Tag: Lai Olurode

  • 2019: Jega seeks reformation of election volunteering

    2019: Jega seeks reformation of election volunteering

    *Seeks roles for journalists, engineers, medical doctors, others

    Former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) Prof. Attahiru Jega yesterday called for reformation of electoral volunteering ahead of the 2019 general elections.

    This, he said, would enhance credibility of the poll.

    He canvassed inclusion of additional groups of professionals like engineers, doctors, journalists and others to join the members of the National Youth Service Corps ( NYSC ) in volunteerism.

    Jega spoke at a public lecture organised by the University of Lagos Muslim Community (UMC) in honour of the immediate past Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Rahamon Bello at Julius Berger Hall, Akoka, Lagos.

    The theme of the lecture is: “Prospects and Challenges of involving Volunteers in Nigeria’s Electoral Process”.

    The ex-INEC chief said the need for an increase in the role of volunteers in the nation’s electoral process cannot be over-emphasized.

    He said: “It is necessary and desirable and if appropriately deployed can add tremendous value to having elections with integrity, with positive spin-off effects on good democratic governance. Since Nigeria and Nigerians have chosen liberal democracy as the political and governance system, citizens’ active participation and constructive involvement are prerequisites for its entrenchment, stability and legitimacy. 

    “However, to maximally tap the benefits of volunteerism in the electoral process, urgent reforms are needed leading to 2019 general elections, to reposition the continuous role of members of the NYSC and academics; to open avenues for additional groups of professionals, such as engineers, doctors, journalists, etc., to join academics.”

    He also called for database of all those who have participated in election duty before, so as to assist in future elections.

    INEC, as the Election Management Bodies (EMB), he said, needs to pay even more attention to the identification and selection of credible individuals and Civil Society Organisations (CSOs), as volunteers and partners for bringing about improved electoral integrity.

    According to him, since 2015, there has been enthusiasm and passion for volunteerism in the electoral process for both individuals and civil society organisations.

    He lamented that some unwholesome tendencies are beginning to creep in to obstruct the positive gains of the volunteerism.

    A few examples would suffice:

    According to him, youth corps members have been threatened, intimidated, assaulted, maimed and even killed in the course of doing voluntary election duties, adding “a few have thus far succumbed to threats and intimidation and perpetrated or condoned fraudulent activities and committed electoral offenses. Some of these who were caught have been prosecuted, but many may have escaped arrest and prosecution. The loss of lives of youth corps members due to electoral violence, especially the death nine in the post-2011 general election violence, not only threatened the NYSC policy, but also resulted in many parents discouraging their wards from volunteering for election duties.

    “Corrupt politicians are beginning to find creative ways to compromise youth corps members and some students involved in election duties. They are even increasingly penetrating and compromising seemingly credible CSOs. Similarly, as the use of academic staff as collation and returning officers has become predictable, corrupt politicians are increasingly snooping around university campuses and INEC offices, especially over governorship elections, inducing lecturers with humongous amounts of money with the hope of compromising their role in result collation and tabulation. So far, there is no evidence that they have succeeded, but the tendency is increasing and is of great concern.

    “These emerging challenges need to be carefully studied and urgently addressed with appropriate measures deployed in order to protect the gains recorded.

    In his remark, UMC Chairman Prof. Lai Olurode said one of the areas of concern for INEC under Jega was how to deploy Nigeria’s immense and inexhaustible social capital in service of its electoral regime.

    He noted that previous attempts by INEC to track campaign and election expenses had been challenging for reasons of a paucity of information and logistic issues.

    According to him, it is the responsibility of the Muslim community in an academic environment to make the utmost of every social outing to interrogate pertinent public issues that could extend the frontiers of citizenship.

    Responding, the honouree and former VC, Prof. Bello expressed delight at the gesture of the Muslim Community, saying that he was proud being a member of the institution’s Muslim community.

    Bello said: “As Muslims, we have the obligation of doing all we have to do, according to the Islamic tenets and the will of Allah. We must be vanguards and good ambassadors of Islam at all times.”

  • Benue killings: Don urges FG to unmask groups fomenting trouble

    Benue killings: Don urges FG to unmask groups fomenting trouble

    A don, Prof. Lai Olurode, on Tuesday urged the Federal Government to unmask the groups instigating the recurring crises between the farmers and herdsmen in Benue for peace to reign.

    Olurode, a professor of Sociology at University of Lagos, said the government should initiate a policy aimed at earmarking some resources for the production of feeds for the cattle of herdsmen.

    He also said a sociological survey should be conducted to establish the kind of symbiotic relationship existing between herdsmen and farmers, adding that incidents, which were aggravated by some faceless groups in the affected areas, could also be isolated.

    “So, I think through that way, the hostilities between the two sets of people will cease, as we begin to see a more symbiotic and simpler co-relationship between the herdsmen and the farmers.

    “But government needs to put down a lot of resources to encourage people to do this; otherwise people will not be encouraged and then, the hostilities and killings will continue.

    “Whether we like it or not, we cannot completely say that the herdsmen are not part of the society, they are; some of them don’t even eat the meat of their cattle; they produce the meat for the entire Nigerian community.

    “The same thing applies to farmers; all the crops that are being destroyed by the cattle are meant for you and me. We need to live in this country together and the earlier we understand this, the better for everybody.

    Read also: Benue Attack: Humanitarian crises overwhelm Guma LGA

    “What we need is a more beneficial relationship between the two groups (herdsmen and farmers) because all these demarcations, rulings and approaching the issue through the legal point of view, as some states have done, are not really going to perfectly work.

    “If states continue to say `don’t come to our states to rear cattle’; it will continue to bring acrimony between brothers and sisters,’’ he added.

    The don also called for a comprehensive sociological study of the protracted farmers-herdsmen crisis so as to enable the government to tackle all the contentious issues more scientifically and contain the conflict.

    Olurode, who is a former INEC National Commissioner, disagreed with calls from certain quarters on the government to declare herdsmen as terrorists because of the attacks in Benue.

    “I think the government needs to carry out a sociological study, a survey, to know where there were serious crises; where there have been very serious breakdowns of law and order like Benue State. There should be a thorough study to ascertain who the groups really are.

    “Maybe, not all Fulani herdsmen were involved. Besides, what kind of relationship hitherto existed between the Fulani herdsmen and the communities?

    “When we ask such questions and have concrete answers, we can then use the facts to fashion the way forward.

    “People, who are urging the government to declare the Fulani herdsmen as terrorist groups, are ignorant and sentimental.

    “What is the basis for that? Is it just because of reported incidents of violence all over the place? That will not get us into the root of the matter.

    “What we need is a better understanding; we need to know if the ranks of the herdsmen have been infiltrated by unscrupulous politicians or the Boko Haram insurgents.

    “Or maybe, the herdsmen are working for other purposes; only a scientific study will give us reliable answers to some of these issues and problems,’’ Olurode said.

    However, Mr Nkem Lemchi, the Lagos State Chairman of African Democratic Congress, said: “The killings are becoming gruesome and threat to the unity of the nation.

    “It is a pity that the Federal Government is not really decisive over the matter; it should attack the activities of the herdsmen with the same vehemence it applied on the IPOB (Indigenous Peoples of Biafra) matter.

    “All we hear from the government is mere condemnation of the dastardly acts of the herdsmen. They should be declared terrorists; while their financiers are fished out and dealt with,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • PHOTOS: New VC, Prof. Ogundipe meets UNILAG Muslim community

    PHOTOS: New VC, Prof. Ogundipe meets UNILAG Muslim community

    The new Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ), Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe meets with Muslim community, Prof.  M A Badmus standing for prayer session at the reception held at the central mosque  Islamic  Center Hall during a courtesy visit of the VC to the Muslim community on Friday.

    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), UNILAG Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, Bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus
    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), UNILAG Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, Bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus
    Unilag new VC
    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus

     

  • INEC gives condition for  de-registered parties

    INEC gives condition for de-registered parties

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said yesterday that deregistered parties could not field candidates in next year’s elections, unless they sought re-registration.

    The National Commissioner in charge of the Southwest, Prof. Lai Olurode, spoke in Lagos.

    He said there was no law that said no legal provision precluded such parties from reapplying to be reregistered, provided they met the requirements.

    The commissioner was reacting to claims by Fresh Democratic Party that INEC had disobeyed court order to recognise it.

    “If a deregistered party has not gone to court or the power of INEC has not been destroyed as illegal by a court of law, that party cannot field a candidate next year.

    “The only exception is if the party has gone back to seek re-registration, which is possible under the law.

    “There is no law, which says you cannot apply as a de-registered party if you think you have complied with the requirements of registration.

    “For a party to be recognised as enshrined in the constitution that party must be in compliance with the laws, rules and regulations.

    “The laws, rules and regulations must be as laid down in the constitution and in the Electoral Acts,” Olurode said.

    According to him, INEC is a law-abiding institution and a law-governed institution covered by the laws of the country.

    He said the commission had the power to register, de-list and de-register a party.

    The national commissioner noted that it could also sanction a party for being in violation of certain portions of the law, saying that was not to empty INEC of its power to de-register a party

    Olurode said if the court ruled against the exercise of the powers given to INEC, the commission had no choice but to obey the ruling with regards to specific provisions of the law.

    He, however, said for whatever reasons, the court could not rule that INEC ought not to have de-registered a party.

    Olurode added that this was so especially if the party was able to show that the commission had not complied with certain provisions of the law.

     

     

     

    In July last year, Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the Federal High Court, Abuja in a judgment, voided the decision of the commission.

    The court ordered the electoral body to give due recognition to the party.

     

    It also ruled that INEC had no power to de-register any party in the country without recourse to the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    The court nullified a directive the electoral commission issued on December 6, 2012, wherein it de-registered 28 parties, including Fresh.

    It also declared Section 78 (7) (ii) of the Electoral Act as unconstitutional and therefore invalid, saying it was offensive to the provisions of Section 40 and Sections 221-229 of the constitution.

    Further, it said that Section 228 of the Constitution vested the National Assembly with the powers to enact the Electoral Act.

    But it said despite this, the legislature had no power to direct INEC to de-register any party, which failed to win a seat in either the state or National Assembly elections.