Tag: Inec

  • Afenifere rejects creation of 30,000 additional polling units

    Afenifere rejects creation of 30,000 additional polling units

    THE pan-Yoruba socio-cultural organisation, Afenifere, has rejected the creation of over 30,000 more polling units by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Its position was contained in a statement issued at the end of a meeting in Akure, Ondo State’s residence of the group’s leader, Chief Reuben Fasoranti.

    Chieftains and members from Oyo, Ondo, Ogun, Osun, Ekiti and Lagos states were present at the meeting.

    Its Publicity Secretary, Yinka Odumakin, said the organisation was disturbed by the INEC’s action few months to the general elections.

    The distribution of the new polling units, Afenifere said, was disturbing and showed the determination of the INEC to sustain the permanent dominance of the North on election matters.

    The organisation decried the allocation of 21,000 polling units to the North while the South, including the populous Southwest, was allocated only 8,000 and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) 1,200.

    It condemned the allocation of 7,906 to the Northwest alone, 5,291 units to the war-ravaged Northeast whereas the Southeast was given 1,167 units and Southwest 4,160.

    The statement reads: “Afenifere hereby passes vote of no confidence in the ability of the Prof. Attahiru Jega-led INEC to conduct a free, fair and credible election, if those polling units are sustained.

    “We viewed the creation of the new units as attempts to create rigging of the election at the source.

    “The creation of polling units is a subject of the number of registered voters and not based on land mass or any geographical distribution.

    “We do not know any country in the world where electoral law is changed one year to the election. We reject the exercise in its entirety and INEC should cancel the new units,” Afenifere stated.

    On the National Conference, Afenifere hailed President Goodluck Jonathan for convening the conference.

    The meeting praised the performances of Yoruba delegates at the conference, advising that the recommendations of the conference should be subjected to a referendum, which would give birth to a new constitution.

    It urged Jonathan to implement the decision reached at the conference and make it a centenary legacy for Nigeria as Lord Lugard was being remembered for the amalgamation.

    The organisation advised leaders to go back to their states and ensure that committed members of the organisation emerge victorious in the election.

    The meeting, which was attended by leaders and members from the political divides, was the first to be held after the National Conference.

     

    Those present were Chief Olusegun Osoba, the Minister of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro, Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan and Senator Iyiola Omisore, Senator Gbenga Kaka, Olu Falae, Ayo Adebanjo and Prof. Akin Onigbinde.

  • Southsouth, Southeast leaders reject 30,000 polling units

    Southsouth, Southeast leaders reject 30,000 polling units

    Southern leaders yesterday rejected the 30,000 new polling units created by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    They spoke under the banner of Southern Nigerian Peoples Assembly (SNPA) in Abuja.

    The leaders said the allocation of the 30,000 polling units was skewed in favour of the north.

    The INEC in August, created the additional polling units to bring the number of the polling units in the country to 150,000.

    According to the electoral agency, the idea would facilitate easy access to election centres.

    There has been mixed reactions to the action.

    Yesterday, Chief Edwin Clark, SouthSouth leader, Former Vice President Dr. Alex Ekwueme leader of the Southeast, and Rev. Emmanuel Gbonigi, Chairman Yoruba Unity Forum, spoke for the south.

    According to them, it was unacceptable to allocate 21,615 units to the North out of the 30,000 units.

    Chief Clark said the arbitrary allocation of the polling units, was against the new spirit reached at the National Conference.

    The SouthSouth leader said it was an attempt to manipulate the 2015 general elections.

    Bishop Gbonigi also co-chair of the group, said the electoral body’s decision to allocate additional polling units to the North lacked logic or wisdom.

    Gbonigi said the SouthWest rejected the allocation and called for immediate withdrawal of the “offensive proposal”.

    The second republic vice president noted that it was necessary for the group to make the position of the Southern region clear.

    He also suggested that the group should seek an audience with INEC to get its explanation.

    Clark said additional polling units to parts of the North especially in the NorthEast states of Borno, Bauchi and Adamawa was unacceptable to the leadership of the SNPA.

    He said, “we view with restraint worries the significant differences between the number of new polling units allocated to the whole of the Southern Zones, (SouthWest: 4,160, South-South: 3,087 and SouthEast: 1,167) a total of 8,414 which is less that the figure of the NorthWest alone (7,906) added to the FCT (1,120) totalling 9,026.

    “Or even more so the number allocated to the South-South zone (3,087), which is less than half of that allocated to the NorthWest zone.

    “Then, that of the SouthEast (1,167) which is less than a quarter of any of the Northern zones (NorthWest: 7,906, NorthEast: 5,291,and the NorthCentral: 6,318.

    “All of this is unreflective of any historical data or any significant statistical data change to inform such radical disparity in the arbitrary allocation of the polling units to the respective zones.

    “For instance, the whole of the SouthWest with Lagos, the most populated state in terms of eligible voters in the country added all other south west states, is allotted less than any northern zone, a position not supported by any scientific or proven data.

    “I view this insensitive assault on our collective sensibilities gravely worrisome and demanding of our urgent proportionate action. No amount of explanation will be acceptable to the voters of Southern Nigeria”

    Bishop Gbonigi who was represented by Senator Femi Okurounmu said INEC’s decision to allocate more additional polling station to the North lacks any logic or wisdom particularly with lower voter turnout at previous elections and the massive exodus of citizens from many of the troubled parts of the North.

    “The commission has exceeded its mandate by restructuring the number of polling units nationwide. Furthermore, it wrote for itself the rules when it decided to restructure the number of polling units in each state using 15% equality of states and 85% promotional representation. The criteria above lack any logic or merit except to create bank of votes for the North to deploy during presidential elections or when a referendum is needed to decide fundamental national issues.

    “The SouthWest rejects totally this INEC’s gift and we shall most certainly not fold our alms and watch the future generations yet unborn bargained away. The South is yet to recover from the consequences of the massive injustice done to her when the states and local governments were created during the military era and the Northern Nigeria got 19 states and over 100 more local governments than Southern Nigeria with just 17 states.

    “Accepting this new arrangement will amount to making the region completely irrelevant in national affairs, added Gbonigi.

    The Assembly however called for the immediate withdrawal of what it described as “an offensive proposal.”

    It stressed that INEC must conduct 2015 elections on the existing 120,000 polling unit structures nationwide.

    The Assembly also urged President Goodluck Jonathan, Senate President David Mark, House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Masari, members of the National Assembly and the Nigerians to prevail on INEC to withdraw their obnoxious proposal so as not to plunge the country into needless crisis because under no circumstance will the people of the Southern Nigeria accept the proposal.

    It was gathered that INEC chairman Prof. Attahiru jega will address the issue in Abuja today.

  • Voter card protest in Agbor

    Voter card protest in Agbor

    hundreds of protesters from Agbor and Abavo in Ika South Local Government Area of Delta State marched on major roads yesterday to protest the cancellation of the voter register by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    INEC did not issue Permanent Voter Cards (PVC) to registered voters in Ika South last month.

    The commission said the electronic copy of the register had been corrupted, and it would conduct a fresh registration.

    The President-General of Agbor community, Maj. Gen. Nick Agbogun (rtd), said INEC’s action “stands in breach of its statutory obligation to every constituent district of Nigeria and has disenfranchised eligible voters in our area and therefore decidedly unacceptable”.

    He said: “An INEC official said the electronic database was damaged by virus.

    “He, however, said the back-up register was not affected and that the area was the only one affected in the 25 local government areas in Delta.

    “Arising from poor planning, dysfunctional equipment and inadequate logistics, which marred the fresh registration between August 20 and 25, less than 40 per cent of a cancelled register of 73, 000 voters were captured.”

  • 2015: INEC partners Institute to address challenges

    The Director-General of the Nigerian Institute of Transport Technology (NITT), Dr. Aminu Musa- Yusuf, has said the institute was collaborating with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to address the logistic challenges facing the commission.

    He spoke yesterday at the opening of a three-day training programme on “Logistic operations management”, for INEC officials in Zaria.

    Musa-Yusuf, represented by the Director of Transport School, Dr. Abimbola Udomusu, said logistics was a critical element for the successful conduct of elections.

    He went on: “NITT considers this course as an important one because logistic planning components of INEC’s operations are vital to the success of the exercise.

    “Logistics ensure that equipment and personnel, among other things, are put in place in time, besides moving them to where they are needed for a successful poll.

    “Election of whatever nature requires planning and preparation, especially the logistics aspect of it.”

    Musa-Yusuf noted that it was the responsibility of stakeholders to consider how they would contribute to empower INEC, to enable it carry out its mandate.

    He added: “NITT has chosen the path of increasing the capacity and capability of INEC officials to enable them develop strategies for solving electoral challenges, particularly in the area of logistics.

    “The institute is not a stranger to the challenges INEC faces in conducting elections in the country.”

    The Director, Logistics and Operations, Mr. Kayode Oladimeji, said the essence of the training was to make INEC workers more effective and efficient in service delivery.

    “We have brought our logistics officers from the states to ensure they get knowledge on logistics.”

    Oladimeji said after the training, the participants would pass the knowledge to their colleagues at the state level as part of efforts to ensure successful elections.

  • INEC seeks offences commission

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC),  has called for the establishment of an Electoral Offences Commission to deal with electoral offences that will arise from next year’s general election.

    The commission’s Director of Legal Services, Mr. Ibrahim Bawa, said the commission should be set up because INEC does not have the resources to prosecute electoral crimes.

    He spoke in Owerri, the Imo State capital at a programme by the Lawyers in the Media (LIM) forum of the Nigerian Bar Association  (NBA) during its Annual General Conference.

    Removing the responsibility of prosecuting those involved in electoral fraud and offences, he said, would enhance INEC’s concentration  on logistics.

    According to him, the commission will deter potential offenders from violating the electoral laws.

    Presenting the Keynote address titled: “Media, law and the struggle for good governance in Nigeria: 100 years after, the journey so far”, Chairman, NBA Election Working Group, Dafe Akpedeye (SAN), said no institution, not even the body of lawyers, civil rights activists or other civil society groups, has done and sacrificed more in the fight for good governance in Nigeria, than the  media.

    According to him, the media has been the most persecuted and vilified by the authorities in power.

    “The press (electronic and print media, and in recent times online media) of any nation is regarded as the fourth estate of the realm: It is saddled with the responsibility of serving as watch-dogs of the activities of the government and their various agencies, reporting on events and occurrences.

    “The press is also expected to enlighten the citizenry of these occurrences, proffering solutions to socio-cultural and economic challenges. In so doing, the Press helps in shaping the mindset of the populace and in effect the policies of the government,” he said.

    Tracing the history of the media, Akpedeye said  its vibrancy  dated back to the colonial times, saying the country can boast of the freest and most outspoken media in Africa.

    The media, he said, had however, been the target of harassment by both the past military dictatorships and the  civilian governments.

    “Many agents of the media have been imprisoned, exiled, tortured, or murdered. Among them was the late Ogoni activist and television producer, Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was tried by a kangaroo tribunal and executed for treason on the orders of the late General Sani Abacha  in 1995. This was done  without recourse to the accused right of appeal (resulting in the expulsion of Nigeria from the Commonwealth of Nations and sanctions from many nations),” he said.

    Akpedeye who recalled the activities of the media from pre-Independence era to post-Independence Nigeria, canvassed an urgent need to protect its practitioners.

    “Despite the backing of the judiciary to extend protections for a free press, Nigeria remains a dangerous place to practice journalism. Sharia, or Islamic law courts, which operate in 12 northern states, demonstrate antagonism toward free expression, and Sharia statutes impose severe penalties for alleged press offenses,” Akpdeye said.

    He continued: “One major threat to press freedom and public safety in 2011 was the violent campaign by the militant Islamist sect, Boko Haram, whose wave of bombings, assassinations and intimidation have claimed hundreds of lives during the year. The group is seeking to impose strict Islamic laws over all of Nigeria. In October of that year, the group carried out one of its most brazen attacks on journalists, when its members allegedly shot and killed Zakariya Isa, a reporter and cameraman for the state-owned Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) as he covered the aftermath of one of the sect’s bomb attacks in the northeastern city of Maiduguri.”

    Other acts of intimidation against the press in 2011, according to him, included more than 30 attacks on press freedom before April 2011 presidential, legislative, and gubernatorial elections.

    Journalists, he said, were targets of ill-disciplined police and State Security Service (SSS) agents, who arrested and detained them for brief periods without any authorisation. “Separately, in October 2011, the police raided the offices of The Nation newspapers, seeking information on how the medium obtained a letter from former President Olusegun Obasanjo to President Jonathan outlining former’s desire for Jonathan to replace the leaders of the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) and four other agencies with his own candidates. After the newspaper refused to disclose such information, police arrested four editors and two journalists. However, they were released and charges against them were never filed. There are motley of cases of the murder of journalists’over the years which have remained unsolved,” he noted.

    According to him, the journalistic fervour and zeal inherent in traditional journalism have gradually faded, giving way to biased reportage, money-induced, favourable reviews and lazy journalism.

    “Of utmost concern is in the obvious lack of investigative journalism. It is rare, if not uncommon, to find present day Nigerian journalists going through the drudgery of researching on events, stories or expected occurrences.

    “The unfortunate norm in present day Nigeria is the knack for journalists to sit in front of computer screens, typing on the key-board, manufacturing baseless stories with the intention of second-guessing the minds of the Nigerian populace who have over the years been deep in high scale gullibility (an attribute the media men exploit by filling the newsstand with stories suited to feeding the populace with concocted stories they love to hear.)

    Akpedeye accused politicians of helping in dragging the profession in the mud. “This is done in connivance with deep-pocket politicians, who are mainly interested in furthering their political benefits, notwithstanding the potential negative effects their actions will have on the nation. The extent of politicians’ desperation and press-manipulative tendencies is evident in their insistence to perpetuate laws that are inconsistent with modern progressive journalism,” he said.

    He, however, said blogging on the social media (online journalism) has become a much safer and easier conduit for Nigeria’s growing internet-enabled minority to express their dissatisfactions with the current state of affairs in Nigeria.

    Speaking on the topic: “Pronouncing and enforcing legal penalties for the violation of political advertisements in Nigeria: Apcon’s role and journey so far”, the Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON) ‘s Registrar, Alhaji Garba Bello Kankarofi, represented by the former LIM Chairman, Mr. Charles Odenigbo, said: “To check political advertising abuses, we urge you to contact APCON if you see, read or hear adverts that seem to contain such abuses.”

    He asked them to write to the Registrar/CEO, APCON, noting that APCON alone could not enforce the law.

    He urged the media to collaborate with council to ensure that politicians play according to the rules of the games.

    The former NBA chief, Mr. Joseph Bodunrin Daudu (SAN) said the media has been very proactive before and after the independence. He noted that without a virile  and independent press, no nation, no matter how highly gifted, could develop.

    Chief Joe-Kyari Gadzama (SAN), represented by the Director-General, Vox-Populi, Mr. John Egwuonwu, said the journalistic zeal of the media had remained undaunted from pre-independence era, noting that the advent of social media has its own challenge for traditional media.

    He urged the media to continue its watchdog responsibility in the interest of the country by holding governments accountable to the people.

  • Osun APC  petitions INEC over Ife results

    Osun APC petitions INEC over Ife results

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has petitioned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over the results from eight local government areas in the governorship election.

    Special Adviser to Osun State Governor on Environmental Matters, Bola Ilori, broke the news at the weekend in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.

    He said: “We have written to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) about the manipulation of votes by the PDP in the four wards of the Ife South Local Government Area. In all, the APC is contesting results of eight council areas because of what happened during the election in these areas. So, people should not be surprised that votes counted for the PDP would be deducted.”

    Ilori said it was clear to the voters that Omisore wanted power not in the public interest but to serve his selfish and inordinate ambition.

    He said: “People of Osun are not fools. They know Omisore was pretending to love them while his heart was far away from the state. If Omisore is accusing the administration of capital flight, the people know who their friend is and who is boosting the economy of the state and who is doing the opposite. All the policies and programmes of the Aregbesola administration have brought about a multiplier effects that significantly reflect on the quality of lives of the residents.”

    Ilori said the PDP would be surprised that some of the votes counted for Omisore would be deducted at the conclusion of the tribunal sitting.

  • 2015: PDP’s Jonathan  versus APC’s whom

    2015: PDP’s Jonathan versus APC’s whom

    There is probably no one left in Nigeria who thinks President Goodluck Jonathan will not be running for president in 2015. Not only will he run with flourish irrespective of the rigmarole enacted by the sycophantic Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN), he will do so with damnable indifference to  the devastations caused by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, and with complete contempt for the manner the sect exhibits his leadership failings. There will be no contest for the PDP’s presidential ticket, at least not a contest properly describable as a dignified joust. If anyone would be courageous enough to compete against Dr Jonathan for the coveted party ticket, it would be mimic jousting designed to create the false impression of internal democracy within the self-styled biggest party in Africa.

    With TAN rallies in full swing all over the country, signing up millions of people whom the organizers describe extravagantly as converts to the Jonathan cause, it is already taken for granted that within the PDP, Dr Jonathan is unassailable, and his campaign already in full blast. No one will dare oppose him except to mimic democratic reality, and no one in civil society, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) or Nigeria’s servile law enforcement agencies will dare caution him or draw his magisterial attention to how ignobly he subverts the law. The country, in other words, quiescently acknowledges Dr Jonathan as the PDP presidential candidate and his campaign a trifling, inconsequential infraction.

    In the next few weeks, however, all attention will be focused on the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) as it begins its complex permutations to produce a winning presidential ticket. Given Dr Jonathan’s head start, not to say Nigerians’ sniveling propensity to venerate a sitting president, the APC will have the most unenviable task in the world to demolish the cultural strictures that promote sycophantic adulation of those in office. The party will be challenged to hammer out a platform that resonates with hostile or undecided voters, to outfox subservient and compromised law enforcement agencies determined to thwart common sense and humiliate the constitution, and to rein in rebellious regional political warlords whose regicidal instincts lead them to the most atrocious murder of principles and values ever. The APC will not find its task easy at all, nor, given their tendency to fight to the death whenever they disagree, do I envy the short, brutal and merciless uphill journey they must make in less than five months before the next polls.

    Compared with the conservative PDP, which appeared to have been born into power, and whose leading apparatchiks seem to think it is born to rule, the less obsequious APC, now increasingly looking like an outsider in the national political war, will want to ride upon a revolutionary manifesto to overthrow the old order. The party will not be discomfited by the discordance with which of many of its conservative but leading lights uncharacteristically flaunt a radical manifesto, nor will it allow the fratricide going on within its ranks to slow it down. It will expect that its hope of achieving victory in any coming encounter with the ruling party will triumph over its feeling of massive political incapacitation. The PDP is united by its long stay in office, and the spoils of office that cement that unity. On the other hand, the APC’s long stay out of office has become demoralizing, causing its leaders to fret endlessly and to fritter away its strength in meaningless, persistent and debilitating quarrels.

    Indeed, the most pressing task before the APC will be how to select a winning ticket from a political milieu that has morphed considerably into an unrecognizable form. Tom Ikimi, the chairmanship aspirant who recently left the opposition party, reveals that the APC anchors its hope of taking the presidency on winning the Southwest and Northwest votes in 2015. But contrary to his sinister and cynical tone, there is nothing intrinsically wrong with that calculation, especially if the party thinks the votes from those zones are sufficient for victory. However, the calculation may be based on a wrong assessment of the character and cultures of the country’s geopolitical zones. The Southwest, for instance, used to be single-mindedly progressive, and its definition of progressivism not contentious. Today, the Southwest’s political culture, which used to be fairly distinguishable from the rest of the country both for its idiosyncratic progressivism and the firm values and principles that sustain it, has moved much closer to the national mean of general and enervating pragmatism.

    Worse, even the Southwest political elite is now fractured into contentious parts by internal schisms, some of them caused by nothing more than an insular struggle for regional dominance. Shorn of the principles and ennobling values that had defined its politics, religion and culture, nay its very existence, for more than a century, the region has become distressingly susceptible to the riotous application of religious parochialism. More alarmingly, a sizable faction of the region’s power elite, as demonstrated by Olu Falae, Yinka Odumakin, Ayo Adebanjo, among others, remains dangerously trapped in the bitter, vengeful and anachronistic politics of the past, especially their dichotomous view of northern feudalism versus southern liberalism. Yet, the iconic Obafemi Awolowo made a last ditch attempt in the closing years of his political life to bridge the so-called ideological divide between the North and the Southwest, to find a common ground between the so-called northern feudalism and south western liberalism.

    If the APC is to make progress and unite the Southwest behind the opposition party’s worldview, it will have to appeal to the voters directly, over the heads of the scaremongering and parochial factional elite that now holds the region in thrall. The party will also have to draw attention to the region’s culture of accommodation, its liberal spirit of tolerating other perspectives — be it religious, political or cultural — and then advertise the existence of a richer, better future outside the dogmas and insularity of the past. There are indeed shared affinities between the Northwest and the Southwest, and these affinities are not only shared with other regions; they in fact do not preclude either accommodation or rapprochement with those other regions. Going by the outcome of the national conference, and the insistence of some members of the Southwest elite that the recommendations be peremptorily implemented without recourse to either an enabling law or the National Assembly, it is feared that even the jurisprudential legacy .of the region has been corroded by emotions and long interactions with the lawless propensity of the Jonathan government.

    In picking Dr Jonathan’s opponent, the APC will have to ensure it carries along a sizable part of the Southwest, almost the entire Northeast and Northwest, in spite of the ongoing insurgency in parts of the North, and a healthy share of the North-Central. The South-South is largely out of reach, except a part of the ticket comes from there, and the Southeast seems all but lost on account of its emotive commitment to the patronizing Dr Jonathan. These permutations, as well as a clear appreciation of the changing political culture of the Southwest and an accurate sense of what needs to be done, will closely influence the APC’s choice of presidential candidate and running mate.

    Indeed, by now, the APC must have realized that it cannot hope to fight the ineffective but paradoxically entrenched Dr Jonathan without a more than disproportionate application of unorthodox politics. Its choice of standard-bearer must be revolutionary, unexpected, forward-looking, and transcendental. The party has only a few weeks to do this, and correspondingly fewer weeks to sell him. That candidate must, therefore, have no baggage to tie down the party’s resources, and must suffer no handicap to make the party fritter away its time and goodwill.  The APC may have a few leaders enamoured of brinkmanship; now they must draw upon that facility in a chess move certain to determine whether the party survives or dies, whether it succeeds or fails, whether it has a future or is crushed by the weight of its incandescent past. Now more than ever, it must take a bold and radical step, perhaps the most remarkable ever, to make a solid political statement. Will it? Can it?

    I think the party is faced with two main choices: to play safe by hugging the past, or to take a gamble with futuristic daring. Either choice is certain to have implications for Nigeria’s political future: whether we would slip into one-party rule and fascism projected deliberately or inadvertently by the Jonathan government; or whether we would begin the process of national renewal. The choice, I believe, lies between former military head of state, Muhammadu Buhari, the taciturn, principled and doughty retired army general, who is sadly misperceived and misunderstood by a large swathe of the South and North-Central; and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, who is not even yet a member of the party, but could, should he join the party, represent its future and hope. If the APC honestly recognizes that most of the factors expected to shape national politics and influence the electorate’s voting pattern in 2015 have been concocted by Dr Jonathan and the PDP, such as religion and ethnicity, then it will have no illusion what its responses must be. Gen Buhari is probably the best man for these trying times, but best men seldom win elections anywhere except in dire, unusual circumstances. In Nigeria, where voters lack the competence to read the signs of the times, it is even worse. The APC will have to gauge whether the fanatical support Gen Buhari attracts from parts of the North is worth the risk of alienating the untrusting remainder of the country.

    On the other hand, everyone knows Hon Tambuwal’s heart and soul are in the APC. If he can overcome the frightful parliamentary fallout of defecting to the opposition, he will probably open the eyes of the APC to more tantalizing political possibilities. Not only is he unencumbered by ethnic and religious baggage, he is modern, intelligent, a consensus builder with cross-over appeal, has a mind of his own, and is principled and loyal to causes, and much more. For its sake and the sake of the country, I hope the APC does not rule out Hon Tambuwal. This is the time for the party to do a strategic rethinking of its methods and ideas; a time to abandon the staid and stultifying formalism of the past; a time to let former Vice President Abubakar Atiku exit the presidential race with all the maturity and dignity commensurate with his political stature; and a time to let Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano bide his time for a future when his stature and exposure would stand him in good stead.

    This indeed is time for a miracle; APC had better furnish the country one. For every democrat, every Nigerian, every patriot who has the instinctive feel of the danger Nigeria faces with a government heading towards tyranny, one-party rule and unexampled impotence and incompetence knows it is of capital importance to deny Dr Jonathan four more years of misrule.

  • Editing Nigerian editors

    THE NATION ON SUNDAY of August 24 sustained the culture of wrongdoing: “It is commendable that Professor Jega has come out boldly, not only to condemn the development but assure (assure the nation) that the commission would not accept them for future elections.”

    “Can we begin to have confidence on (in) INEC?”

    “Some of these areas include producing enough food to feed our teaming (teeming) population.”

    “Rather, the money, including the N200 million per state released for special purposes, was diverted to other uses.”  We certainly do not need the last three words in the extract, having been taken care of by ‘diversion’.

    “Unless the detonating mechanism of extremist religious chauvinism is diffused….” Get it right: defused (not diffused).

    “They have decided to sheath their machetes and seek vengeance no more.” Noun: sheath; verb: sheathe.

    THISDAY of August 28 requires reformation of four lines: “The sources of revenue in a city like Lagos is very important.” Still on errors of attraction (more below): The sources… are.

    “…business downturn resulting to (in) drive-wandering.”

    “…the rapaciousness of project contractors increase (increases) the country’s debt burden.”

    “Senior civil servants’ union berate junior counterparts” Inside business: union berates.

    THE GUARDIAN of August 28 questioned linguistic rules on two occasions: “It’s the poet feared most, knowing fully (full) well that one of the….”

    “The agitated crowd, who had been whipped to hysteria, demanded for his head.…” To avoid mayhem, delete ‘for’ from the extract.

    “…and which provides a noble and humanistic framework for relations between the state and citizens in (on) our continent.”

    “But in the welter of these realignment of forces…” Re-thinking development: this realignment of forces.

    VANGUARD of August 28 circulated three goofs: “The fear along the room and corridor (corridors) of power of a sovereign national conference.…”

    “It is not in doubt that most of the commuters in the luxurious (luxury) buses that ply.…”

    “…Aba traders constitute a large proportion of the passengers on commercial aircrafts (aircraft) that fly….”

    “Major reorganization of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), which may lead to mass retirement and sack of its men and officers, now looms.” Get it right: a major reorganization or major reorganizations, as context demands.

    “One of the most outrageous abuses occurred.…” Spelling in the lurch: occur, occurrence, occurred.

    “I do not buy the argument that the advent of electronic mails and network computers have rendered postal services absolute.” Not yet time for structural proximity: the advent of electronic mails and network computers has (not have).

    “In doing this, however, he must be faithful to the mandate of the ECOWAS Heads of Government under whose platform he operates.” Agenda: on (not under) whose platform he operates

    “As Nigerian editors converge in (on) Katsina for their 10th Annual Meeting.…”

    “A government white paper on the demonstration….” Sheer abuse of words! ‘White paper’ is a report issued by Government to give information. Let’s respect words. After all, reporting is all about telegraphic brevity.

    “UNN students union honour vice chancellor” What is happening? Sub-editors of these days show traces of illiteracy! This way: UNN students’ union honours VC

    “The fact that some people eat food that does nothing for their physical well-being put them in the class of the poor.” The fact…puts.

    “The richer nations who (sic) have more than enough should in this moment of great need and expectation by the poor masses (the masses are basically poor) be their brothers’ keepers.” Standard sociolinguistics: ‘brother’s keeper’—whether one or more.

    “Any further discourse on it, some might say, amounts to nothing but over-flogging a dad horse.”  You flog, not over-flog, a dead horse, talking idiomatically.

    “Like few (a few in this context) years ago, a life cow was allegedly buried….” ‘Life cow’ in place of ‘live cow’ portrays sub-literacy.

    “Opponents of private universities claim that they will aggravate the unemployment problem in the country.” ‘Unemployment’ is certainly a problem—so why compound it by adding another ‘problem’?

    “Denmark has just played an historic role in….” ‘An historic role’ is the type of expression Ndaeyo Uko calls Elizabethan English! Current syntactic trend: ‘a historic…’

    “One of the enduring concerns at the workshop concerned the role and orientation of the military with regards to our democratic aspirations.” Received English: ‘as regards’ or ‘with regard to’.

    “…the two ethnic rivals are now creating the impression that they are about to re-open (no hyphen) their old wounds and embark on another round of strive (strife).”

    “They have in most cases remained willing collaborators in the de-politicization of the political system by acquiescing to virtually all the issues….” Get it right: acquiesce in (not to).

    “And the neglect of such costs lead to political and economic imbalance that create disequilibria in the larger society.” The two verbs in this sentence (‘lead’ and ‘create’) demand singular usage to agree with ‘neglect’ and ‘imbalance.’

    “The criteria for the choice of candidates was based on partisan political loyalties and ethnic considerations.” The plural of ‘criterion’ is ‘criteria’.

    “NSE parleys foreign stock exchange”  ‘Parley’ takes ‘with’, if it must be used in this sense at all.

    By the way, is it not amazing that some Nigerian sub-editors do not know what they ‘N’ in ‘NUJ’ represents? It is Nigeria (not Nigerian) Union of Journalists. One keeps coming across the unpardonable error in reputable newspapers and magazines.

    “All Nigerian Editors Conference Katsina 2014” Editing editors: All-Nigeria Editors’ Conference Katsina 2014

     

  • Will INEC conduct by-election in Edo?

    Will INEC conduct by-election in Edo?

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is in a fix  in Edo State. The commission has received two letters from the  House of Assembly. The first letter is from 15 All Progressive Congress  (APC) members led by Speaker Uyi Igbe. The second letter is from nine Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members led by impeached Deputy Speaker Festus Ebea.

    In the lettwer, INEC was informed about vacant seats in the House and  the need to conduct by-elections within 90 days. The seat of Abdulrazaq Momoh (Estako West 1) was declared vacant by the Speaker, following his  defection to the PDP without following the due process.  In reaction, the PDP declared the seat of Victor Edoror (Esan Central) vacant for defecting to the APC

    Crisis hit the House on June 9 after four lawmakers-Jude Ise-Idehen (Ikpoba-Okha), Friday Ogierhiakhi (Orhionmwon South), Festus Ebea (Esan Southeast), and Patrick Osayimwen (Oredo East) were suspended for alleged gross misconduct and attempt to woo other lawmakers to the PDP.

    The suspended lawmakers were also accused of offering APC lawmakers N50m to join the APC. Before the suspension, four lawmakers of the APC including Ise-Idehen, Patrick, Friday and Momoh had defected to the PDP. With the defection, the PDP lawmakers rose to eight against 16 APC lawmakers before the impeached Deputy Speaker pitched tent with the PDP.

    What the PDP needed was to woo four more lawmakers to effect leadership change in the House, which would have led to the impeachment of Governor Adams Oshiomhole and his deputy, Pius Odubu. Ebea was said to have been penciled down for the position of acting governor, if the plan had succeeded.

    For about four weeks, Benin-City was enveloped in anxiety as lawmakers battled for the control of the House. The police took over the premises and put a blockade on roads leading to the city centre where the Assembly complex is located. It was a daily exchange of blows for the PDP and the APC lawmakers. Legislative businesses were put on hold.

    The crisis persisted because the lawmakers insisted on attending plenary sesions,  despite a court order restraining them from gaining access to the  complex. Several meetings supervised by the Commissioner of Police, Foluso Adebanjo, failed to resolve the crisis as the APC lawmakers said they would be disobeying court orders by allowing their suspended colleagues to attend plenary.

    On July 7, Speaker Igbe moved the plenary session to the old legislative chamber inside the Edo Government House, citing the on-going renovation of the complex. PDP lawmakers kicked against the relocation of the plenary session and vowed not to attend the sitting. Legislative staff were asked to resume work at another location.

    The roof of the hallowed chamber was removed. Armoured doors and iron bars were used to seal the chamber and offices of the suspended lawmakers.

    PDP lawmakers however, broke the armoured doors and resumed plenary session inside the unkempt hallowed chamber. They recruited two former  workers-Omoregbe Osagie and Okoh Godwin-to assist them. Omoregbe and Okoh served as Sergeant at Arms and Clerk for the PDP lawmakers.

    Victor Edoror was named the new Deputy Speaker by APC lawmakers while PDP lawmakers also replaced principal officers. The latest action of the divided House was the sacking of two lawmakers. Speaker Igbe declared the seat of Momoh vacant while PDP lawmakers declared the seat of the new Deputy Speaker vacant.

    Whose resolution will INEC obey? The 15 APC lawmakers or nine PDP lawmakers?

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner, Baritor Kpagih, confirmed that the commission has received two letters from both camps informing it about the vacant seats. But, he said  the commission was yet to take a decision on the matter.

    Baritor  said a by-election was not important to the commission than the distribution of Permanent Voters Cards.

    He said the INEC does not take decision on a by-election at the state level , adding that its activities are guided by law.

    “We have received two letters, but what is important to us is the distribution of permanent voters cards and thereafter, we register those that are yet to register.

    “Regarding the by-election, the House of Assembly has notified us. As far as we are concerned, we don’t take decisions on such matters here at the state level. We have communicated to the INEC office, Abuja and, once a decision is taken, we will act on it.”

  • 2015: CBN, INEC discuss printing of electoral materials

    2015: CBN, INEC discuss printing of electoral materials

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) have agreed to work together towards the 2015 elections.

    The collaboration is expected to come in the area of printing electoral materials for the poll.

    It is a follow up to the directive of President Goodluck Jonathan that the Nigeria Security Printing and Minting Company (NSPMC) be given the first choice of refusa to handle security printing materials either for election or security documents.

    The CBN Governor  Godwin Emefiele visited INEC’s Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, yesterday to actualise the President’s directive.

    The visit is the first since the commission was established 15 years ago.

    Jega said the CBN was a strategic partner of INEC in ensuring free, fair and credible elections.

    He assured the CBN boss that “INEC is willing to discuss the proposal and will continue to explore more ways to collaborate with CBN and look at global picture in terms of what is best for the country.”

    Jega said the CBN played a vital role in the last general elections, especially in the area of securing sensitive election materials, adding that “INEC and CBN will continue to partner and I hope that the interest of the larger society is important.

     “We in INEC are willing to discuss the business proposals you have come with. We will keep expanding ways and means to the benefit of our society.”

    He assured that they would put the larger interest of the country first and discuss things honestly and sincerely so that decisions would be in the interest of the country.

    Emefiele said the visit followed the directive of President Jonathan that NSPMC be given the first choice of refusa to handle security printing materials either for election or security documents.

    He said NSPMC was seeking a way through which it could work with INEC, particularly in the area of security documents printing and as it affected the printing of documents for the coming elections.

    The CBN governor described the visit as “basically a business visit”, adding: “I will crave your indulgence that we don’t stretch it just beyond this business visit.

    “We have come to collaborate with INEC to ensure that the objectives of ensuring that the printing of materials as well as transportation of materials from the printing press to the voting centres are discussed to seek harmonious ways of handling it.”