become a matter of life and death to the country and its people.

    By so doing, they simply missed or glossed over the very critical content disclosures raised on the floor of the Senate chambers by the INEC men on how they intended to transform the agency into an institution of hope not only for the electoral emancipation of the country, but that which would create a pathway for the fast and steady movement to a dream Nigeria.

    Else, the declaration by Mahmood Yakubu, would not only have been reverberating across the country today like the echo of a church bell, but creating deep impressions in the hearts of all lovers of democracy with its eternal import.

    Hear the new INEC helmsman when asked about what he was bringing on the table: “I want to assure distinguished senators and Nigerians that no elections ever, under my watch, will be won and lost at INEC headquarters. If you want to win elections, go and canvass for the votes of the Nigerian people. We will protect the interest, integrity and sanctity of the decisions taken by the Nigerian people. Never again will elections be won and lost at INEC headquarters, at the headquarters of the state electoral commissions, and the EOs (Electoral Offices) at the local governments. This will be a thing of the past.”

    To any critical mind, these are not only words on the marble by the deep meanings they conjure, but words that ought to be engraved in the minds of all Nigerians with which to confront the INEC boss, should he deviate from them, because they speak directly to the heart of one of the cardinal issues in the Nigerian troublesome system. For no matter what anybody might say, INEC, still remains a very big barrier to elections in Nigeria.

    Yes, there are many people who would easily roll out the drums today to celebrate Mahmood’s predecessor, Prof. Attahiru Jega, for the handling of the 2015 general elections. But that can only serve the purpose of those professing the glass is half-full philosophy. A quick look at the judgements of the electoral tribunals today, certainly appears not to make Jega’s INEC smell roses.

    Incidentally, there is nothing in the stars that says that what the new INEC boss is saying is impossible within our shores. In the Ghanaian presidential election in 2008, what the ruling party needed to form a government, after winning the first ballot, was less than five per cent of the votes. It would have been a piece of cake to have just awarded it and ask the opposition to go to court. But the Electoral Commission of Ghana, under the watch of the inimitable Kwado Afari-Gyan, refused to grant it.

    Interestingly, the ruling party lost at the second round of balloting, leaving the opposition to go ahead to form government. What followed that act of one man, who refused to budge under pressure, was that the image of Ghana towered in democratic circles, such that it did not only leave many other African countries behind, it practically rubbed shoulders with even the giants of democracy across the world.

    What Mahmood is promising is that he would act in a similar manner, when so confronted. Of course, it could be argued that Jega achieved the same thing with the last election. But such a claim would fall flat in the face of critical examination. Even then, it was clear that Nigerians in their hysteria for change, simply glossed over a lot of things, as is becoming quite apparent now.

    The fact therefore, that Mahmood, instead of living in denial, has decided to do some introspection, by focusing his attention on INEC first, means a major departure from the past.

    This indeed is where the hope comes. Besides, it is not difficult to place the new INEC helmsman at the commanding heights of the nation’s intelligentsia, as a first class brain, who comes with a rich pedigree of performance in other positions.

    But, what becomes more enthralling is that he is also a professor of history. Therefore, he is not only supposed to be at home with historical antecedents, but is expected to be equally eager to create his own history. Here, perhaps, President Muhammadu Buhari might have hit the bull’s eyes with his change mantra. Obviously, the coming elections in Kogi and Bayelsa states, would be the first litmus test.

    Surely, as the various political gladiators plan their own strategies, towards becoming the chief executives of their states, Mahmood, must also be planning his own victory – how to win the hearts of Nigeria. And with all at his disposal, it is a victory only he could lose. The world waits.

    • Igboanugo, a journalist writes from Abuja
  • INEC to deploy 21, 000 for Kogi, Bayelsa polls

    The Independent National Electoral Commission said on Wednesday it will deploy 21,947 personnel for the governorship elections in Kogi and Bayelsa States.

    The Kogi gubernatorial election takes place on November 21, while that of Bayelsa is slated for December 5.

    For Kogi governorship election, 12,120 officers will participate in the exercise, while 9,827 will be deployed for the Bayelsa poll.