Tag: Inec

  • Fasoranti scores INEC high on polls

    Fasoranti scores INEC high on polls

    Leader of the factional Afenifere, Chief Reuben Fasoranti has described the just concluded Presidential, Senate and House of Representives election as unprecedented in the history of Nigeria politics.

    He affirmed that the elections were transparently clear, free and fair in all the 36 states of the federation, though there were reported cases of the Smart Card Readers (SCRs) malfunctioning in some places.

    The elder statesman who hosted President Goodluck Jonathan during his visit to Ondo state where his group endorsed the PDP Presidential Candidate also lauded the use of the SCRs, as a new innovation in the elections, but said the new system was not perfect and gives room for improvement in the future.

    He criticised the call from some quarters on Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to cancel the elections due to the technical shortcomings in the use of the cards, saying: “It is clear from what we can see, fair, clear; no problem, no rigging. I hope we shall be able to follow this in future.”

    Fasoranti advised the incoming APC led federal government to play politics that is free from bitterness, rancour and hatred and urged the new government not to jettison the recommendations of the 2014

    He said “Confab is taken and debated that Nigerians should be given what they want because it is the opinion of the people; that is what we want. We want resource control, regional autonomy,” he said.

    The Octogenarian cautioned the incoming government of Gen Muhammadu Buhari not to tamper with the reports of the confab saying “quite a number of people were there to take the decision. The voice of the people, the recommendations should be taken and implemented.”

  • PDP agent declines signing result sheet

    PDP agent declines signing result sheet

    The Peoples Democratic Party agent, Dr. Bello Fadile, declined to append his signature on the final result sheet announced by the Independent National Electoral Commssion (INEC) Wednesday in Abuja.

    The result sheet was signed by all party agents except the PDP.

    Jega however declared Buhari as the winner of the election.

    Fadile, who merely shook Jega’s hand, said he had “no instruction to sign the result sheet.”

  • Buhari beats Jonathan with 2.571m, emerges President

    Buhari beats Jonathan with 2.571m, emerges President

    PDP refuses to sign result sheet
    The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega, Wednesday morning declared the Presidential Candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari as the winner of the 2015 Presidential Election.

    Buhari polled 15, 424, 921 to emerge top ahead of his main rival President Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (12, 853, 162).

    The number of accredited voters for the March 28, Presidential Election was 31, 746,490.
    Although the total votes cast were 29,432, 083, the difference between Buhari’s votes and Jonathan’s was 2, 571,759.

    While the valid votes amounted to 28,587,564, the number of rejected votes was 844, 519.
    The victory of Buhari re-wrote the electoral history of the nation in five ways:
    •       the first time in the history of Nigeria that an incumbent President will be defeated;
    •       the first time a party in power for 16 years will be voted out of government by Nigerians in preference for the opposition party;
    •       the first time a merged party will win election at the centre since 1962 when the opposition had been forming coalition to rule the country;
    •        the first time a candidate who had contested and failed three times will win at the fourth attempt;
    •       the first time a Septuagenarian will be elected Nigeria’s President like the case in Senegal; the US and others.

    Jega, who made the declaration after the collation of results at the National Collation Centre at the International Conference Centre in Abuja, said Buhari has met the requirements in Section 134(2) of the 1999 Constitution to be elected as the President of Nigeria.

    The constitutional requirements are winning a simple majority of the total votes cast and 25 per cent of the votes in at least 24 states of the Federation during the presidential election.

    Section 134 of the 1999 Constitution says: “A candidate for an election to the Office of the President shall be deemed to have been duly elected where there being more than two candidates for the election (a) he has the highest number of votes cast at the election; and (b) he has not less than one-quarter of the votes cast at the election in each of at least two-thirds of all the states in the Federation and the Federal capital Territory.”

    He gave the breakdown of the performance of the 14 parties that participated in the presidential poll as follows:
    •       AA—-Tunde Kelani—–22,125
    •       ACPN—-Ganiyu Galadima—-40,311
    •       AD— Rafiu Salahu—-30,673
    •       ADC— Dr. Mani Ibrahim Ahmed——-29, 666
    •       APA—-Ayeni Musa Adebayo—–53, 537
    •       APC——Muhammadu Buhari——15, 424, 921
    •       CPP—Sam Eke——-36, 300
    •       Hope——Ambrose N.A . Owuru—7, 435
    •       KOWA——Comfort Oluremi Sonaiya—-13, 076
    •       NCP—–Martin Onovo——24, 455
    •       PDP—–President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan——12, 853, 162
    •       PPN—–Allagoa Kelvin Chinedu—–24, 475
    •       UDP—- Godson B. Okoye——-9, 208
    •       UPP—–Chekwas  Okorie——–18, 220

    Bedecked in white Babanriga and flanked by National Commissioners, Jega, who began the announcement of results at exactly 2.47am, said: “Before I announced the results, I will like to express our gratitude to all Nigerians for the opportunity to serve this country.

    “We also commend all Nigerians for coming out in large number during the election. I also express our appreciation to our staff, both permanent and ad hoc, who worked tirelessly for the success of the poll, especially the young members of the National Youth Service Corps who added value.”

    After the signing of the results by all parties except the PDP, Jega declared Buhari as the winner of the election.

    The agent of the PDP, Dr. Bello Fadile, who merely shook Jega’s hand, said he had “no instruction to sign the result sheet.”

    He said: “By the powers conferred on me by the Constitution and the Electoral Act, I hereby certified that I was a Returning Officer for the election held on the 28th of March 2015.

    “That the election was conducted and that the candidates received the following votes.

    “That Gen. Muhammadu Buhari of APC, having satisfied the requirements of the law and scored the highest number of votes cast, is hereby declared the winner and is returned  elected.”

    Responding to a question, Jega said “while Buhari has spread in 27 states, the candidate of the PDP has the spread in 26 states.

    “The canddates are expected to score 25 per cent of the total votes cast in two-thirds of the Federation.”

  • APC addresses supporters on Buhari’s speech

    APC addresses supporters on Buhari’s speech

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) has announced that the speech of the President newly elected on its platform, General Mohammadu Buhari would not be given until 11 am on Wednesday.

    The party made the announcement following the elongated time spent so far by the independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to compute the final results and officially announce the winner of the Match 28 presidential election.

  • April 1st Our Girls; One INEC team + One Card Reader/50-100 voters pls; Single day elections in 2019

    April 1st Our Girls; One INEC team + One Card Reader/50-100 voters pls; Single day elections in 2019

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15th 2014. Soon it will be one tragic year. Congratulations to our troops and the supreme sacrifice some have had to make against Boko Haram. We wish they had acted one year ago.

    No results are announced by INEC at my press time Monday Am. Nigeria is still afraid of exit polls, which are part of the international political anticorruption arsenal. Why did INEC not quickly collate and announce ‘INEC authorized results’ at local collation centres immediately?  We pray that INEC will not be oppressed by the traditional demons against democracy as in the recent past. The election was not ‘pure’. There were unacceptable incidents of calculated and callous violence, stolen report sheets, bombs, attacks, gunfire, deaths and injuries, violence against the media and a fatal boat incident.

    However it ‘appears’ largely free and fair except for some very difficult orchestrated elections in violence-prone states. Voting should be a pleasant experience and not a dangerous punishment. Patience, perseverance and pragmatism are necessities in Nigerian elections and punishment for violence perpetrators. Voters will not swallow false results of a sham election rigged in their state.

    Exposure to scorching sun or tropical rain, no seats, no shade, no toilet facilities, was the order of the voting day. Worldwide we see elections where voters spend seconds or minutes for accreditation with driving licence or passport or voter’s ID and immediately vote with a choice of several curtained-off polling booths for secret voting. In this last election on the March 28 in my polling booth, INEC arrived at 8.45pm and we spend from 9.15am to 3pm being accredited as one card reader died on us and this was not replaced until the second one died at 1.06pm. Even then, it took the pressure of the citizens and a citizen’s vehicle to take INEC officials to HQ for replacements, which arrived at 2pm to accredit the remaining 100 out of about 280 voters. As usual in Nigeria, it was exhausting, time consuming and economically costly.

    I personally wiped my thumb and the card reader spent just 2 or 3 seconds to accredit me. However the person ahead of me was accredited on his ninth digit attempt. But even that took just about one minute. Of the nearly 300 voters only three or so had to be done manually. What are the lessons and corrections that can be offered? The card reader was a ‘qualified’ success preventing duplication, multiple voting, fake cards and post-voting stuffing of ballot boxes. The difficulty was when the card readers failed but card readers are multi-purpose anti-corruption device. In some cases where it failed the card reader was maliciously or politically crippled. Below are my conclusions or Post Mortem Findings.

    Post Mortem finding 1: The spending of four hours lining up for one three person INEC team to accredit over 150-500 people is too long and wrong. We in our station were ‘lucky’ as only 300 turned up out of 800 expected. Many voters had registered but only worked there and could not come to vote from home-lost votes. Surely in order to ‘Speed up the process,’ Nigeria have one INEC card reader/50 cards to speed up the accreditation process. The card reader is to be hailed as it severely limited vote rigging and voter number fixing.

    Post Mortem finding 2: A planned three INEC staff for 200-500 voters are unimaginably poor management. We eventually had two sets of three INEC staff. INEC needs to treat Nigerians better and plan ‘three INEC staff /100 voters’ in each polling station.

    POST Mortem finding 3:  Nigeria must have a single INEC election with one accreditation and same afternoon election of all offices: President, National Assembly, Governors and State Assembly. Nigerians and Nigeria cannot afford to shut down twice for elections at the cost and loss of many billions to businesses and government. Nigerians should not be forced to go through the mental, physical and financial stress of an 8-12 hour election, more than one day every 4 years. This will halve the INEC budget for police security, travel and vehicle transport hire, and voter register reproduction for the second election day and also save parties 50% of party agent hire fees and other monitoring expenses. INEC can apply some of the billions in ‘saved’ funds to hiring more INEC staff for a ‘one day election’, which will maximise the value of accreditation and queuing. It will cut wastage of time and energy and financial business losses and reduce security risks.

    If allowed to function, The permanent voter card and the card reader remain the best things that have happened to ‘honest elections’ in Nigeria. Of course, no Card reader revolution can totally prevent the massed forces of evil political elements misusing their position and power to intimidate voters, buy voters’ thumbs or steal ballot boxes. These manifestations of maniacal acts of demonic anti-democracy vandalism often characterise struggling democracies where ‘one man-one vote’ democracy is subverted by ‘party and personal perpetuation’ at any evil price.

    Serving politicians who have lost elections by legitimate means or had to use illegal means to ‘win’ the elections must ask themselves why they got it wrong? In four years’ time, 2019, when the electorate decides again, we do not want to be challenged by the same political arrogance, insulting electioneering behaviour and prolonged massive financial wrongdoing.

  • INEC sets up panel to verify results

    FEAR has reportedly gripped candidates and supporters of parties in Abia State. This followed the decision of the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Selina Oko, to set up a panel to verify results of the three senatorial districts and some federal constituencies.
    Some of the affected areas include Abia North, Abia South and Abia Central where the opposition parties alleged that the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) manipulated the results.
    The Nation learnt that although the parties adopted President Goodluck Jonathan as their presidential candidate, they were irked by attempts by the PDP to influence the outcome of the polls, which they said did not tally with the certified results their agents obtained from INEC officials.
    We gathered that it was based on the allegations and others that the REC decided to review the results.
    Sources said since the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, directed a review of the results, some candidates, whose areas were affected, had become frantic.

  • INEC confirms Lawan as PDP candidate

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has confirmed Alhaji Gambo Lawan as the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Borno State, instead of Alhaji Mohammed Imam.

    The Nation reports that the crisis in the Borno PDP worsened when Lawan, who emerged as the party’s candidate after a mini primary election in Abuja, was replaced by Imam.

    In a memo dated March 27, from the INEC headquarters in Abuja, signed by the Secretary of the commission, Ibrahim K. Bawa, with reference number INEC/LEG/DR/356/VOL.1/79 directed the Resident Electoral Commissioner to effect the change.

    Confirming the replacement, INEC’s spokesman in the state, Tommy Magbuin, said they have received a directive to add Lawan as the PDP candidate.

    He said: “We have already acted on it”.

    The memo from Abuja reads: “The commission (INEC) was served with judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja in suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/1123 -Alhaji Gambo Lawan vs. Alhaji Mohammed Imam and two others wherein the court ordered INEC to take necessary steps and actions, including the listing of the name of Alhaji Lawan as the governorship candidate of the PDP in Borno State and to allow him to contest.

    “In compliance with the judgment of the court, the commission has directed that the name of Alhaji  Lawan be included on the list of governorship candidates for Borno State as the candidate of the PDP.”

     

  • No reason to cancel Rivers election – INEC

    No reason to cancel Rivers election – INEC

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has acknowledged receiving a petition from the All Progressive Congress on Sunday seeking the cancellation of the last Saturday election.

    “Sunday morning, I received a petition from @APCNigeria demanding for the cancellation & rescheduling of elections.

    “I circulated this memo to the Committee. We reviewed it and set up a 3 man Committee to Rivers and returned this morning with their observations.

    “There were a number of points as to why the Commission should cancel/reschedule elections:

    1) No elections, 2) No result sheets and 3) Substitutions of officials.

    “We cannot establish any cancellation or substitution of results and we sent a list of collation officers to the state.

    “Officials fail to show up to work for several reasons and it is up to the REC to substitute from the pool of officials they have.

    “We do not believe the allegations are substantial enough to require the cancellation/rescheduling of the elections in Rivers.

    “The decision of the Commission is that we will take the results of the elections in Rivers state.

    “We have taken measures to make sure that reoccurrences do not occur in the future,” Jega said.

  • 2015 election final results

    2015 election final results

    INEC final results

    • Borno:

    REGISTERED = 1,799,669

    ACCREDITED = 544,759

    AA:145

    AD:392

    ACPN:243

    ADC:201

    APA:878

    APC:473,543

    CPP:310

    HOPE:88

    KOWA:158

    NCP:107

    PDP:25,640

    PPN:143

    UDP:31

    UPP:41

     

     

    • Delta:

    REGISTERED = 2,044,372

    ACCREDITED = 1,350,914

    AA:1473

    AD:735

    ACPN:916

    ADC:888

    APA:478

    APC:48,910

    CPP:813

    HOPE:166

    KOWA:311

    NCP:670

    PDP:1,211,405

    PPN:393

    UDP:354

    UPP:261

     

     

    • Sokoto:

    REGISTERED = 1,663,127

    ACCREDITED = 988,899

    AA: 249

    AD: 714

    ACPN:535

    ADC:762

    APA:3482

    APC:671,926

    CPP:1894

    HOPE:283

    KOWA:475

    NCP:686

    PDP:152,199

    PPN:605

    UDP:269

    UPP:180

     

     

     

    • Taraba:

    REGISTERED = 1,374,307

    ACCREDITED = 638,578

    AA:962

    AD: 586

    ACPN:811

    ADC:320

    APA:1306

    APC:261,326

    CPP:1,033

    HOPE:161

    KOWA:153

    NCP:876

    PDP:310,800

    PPN:680

    UDP:224

    UPP:439

     

     

    • Edo:

    REGISTERED = 1,650,552

    ACCREDITED = 599,166

    AA: 159

    AD: 450

    ACPN:1284

    ADC:512

    APA:709

    APC:208,469

    CPP:325

    HOPE:22

    KOWA:175

    NCP:516

    PDP:286,869

    PPN:729

    UDP:160

    UPP:72

     

     

    • Yobe:

    REGISTERED = 1,077,942

    ACCREDITED = 520,127

    AA:101

    AD: 213

    ACPN:164

    ADC:112

    APA:632

    APC:446,265

    CPP:329

    HOPE:67

    KOWA:104

    NCP:120

    PDP:25,526

    PPN:101

    UDP:30

    UPP:32

     

     

    • Bauchi:

    REGISTERED = 2,053,484

    ACCREDITED = 1,094,069

    AA:131

    AD: 173

    ACPN:232

    ADC:189

    APA:964

    APC:931,598

    CPP:391

    HOPE:46

    KOWA:128

    NCP:207

    PDP:86,085

    PPN:128

    UDP:29

    UPP:37

     

     

    • Benue:

    REGISTERED = 1,893,596

    ACCREDITED = 754,634

    AA:315

    AD: 254

    ACPN:1464

    ADC:539

    APA: 945

    APC:373,961

    CPP:567

    HOPE:115

    KOWA:105

    NCP:683

    PDP:303,737

    PPN:439

    UDP:66

    UPP:74

     

     

    • Kebbi:

    REGISTERED = 1,457,763

    ACCREDITED = 792,817

    AA: 214

    AD:450

    ACPN:361

    ADC:472

    APA:2685

    APC:567,883

    CPP:1794

    HOPE:213

    KOWA:448

    NCP:519

    PDP:100,972

    PPN:547

    UDP:207

    UPP:238

     

     

    • Zamfara:

    REGISTERED = 1,484,941

    ACCREDITED = 875,049

    AA:125

    AD:290

    ACPN:290

    ADC:294

    APA:1310

    APC:612,202

    CPP:655

    HOPE:14

    KOWA:122

    NCP:404

    PDP:144, 833

    PPN:374

    UDP:93

    UPP:68

     

     

    • Adamawa:

    REGISTERED = 1,518,123

    ACCREDITED = 709,993

    AA: 495

    AD:595

    ACPN:1166

    ADC:1012

    APA:1549

    APC:374,701

    CPP:819

    HOPE:267

    KOWA:752

    NCP:1212

    PDP:251,664

    PPN:1163

    UDP:289

    UPP:334

     

    • Rivers:

    REGISTERED = 2,324,300

    ACCREDITED = 1,643,409

    AA: 1066

    AD: 1104

    ACPN:525

    ADC:1031

    APA:513

    APC:69,238

    CPP:577

    HOPE:542

    KOWA:2274

    NCP:565

    PDP:1,487,075

    PPN:492

    UDP:303

    UPP:156

     

     

    • Cross River:

    REGISTERED = 1,144,288

    ACCREDITED = 500,577

    AA: 279

    AD: 709

    ACPN:514

    ADC:749

    APA:532

    APC:28,368

    CPP:381

    HOPE:237

    KOWA:312

    NCP:930

    PDP:414,863

    PPN:864

    UDP:289

    UPP:1487

     

     

    • Gombe:

    REGISTERED = 1,110,105

    ACCREDITED = 515,828

    AA: 104

    AD: 169

    ACPN: 192

    ADC: 247

    APA: 773

    APC: 361,245

    CPP: 407

    HOPE: 46

    KOWA:97

    NCP: 227

    PDP: 96,873

    PPN:157

    UDP:25

    UPP:37

     

     

    • Bayelsa:

    REGISTERED = 605,637

    ACCREDITED = 384,789

    AA:45

    AD:69

    ACPN:38

    ADC:116

    APA:70

    APC:5,194

    CPP:44

    HOPE:18

    KOWA:52

    NCP:95

    PDP:361,209

    PPN:62

    UDP:20

    UPP:35

     

    • Lagos:

    REGISTERED = 5,827,846

    ACCREDITED = 1,678,754

    AA:1795

    AD:4453

    ACPN:3038

    ADC:2072

    APA:2177

    APC:792,460

    CPP:1125

    HOPE:255

    KOWA:1000

    NCP:1430

    PDP:632,327

    PPN:1041

    UDP:269

    UPP:244

     

     

    • Niger:

    REGISTERED = 1,995,679

    ACCREDITED = 933,607

    AA: 307

    AD: 403

    ACPN:441

    ADC:614

    APA:2006

    APC:657,678

    CPP:1264

    HOPE:198

    KOWA:305

    NCP:550

    PDP:149,222

    PPN:449

    UDP:116

    UPP:118

     

     

    • Ebonyi:

    REGISTERED = 1,071,226

    ACCREDITED = 425,301

    AA: 426

    AD: 1133

    ACPN:1214

    ADC:2704

    APA:2452

    APC:19,518

    CPP:2345

    HOPE:989

    KOWA:913

    NCP:1890

    PDP:323,653

    PPN:1168

    UDP:624

    UPP:4859

     

    • Plateau:

    REGISTERED = 1,977,211

    ACCREDITED = 1,076,833

    AA: 178

    AD: 279

    ACPN: 391

    ADC: 406

    APA: 618

    APC: 429,140

    CPP: 237

    HOPE: 56

    KOWA: 138

    NCP: 693

    PDP: 549,615

    PPN: 554

    UDP: 54

    UPP:29

     

    • Imo:

    REGISTERED = 1,747,681

    ACCREDITED = 801,712

    AA: 533

    AD:757

    ACPN: 956

    ADC: 1617

    APA: 2236

    APC: 133,253

    CPP: 733

    HOPE: 157

    KOWA: 158

    NCP: 784

    PDP: 559,185

    PPN:414

    UDP:264

    UPP: 1917

     

    • Akwa Ibom:

    REGISTERED = 1,644,481

    ACCREDITED = 1,074,070

    AA: 1600

    AD: 474

    ACPN:443

    ADC:608

    APA:384

    APC:58,411

    CPP:412

    HOPE:192

    KOWA:160

    NCP:381

    PDP:953,304

    PPN:324

    UDP:224

    UPP:144

     

    •  Abia:

    REGISTERED = 1,349,134

    ACCREDITED = 442,538

    AA:315

    AD:448

    ACPN:2194

    ADC:569

    APA:2766

    APC:13,394

    CPP:1046

    HOPE:125

    KOWA:173

    NCP:745

    PDP:368,303

    PPN:424

    UDP:213

    UPP:330

     

    • Anambra:

    REGISTERED = 1,963,427

    ACCREDITED = 1,963,427

    AA:547

    AD:475

    ACPN:1259

    ADC:534

    APA:2303

    APC:17,926

    CPP:1279

    HOPE:357

    KOWA:311

    NCP:887

    PDP:660,762

    PPN:537

    UDP:286

    UPP:1121

     

    •  Kaduna:

    REGISTERED = 3,361,793

    ACCREDITED = 1,746,031

    AA:218

    AD:273

    ACPN:424

    ADC:546

    APA:1611

    APC:1,127,760

    CPP:824

    HOPE:105

    KOWA:176

    NCP:754

    PDP:484,085

    PPN:549

    UDP:79

    UPP:78

     

    • Kwara:

    REGISTERED = 1,181,032

    ACCREDITED = 489,360

    AA:248

    AD:520

    ACPN:817

    ADC:438

    APA:1165

    APC:302,146

    CPP:910

    HOPE:118

    KOWA:214

    NCP:394

    PDP:132,602

    PPN:325

    UDP:81

    UPP:102

     

    •  Katsina:

    REGISTERED = 2,842,741

    ACCREDITED = 1,578,646

    AA:183

    AD:283

    ACPN:402

    ADC:498

    APA:1671

    APC:1,345,441

    CPP:976

    HOPE:47

    KOWA:215

    NCP:330

    PDP:98,937

    PPN:254

    UDP:117

    UPP:72

     

    • Jigawa:

    REGISTERED = 1,815,839

    ACCREDITED = 1,153,428

    AA:394

    AD:587

    ACPN:540

    ADC:375

    APA:2527

    APC:885,988

    CPP:1,553

    HOPE:337

    KOWA:423

    NCP:548

    PDP:142,904

    PPN:853

    UDP:338

    UPP:197

     

    • Kano:

    REGISTERED = 4,943,862

    ACCREDITED = 2,364,434

    AA:426

    AD:708

    ACPN:778

    ADC:657

    APA:2770

    APC:1,903,999

    CPP:1,552

    HOPE:292

    KOWA:288

    NCP:697

    PDP:215,779

    PPN:485

    UDP:234

    UPP:156

     

    • Nassarawa:

    REGISTERED = 1,222,054

    ACCREDITED = 562,959

    AA:40

    AD:74

    ACPN:95

    ADC:105

    APA:310

    APC:236,838

    CPP:131

    HOPE:4

    KOWA:48

    NCP:222

    PDP:273,460

    PPN:164

    UDP:23

    UPP:33

     

    • Oyo:

    REGISTERED = 2,344,448

    ACCREDITED = 1,073,849

    AA:6331

    AD:6282

    ACPN:8979

    ADC:5000

    APA:4,468

    APC:528,620

    CPP:6,674

    HOPE:839

    KOWA:1,312

    NCP:1895

    PDP:303,376

    PPN:2842

    UDP:1069

    UPP:3665

     

    •  FCT:

    REGISTERED = 886,573

    ACCREDITED = 344,056

    AA:139

    AD:240

    ACPN:342

    ADC:288

    APA:674

    APC:146,399

    CPP:347

    HOPE:83

    KOWA:165

    NCP:473

    PDP:157,195

    PPN:269

    UDP:95

    UPP:96

     

    • Ondo:

    REGISTERED = 1,501,549

    ACCREDITED = 618,040

    AA:386

    AD:1237

    ACPN:2406

    ADC:1227

    APA:1139

    APC:299,889

    CPP:1012

    HOPE:184

    KOWA:223

    NCP:846

    PDP:251,368

    PPN:734

    UDP:184

    UPP:221

     

    • Osun:

    REGISTERED = 1,378,118

    ACCREDITED = 683,169

    AA = 377

    ACPN = 1731

    AD = 1667

    ADC = 937

    APA = 1306

    APC = 383 603

    CPP = 1029

    HOPE = 132

    KOWA = 255

    NCP = 767

    PDP = 249,929

    PPN = 599

    UDP = 124

    UPP = 159

    
    
    • Kogi:

    REGISTERED = 1,350, 883

    ACCREDITED = 476,839

    AA 700

    AD 427

    ACPN 1089

    ADC 761

    APA 1001

    APC 264, 851

    CPP 967

    HOPE 144

    KOWA 190

    NCP 399

    PDP 149, 987

    PPN 476

    UDP 180

    UPP 156

    
    
    •  Enugu:

    REGISTERED = 1,381,562

    ACCREDITED = 616,112

    AA 441

    AD 269

    ACPN 479

    ADC 478

    APA 715

    APC 14,1 57

    CPP 237

    HOPE 110

    KOWA 203

    NCP 761

    PDP 553, 003

    PPN 407

    UDP 1623

    UPP 290

     

    • Ogun:

    REGISTERED = 1,709,409

    ACCREDITED = 594, 915

    AA 584

    AD 1927

    ACPN 3072

    ADC 1364

    APA 1930

    APC 308, 290

    CPP 978

    HOPE 332

    KOWA 432

    NCP 815

    PDP 207,950

    PPN 4339

    UDP 562

    UPP 597

     

    • Ekiti:

    Registered Voters: 700,255
    Accredited: 323739

    AP: 94

    ACPN: 538

    AD: 864

    ADC: 424

    APA: 482

    APC: 120, 331

    PDP: 176, 466

    CPP: 330

    HDP: 94

    KOWA: 108

    NCP: 377

    PPN: 388

    UDP: 60

    UPP: 145

  • ‘APC ’ll not tolerate last-minute rigging’

    ‘APC ’ll not tolerate last-minute rigging’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday warned against what it described as the last minute rigging of the general election, saying that it is dangerous for democracy.

    The party urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, to stand firm to the end and declare authentic results to douse tension, fears and uncertainties.

    Lagos APC Publicity Secretary Joe Igbokwe told reporters in Ikeja, the state capital, said, since elections have been conducted in the outstanding 110 units in five local governments, the onus is on the electoral agency to announce the results within 24 hours in accordance with the electoral law.

    He alleged that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was plotting to manipulate the process to give its candidates undeserved and unmerited advantage.

    Warning that any electoral fraud at the collation stage is potentially dangerous, Igbokwe said the move may set the country on fire.

    He added: “Faced with an embarrassing, humiliating and crushing defeat, PDP leaders have been running helter-skelter, holding secret meetings with security agencies to tinker with the results. Nigerians will stop at nothing to defend their votes. Nigerians have worked so hard to effect change in the way we run this country. But, the agents of darkness are still at work to scuttle a hard earned victory with pains, tears and blood. Nigerians will soon know how many people were killed to suppress this imminent change.”

    Igbokwe urged Nigerians to take interest in the carnage in the Southeast and Southsouth during the exercise, adding that security agencies have unleashed terror in innocent people as if the country is in a war situation.

    Igbokwe said only truth and decency can sustain Nigeria, urging the electoral agency to resist manipulation.

    He said democracy can only survive through the sanctify of the ballot box.