Tag: Inec

  • Buhari: disband INEC

    Buhari: disband INEC

    The former presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday said the 2015 election may not be free and fair – unless the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is disbanded.

    Besides, said Gen. Buhari, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) – Federal Government has emasculated the Judiciary since 2003 to the extent that the court cannot protect the ballot.

    He blamed the international community for turning a blind eye to electoral fraud in Nigeria since 2003.

    Gen. Buhari, who spoke at the Africa Diaspora Conference in London , said the Judiciary had lost its reputation to protect the sanctity of the ballot.

    He said tackling corruption was beyond the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    His words: “All the present indications are that INEC as it is presently constituted would be unable to deliver any meaningful elections in 2015. I have gone to some lengths earlier in my talk to describe INEC’s conduct in the last decade. The electoral body has developed a very cozy relationship with the Executive and Judicial arms of government that its impartiality is totally lost.

    “In the run-up to the last elections, INEC requested (and received with indecent haste) in excess of N80 billion (about £340m), a hefty sum by any standards, so that it could conduct the elections, including organising bio-metric voters data specifically for the 2011 elections.

    “But when opposition parties challenged the patently dishonest figures it announced and subpoenaed the bio-metric data in court, INEC refused to divulge them on the laughable excuse of “National Security”.

    “INEC’s top echelon is immersed deep in corruption and only wholesale changes at the top could begin to cure its malaise. What is required is a group of independent-minded people, patriotic, incorruptible but with the capacity to handle such a strenuous assignment of conducting elections in Nigeria.

    “It is not difficult to find such people, but whether the Government and the National Assembly have the inclination to do so, I am not so sure. The only way I and many more experienced politicians than myself expect the 2015 elections to be remotely free and fair is for the opposition to be so strong that they can effectively prevent INEC from rigging.

    “I would like, here, Mr. Chairman, to repeat what I have said time and time again at home in Nigeria with regards to the election aftermath. Some commentators and public figures have wrongly pointed accusing fingers at me for inciting post-election violence. Nothing could be farther from the truth.

    “I have been a public servant all my adult life: a soldier, a federal minister, a state governor and the head of state. My duty is to Nigeria first and foremost. Post-election violence was triggered by the grossest injustice of election rigging and accompanying state high-handedness.”

    Gen. Buhari expressed regrets that elections had not been free and fair since 2003 in Nigeria with the connivance of the Judiciary.

    He said: “Central and critical to democracy is adherence to the rule of law. That is to say, no individual, institution, not even government itself can act outside the confines of the law without facing sanctions. Executive arbitrariness can only be checked where there is respect for the law.

    “Other desirable conditions of democracy, such as freedom of speech and association, can only flourish in an atmosphere where the law allows a level playing field. In the absence of the rule of law, free and fair elections and an independent judiciary cannot exist.

    “As a result of the virtual absence of the rule of law, elections in Nigeria since 2003 have not been free and fair. As a participant, I can relate to this audience my experiences during the 2003, 2007 and 2011 presidential elections. Hundreds of candidates have similar experiences in state, federal legislature and gubernatorial elections.

    “Under Nigerian law, these elections are governed by the 1999 constitution, the Electoral Law and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Acts of 2002, 2006 and 2010. Ordinarily, an election is an occasion where contestants will join the electorate in celebration of freedom, because the will of the majority has prevailed. Winners and losers alike come together to work in the interest of their country. But this happens only if the elections were deemed free and fair.

    “In 2003, INEC tabled results in court which were plainly dishonest. We challenged them to produce evidence for the figures. They refused. The judges supported them by saying, in effect, failure to produce the result does not negate the elections!

    “In a show of unprecedented dishonesty and un-professionalism, the President of the Court of Appeal read out INEC’s figures (which they refused to come to court to prove or defend) as the result accepted by the court. The Supreme Court, the highest court in the land, said this was okay.

    “In 2007, the violations of electoral rules were so numerous that most lawyers connected with the case firmly believed that the elections would be nullified. I will refer to just two such violations. The Electoral Act of 2006 stipulated that ballot papers SHALL be serially numbered and voters result sheets must also be tallied on serially numbered papers. INEC produced ballot papers with NO serial numbers and also used blank sheets, thereby making it well near impossible to have an audit trail.

    “At all events, at the final collation centre, the chief electoral officer, after 11 (eleven) states (out of 36) were tallied excused himself from the room – apparently on a toilet break – and announced the ‘final results’ to waiting journalists. He had the ‘results’ in his pocket. At the time, several states had not completed transmission of their tallies.

    “As in 2003, the courts rubber-stamped this gross transgression of the rules. Some election returns confirmed by INEC stamps included, 28th April, two (2) days before the election, 29th April, a day before the election and astonishingly, 31st April a date which does not exist on the calendar, illustrating the farcical nature of the election. The

    Supreme Court split 4-3 in favour of the Government.

    “In 2011, all pretences at legality and propriety were cast aside. In the South-South and South-Eastern States , turn-out of voters was recorded by INEC at between 85% – 95% even though in the morning of the election, the media reported sparse attendance at polling booths.

    “The rest of the country where opposition parties were able to guard and monitor the conduct of the Presidential election turn-out averaged about 46%. In many constituencies in the South-South and South-East, votes cast far exceeded registered figures.

    “Which brings us to the need for an impartial judiciary in a democratic setting. The judicial arm of the government, properly speaking, should be the interpreter and arbiter of executive and legislative actions, but the Nigerian government, since 1999, has successfully emasculated the judiciary and turned it into a yes-man.

    “An independent and impartial judiciary would have overturned all the presidential elections since 2003. In addition, hundreds of cases of judicial misconduct have marred elections to Local Government, State and Federal Legislatures. The judiciary has run its reputation down completely since 2003.”

    Gen. Buhari blamed the international community for turning blind eye to electoral malpractice in Nigeria.

    He said: “Here, I would like to say a few words about the international observers. In 1999, the greatly revered former US President, Jimmy Carter, walked off in a huff at the conduct of that year’s presidential election. But, compared to what took place afterwards, the 1999 election was a model of propriety.

    “I am sure many Nigerians like me feel gratitude to the international community, notably the Catholic Secretariat which deployed over 1,000 observers in 2003 and the National Democratic Institute in Washington for their work in Nigeria.

    “In 2003 and 2007, all the international observer teams, along with domestic observers concluded that those two elections fell far short of acceptable standards. The Nigerian government, along with the international community, ignored those critical reports.

    “Some members of this audience may recall the trenchant criticisms by the UK and US governments on the Zimbabwean elections held about the same time as Nigeria’s. Now the Zimbabwean elections were very much better conducted than the Nigerian elections as the opposition party in Zimbabwe actually was declared to have won the parliamentary elections.

    “Yet, Western Governments turned a blind eye to Nigerian elections and an eagle eye on Zimbabwe’s and its supposed shortcomings. No better illustration of double-standards can be cited. Accordingly, in 2011, the international observers, having seen their painstaking work in earlier years completely ignored, took the line of least resistance and concluded after cursory examinations that the elections were okay.

    Gen. Buhari accused the Federal Government of allegedly frittering away the Execss Crude Account (ECA).

    “Instead of using the so-called excess crude account which in other countries goes by the name of Sovereign Wealth Fund to develop major domestic infrastructure, such as power, railways, road development, the account has been frittered away and applied to current consumption.

    “There is no magic, no short-cut to economic development. We must start from first principles – by developing agriculture and industries.”

    On corruption, the politician said it had “shot through all facets of government and economic life” in Nigeria.

    He added: “Until serious efforts are made to tackle corruption, which is beyond the capacity of this government, economic growth and stability will elude us. On corruption, don’t just take my word for it.

    “The Chairman of one of the bodies charged with the task of fighting corruption in Nigeria, Mr. Ekpo Nta of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), was quoted by the Daily Trust newspaper of 14th February, 2013, as saying that there was no political will to fight corruption in Nigeria .”

    On administrative structure for the country, Gen. Buhari expressed regrets that state, had become dysfunctional.

    He said: “We have tried regions and this was deemed lopsided and a trap to minorities. We tried 12, 19 and now 36 states and there is clamour for more.

    “I firmly believe that state creation has now become dysfunctional, as disproportionate amounts of our meager resources go to over-heads at the expense of basic social services and infrastructural development.

    “Moreover, I also believe that Nigeria ’s problem is not so much the structure but the process. Nevertheless, I believe a careful and civil conversation should be held to look closely at the structure.”

  • Corruption beyond government’s capacity – Buhari

    Corruption beyond government’s capacity – Buhari

    Former head of state, Gen.Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), has said the fight against corruption in Nigeria was beyond the capacity of any government because the scourge was deeply rooted in the nation.

    Buhari , who stated this at the 4th British- African Diaspora Conference with the theme: “Stable Democracy and Nigeria’s Economy”, held at the British House of Parliament, said corruption still remained the old and ever present devil that had eaten into all facets of life in the country.

    The conference took place on Monday night in London.

    “Until serious efforts are made to tackle corruption which is beyond the capacity of the government, economic growth and stability will continue to elude us, “the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the former Nigerian leader as saying at the conference.

    Emphasising the need the cooperation of all Nigerian in this all important campaign, he quoted the Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission, Mr. Ekpo Nta, as saying in a recent interview with `Daily Trust’ newspaper of February 14, 2013, that “there is no political will to fight corruption in Nigeria.’’

    He said this stresses the need for all hands to be on deck in our collective fight to eliminate the scourge from “our nation.”

    Buhari, however, said that Nigeria had the capacity to emerge as an economically competitive nation adding that “democracy’’ cannot function optimally without a certain level of economic attainment.

    He also spoke on a wide range of issues from state creation to zoning system, while expressing concern about the Independent National Electoral Commission and the 2015 general elections.

    According to him, the present leadership of the electoral body is incapable of delivering a fair election, as it had a “rosy relationship” with the executive and the judiciary.

    “INEC requires a group of independent minded people, patriotic and incorruptible, who have the courage and the capacity to handle such a strenuous assignment of conducting elections in Nigeria,” he said.

    Speaking on poverty and wealth creation, the Congress for Progressive Congress chief said there was no short cut to poverty eradication order than to get people to work and earn money.

     

     

  • Fayemi, INEC urge Supreme Court to ignore Oni

    Fayemi, INEC urge Supreme Court to ignore Oni

    Judgment slated for May 31

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday urged the Supreme Court to dismiss an appeal filed by ousted “Governor” Segun Oni.

    Oni is praying the court to set aside the ruling of the Court of Appeal Ado-Ekiti, which refused to hear his application seeking to set aside the October 15, 2010 judgment of the Court of Appeal, Ilorin.

    The appellate court in which sat on the Ekiti State Governorship Election Petition Appeal, removed Oni and declared Fayemi the Governor.

    About seven months after the judgment, Oni and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) filed a motion on March 14, 2011, urging the Court of Appeal, Ado- Ekiti Division, to set aside the judgment that ousted Oni.

    On February 27, the court dismissed the application and the appellants went to the apex court.

    Oni is challenging his removal on the grounds that the suspended President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Ayo Salami, who constituted and presided over the panel that sacked him, had close affinity with the National Leader of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and former Lagos State Governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    At the hearing yesterday, the seven-man panel, led by Justice Tanko Muhammad, granted the the applications by the appellants and the respondents to regularise their processes.

    It also fixed May 31 for judgment after parties adopted their briefs of argument.

    The respondents are Fayemi, ACN, Ekiti Resident Electoral Commissioner, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega, the Police Commissioner and the Inspector-General of Police.

    The appellants’ counsel, Joe-Kyari Gadzama (SAN), said the issue in contention is the “likelihood of bias” against Oni by the Ilorin Appeal Court, which he said renders the judgment a nullity.

    Gadzama argued that the court did not go into the merit of the case before throwing out the motion, averring that Oni was denied a fair hearing.

    Fayemi’s counsel John Bayeshea (SAN), who appeared with Femi Falana (SAN), urged the court to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.

    Bayeshea argued that Justice Salami and other Justices that sat on the Election Petition Appeal have been exonerated by the National Judicial Council (NJC).

    He said two members of the panel-Justices Olukayode Ariwoola and Clara Bata-Ogunbiyi-have been elevated to the Supreme Court based on their excellent performances at the lower court, so the allegations of bias have failed.

    Citing a Supreme Court judgment, Bayeshea insisted that final courts shall have final say even in interlocutory applications.

    He said: “This court has no jurisdiction to entertain this appeal, being an appeal emanating from the decision of the court below in the governorship election petition of Ekiti State, arising from the governorship election of 2007 to which Section 246 (3) of the 1999 Constitution is applicable.

    “This application is not only frivolous and an abuse of court process, it is in fact a subterfuge for an appeal in the Ekiti governorship election petition from which no appeal lies to this court under the constitutional provision that was then applicable.

    “Furthermore, the issues formulated on the purported notice of appeal in the brief of argument of the appellants do not relate to the grounds of appeal, in that they are completely at variance with the purported grounds of appeal.

    “These are multiple errors and or blunders, which in our humble opinion, with due respect, have rendered this appeal incurably bad, grossly incompetent and liable to be dismissed.”

    INEC’s counsel Ibrahim Bawa urged the court to dismiss the appeal and uphold Fayemi’s election.

  • Court sacks Delta lawmaker

    A Federal High Court in Asaba, Delta State, on Friday sacked the member representing Ukwuani constituency in the state House of Assembly, Mr. Alphonsus Ojo, for decamping.

    Ojo was elected to represent his constituency at the April 26, 2011 election on the platform of the Democratic Peoples’ Party (DPP) but decamped to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) last year.

    Ojo in his Notice of Summons argued that the DPP was in crisis necessitating his decision to resign his membership of the party.

    But the DPP and Mr. Chukwuma Dafikpaku dragged the lawmaker before the court, claiming that his action violated the provisions of Section 109 (1) g and (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended and prayed the court to declare the seat vacant.

    In suit number FHC/ASB/CS/129/12, the Delta State House of Assembly, the Speaker of the House and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were joined as defendants.

    Justice C.M.A. Olatoregun-Isiola granted the prayers of the plaintiffs and averred that the second defendant (Speaker of the House) was “under mandatory responsibility to declare the seat of the 3rd defendant (Ojo) vancant.”

    The court also directed the 4th defendant (INEC) to immediately commence the process of conducting fresh election into the Ukwuani constituency seat at the Assembly.

     

  • Court clears Jonathan for 2015 presidential poll

    Court clears Jonathan for 2015 presidential poll

    President Goodluck Jonathan is eligible to contest the presidential election in 2015, a Federal Capital Territory High Court declared on Friday.

    Justice Mudashiru Oniyangi held that his tenure started on May 29, 2011 when he was sworn in after winning the presidential election and not earlier.

    A card carrying member of Peoples Democratic Party from Zuba Ward in Abuja, Cyriacus Njoku, had approached the court following a statement credited to the President that he is serving his first term in office.

    According to him, Jonathan cannot be a candidate in 2015 because he is running a second term in office.

    The respondents in the suit are Jonathan, the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The plaintiff also sought for a perpetual order of injunction to stop PDP from nominating Jonathan for the election, and INEC from accepting his name as a presidential candidate.

    Delivering judgment in the suit, Justice Oniyangi observed that Jonathan only ascended to power in May 6, 2010 by the doctrine of necessity pronounced by the National Assembly following the death of the then President, late Umaru Musa Yar’adua.

    He said this could not be misconstrued as his first term in office.

    Describing the suit as speculative, the court held that the plaintiff failed to establish the fact that the Jonathan had declared for the 2015 presidential election.

     

  • INEC de-registers two more parties

    INEC de-registers two more parties

    The Independent National Electoral Commission has de-registered two more political parties, bringing the total number of de-registered parties to 38.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the affected political parties are Change Advocacy Party (CAP) and Democratic Front for a Peoples Federation (DFPF).

    A reliable source at INEC told NAN that the decision to de-registered the parties was taken at the commission’s meeting of February 5.

    The source also said that the political parties affected did not meet the requirements stipulated by the Electoral Act 2010 as amended.

    When contacted, the Chief Press Secretary to the INEC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu confirmed the de-registration of the parties.

  • INEC condemns Kano by-elections

    INEC condemns Kano by-elections

    …Indicts security agents

    From the Independent National Electoral Commission on Wednesday came a damning verdict on last Saturday by-elections into Gaya and Garko state assembly constituencies in Kano State.

    A statement by the commission’s Chief Press Secretary, Kayode Idowu, alleged that voters and officials were harassed, intimidated and assaulted by armed youths, while security agents failed to intervene.

    The statement reads: “The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has received reports of assault, intimidation and harassment of voters and election officials during the by-elections into Gaya and Garko state assembly constituencies in Kano State held on Saturday, February 2, 2013.

    “Field reports available to the commission revealed that mobs of armed youths disrupted the electoral process in some areas, harassing and intimidating innocent voters. Electoral officials were also intimidated, harassed and threatened, while some INEC supervisory officials were assaulted.

    “The commission is highly disappointed that the culture of thuggery, intolerance and unruly conduct by partisans yet bedevil the electoral process in our country.

    “Regrettably, reports also showed that despite the overwhelming show of force by armed youths during the Kano State by-election, security agents failed to intervene. INEC is concerned that under the circumstance, the elections were conducted in an unwholesome atmosphere that interfered with voters’ exercise of their freedom of choice.

    “The commission hereby affirms that this sort of situation must not be allowed in our political process because it subverts the fundamental principle of free, fair and credible elections. INEC therefore calls on security agencies to remain vigilant; and to promptly intervene, whenever necessary, against the use of thuggery to intimidate or harass voters, thereby subverting the political process.”

     

  • 2015: Politicians want INEC to ‘frustrate’ election riggers

    2015: Politicians want INEC to ‘frustrate’ election riggers

    Some politicians on Sunday in Lagos charged the Independent National Electoral Commission) to devise ways to frustrate election riggers in 2015.

    It will be recalled that INEC on Friday promised to frustrate riggers in the 2015 elections with a “clean” voter register.

    The commission also said it was working on scientific measures to counter problems such as multiple voting, sale of voter cards and snatching of ballot boxes.

    Speaking on the issue, a former Chairman of the FCT Chapter of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Mr. Sunny Moniedafe, said he hoped the commission could keep to its word.

    “I hope INEC can keep to its words because our dear country is where it is today as those in government feel they do not need the voters to win elections.”

    According to him, Prof. Attahiru Jega is not the problem in the conduct of elections.

    Moniedafe alleged that the commissioners in the past were the ones, who messed up Nigeria’s electoral process, saying, “if they can change, it will be better for everybody.”

    The National Public Relations Officer of KOWA Party, Prof. Oluremi Sonaiya, also wished that INEC did what was right.

    “Let INEC do the right thing; we have found out that in this country that those in authority are known to be saying one thing today and doing another tomorrow,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Prof. Sonaiya as saying on the issue.

    She urged INEC to ensure that the 2015 election, if not the best should be near-perfect, adding that expectations of Nigerians were high.sONY

  • INEC undergoing re-organisation – Jega

    INEC undergoing re-organisation – Jega

    The Independent National Electoral Commission is undergoing re-organisation, re-structuring and widening the scope of its electoral institute, its chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, has said.

    At the opening of a three-day workshop on “Managing the Media for Successful Electoral Process,’’ organised by the News Agency of Nigeria, in Makurdi on Wednesday, he explained that the exercise was meant to elicit maximum performance from staff.

    Jega, who was represented by the Administrative Secretary of INEC in Benue, Mr. Bamidele Oladipo, said: “The exercise is informed by the need to get the best out of the staff and it is not a witch hunt, nor is it intended to stultify morale.’’

    On the Electoral Institute, he said: “Our desire is that the institute should research into electoral matters and serve the commission and State Independent Electoral Commissions in West African region.’’

    “In furtherance of this effort, the position of Director-General and Directors have been advertised,’’ NAN quoted the INEC chairman as saying at the forum.

    He explained that promotion of staff to directorate cadre would be released as soon as the restructuring was completed.

    In her remarks, the Managing Director of NAN, Mrs. Oluremi Oyo, explained that the agency had continuously collaborated with INEC in capacity building and wished that the relationship would be sustained.

    Oyo, who was represented by the Executive Director (Marketing), Mr. Jide Adebayo, said NAN and INEC play pivotal role in the transformation process in the country.

    She explained that NAN would remain committed to the “philosophy of improving capacity’’, especially in the media and public relations and would continue to strive to impact positively on the nation.

     

  • Fire guts INEC’s headquarters

    Fire guts INEC’s headquarters

    Fire yesterday gutted the annex of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) headquarters in Abuja.

    But for the intervention by seven fire fighting trucks, including four from the Federal Fire Service, two from the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Fire Service and one from the Nigerian Air Force (NAF), the fire would have affected other buildings and property on the premises.

    The fire, which was said to have started around 9:30am when most workers were on duty, affected the Office of the Director of Voter Registry at the Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) section.

    Speaking on the incident, the Director of Public Affairs of INEC, Mr. Emmanuel Umenger, said there was no cause for alarm as the fire did not affect the data base containing information about the voter registration.

    According to him, it did not spread as it started and ended at the affected office.

    He said: “As you have seen, the fire began and ended in the Office of the Director of Voter Registry. Following the efforts of the workers who alerted the relevant agencies, the fire was put out before it could spread to other places.

    “The voter registration data base was not affected and the saver was not damaged because the fire did not get to that section.”

    Mr. Umenger assured that the fire would not affect the conduct of the forthcoming elections.

    “INEC is determined to organise credible, free and fair elections. I assure Nigerians that this incident will not debar the commission from doing this,” he added.

    The Director of ICT in INEC, Mr. Chidi Nwafor, who conducted reporters round the affected office, said the lost items were personal effects of the workers, files and computers.

    He said there was no serious damage and that the extent of damage would be ascertained in due course.

    INEC workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said most of the workers in the affected office, including the Secretary to the Director of Voter Registry, have been whisked away by security men for interrogation.

    They said most of the damaged equipment and property would have been saved if the security personnel had allowed the workers to have access to the office.

    They attributed the destruction of the property to the low quality of materials used in the building.

    Besides yesterday’s incident, in April 2011, fire gutted INEC’s office, affecting the security post. On May 24, 2011, fire affected the waiting room of the office of the chairman and on May 16 last year, there was fire at the Electoral Institute.