Tag: Mike Igini

  • A’Ibom APC: INEC tampering with materials

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akwa Ibom has claimed it has concrete evidence the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the state has started doctoring election materials.

    The party claimed that it is in custody of a text message sent by the INEC’s state administrative secretary, one Mr. Patta, summoning staff of the commission to duty on Sunday to ‘work’ on election materials.

    A statement by the state publicity secretary of APC, Mr. Nkereuwem Enyonekere, alleged: “A text message sent to some staff this Sunday morning by the Secretary Admin, Mr. Patta, says: ‘Good morning Sir. Please kindly come to the office now as some people are expected to work on election materials. Thanks, Secretary Admin’’.

    The party alleged the INEC Resident National Electoral Commission (REC), Mike Igini, is tampering with the governorship/State House of Assembly election materials of  March 9, 2019 to frustrate the petition filed by its governorship candidate, Obong Nsima Ekere.

    The statement reads: “The Independent National Electoral Commission office in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State has summoned its staff to work on Sunday, March 31 ‘to work on election materials’.

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    “We believe that INEC officials are being summoned to the office by Mr. Patta to tamper with or destroy evidence related to the 2019 general election.

    “This is obviously prompted by the filling of a petition last week at the Akwa Ibom Election Petition Tribunal by Mr. Nsima Ekere, the APC governorship candidate in the March 9 election, challenging the fraudulent announcement of Udom Emmanuel as the winner. Other APC candidates have also filed their petitions”.

    The APC recalled it had months leading up to the elections joined voices with notable Akwa Ibom people and had written to the INEC chairman, Prof Mahmud Yakubu, requesting the redeployment of Igini.

    According to the party, the REC was a deeply compromised electoral officer, who through his actions and statements gave him away as being sympathetic and partial to Governor. Udom Emmanuel, and the PDP.

    It regretted that the request was not granted.

    “The bias of Mr Igini in favour of the PDP showed through his conduct of the election as evidenced in the collusion and connivance of INEC staff and ad hoc staff with the PDP”.

    Responding, Igini denied authorising the doctoring of election materials, saying all materials used in the conduct of the March 9 elections are safe.

    Igini, who spoke through the state publicity officer of INEC, Mr. Don Etukudoh, said all political parties are free to inspect election

    materials to confirm if they have been destroyed or doctored.

    “The APC in the state has been consistent in their accusations against the commission so we are not surprised.

    “The commission in the state under Mr. Igini has a lot of integrity and would not succumb to blackmail,” he said.

  • 44 parties pass vote on confidence on REC Igini

    Forty four political parties have vouched for the integrity of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in Akwa Ibom state, Mr. Mike Igini.

    The parties under the aegis of Inter-party Advisory Council (IPAC) also passed a vote confidence on Igini saying they will swim and sink with Igini despite attempts to remove him as Akwa Ibom REC.

    In a statement by IPAC’s legal adviser, Mr. Mfon Peters, the 44 political parties alleged that several attempts were made to lure the REC against the will of the people during the presidential and senatorial elections but he “chose his integrity instead”.

    IPAC applauded what it described an unbending noble character displayed by Igini in the face of intimidation and fat offers which they said played out in Ikot Ekpene.

    “We have noticed that after the Presidential and National Assembly elections in our State, the ‘Igini Must Go’ assemblage which had receded has been rekindled. The reason is not far- fetched.

    “We applaud the unbending noble character of the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mike Igini, in the test offered by the scenario that played out at Ikot Ekpene Senatorial District elections.

    “Despite monetary inducement, connection, influence and power play, Igini was uncompromising.

    Read Also: How to protect ballot box, by Igini

    “He insisted that only the valid votes cast at the polling units and collated by the designated officers will count.

    “This did not go down well with some political gladiators who hitherto thought that what money cannot do, more money can do.”

    The assemblage of political parties further alleged those seeking transfer of Igini have so far created spurious stories and blatant lies against the REC in a bid to discredit the just concluded election which was adjudged by their respective Units Agents and International Observers as credible and transparent.

    They called on the National Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof Mahmood Yakubu to discountenance the renewal of calls for the redeployment of Igini, stressing they were are ill-intentioned and in absolute bad faith.

  • INEC discovers 19 illegal polling units in Akwa Ibom

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says it has discovered 19 illegal polling units in Akwa Ibom.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Mr Mike Igini, made the disclosure at Enlarged Stakeholders’ Forum in Uyo in Monday.

    The REC said that the illegal polling units were in Obot Akara and Uyo Local Government Areas, adding that that some of the polling units were located in hotels, church, mosques among others.

    He said that INEC found that the polling units concerned were located in violation of its guidelines; therefore there was the need to relocate and rename some polling units in the state.

    Igini, however, urged the people not to see the relocation of the polling units as a creation of new polling units, stressing that that no new polling units had been created.

    He said the essence of the forum was “to enable us see face to face and interact freely. “

    “We are here to present the commission electoral plan and strategic implementation plan, hear from you and carefully consider the concerns and ideas of everyone on how we can serve you better,” he said.

    The REC cautioned politicians who might have plans to rig the 2019 general elections to desist because INEC of today has evolved beyond rigging.

    Igini said INEC had “advanced to a level where everything is tracked.“

    “We must conduct an election that will be accepted by the people without recourse to the tribunals. We have done it elsewhere and we will do it here.

    Read Also: INEC decries low rate of PVCs’ collection in Ebonyi

    “You are going to have little or minimal petitions. Election is a time where the independence and integrity of institutions like INEC, security agencies and judiciary are tested.”

    He also said the forum was organized as an opportunity to engage stakeholders of all political persuasions and have a robust engagement.

    The REC advised leaders of political parties in the state to talk to their party members the need for them conduct ensuring strict adherence to the code of conduct of the electoral acts.

    He stressed the need for political parties to commence the process of identifying committed party members to serve as agents during the general elections.

    Igini assured that the forthcoming election would not tolerate or accommodate thuggery in the state.

    “Campaign messages should encapsulate the principles of accommodation, decency and with strict adherence to the rule of law.

    He emphasized that the best way to win the forthcoming general elections was to mobilize supporters to get their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    Igini however, noted that collection of PVCs in the state was 50 per cent, a development he described as very low.

    The Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr Adeyemi Ogunjemilusi, pledged the neutrality of the police to ensure that all forms of intimidation on the electorate were eliminated, during and after the exercise.

    He said that the command had strategised ways to train security personnel on what was required of them before, during and after the elections.

    The police boss warned against any form of intimidation or harm against corps members deployed to the polling units.

    “No youth corps member will be molested, harmed or killed in Akwa Ibom.

    “We are going to view any embarrassment on corps member more seriously than any other offense in the state.

    “If you ferment problem you go in for it, we are going to prosecute all electoral offenders.

    “We must have peace and security and we must not allow any clash of event,” he said.

    The theme of the forum is “Broad outline of 2019 Election in Akwa Ibom, The Road Map.”

    NAN

     

  • INEC raises alarm over 132, 078 uncollected PVCs in A’Ibom

    The Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) in Akwa Ibom has raised the alarm over 132,078 uncollected Permanent Voters’ Card (PVCs) by electorates in the state.

    According to the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr. Mike Igini, the figure comprised old and new PVCs, adding that PVC collection by electorates in the state was very poor.

    Speaking yesterday with reporters in Uyo. Igini said out of the 127,267 new PVCs received by the commission and distributed across the state, only 12,881 have been collected leaving an outstanding of 114,386.

    “From the old PVCs, out of 18,541 received and distributed, only 849 have been collected, leaving an outstanding of 17,692”, he said.

    Igini noted that nationwide, over 7million PVCs were yet to be collected, the REC wondered how the electorates will cast their votes less than 224 days to the commencement of the elections across the country without their PVCs.

    He explained that even with the campaigns run in the media on the issue, many people in Uyo, the state capital with the highest number of polling units are yet to collect their PVCs.

    The REC charged political parties in the state to employ the strategy used in ensuring the electorates registered during the Continuous Voters’ Registration exercise to visit INEC offices for the collection of their PVCs.

    “With respect to the level of Permanent Voters’ Card collection and registration exercise in Akwa Ibom State in particular, what I want you to know is that there are in two broad categories: We have the PVCs that we have produced prior to the 2015 elections up to the time of the commencement of the new Continuous Voter Registration on the 27th of April last year. These Permanent Voters’ Card of 2015 till date which we refer to as the old PVC, the level of turnout is very poor.

    “In Akwa Ibom state, we still have a total of 18,541 old permanent voters’ card, out of which we have only distributed 849, leaving a total of 17,692 still uncollected. Similarly, of the new set of PVCs, it may also sadly interest you to know that out of the 127,267 PVCs, we have only distributed 12,881, leaving a total of 114,386 PVC uncollected in this state”.

    He called on the political parties and the candidates to begin to endear themselves to the electorates so as to secure their votes, adding that there will be election in every entire polling unit in the state.

    Igini warned that the practice of snatching of ballot boxes and ballot sheets will not be tolerated, and where such incidences were to happen, the elections in that place would be cancelled.

    “As at today, we have barely six months to the 2019 elections. We have less than 224 days to the opening of the polls in the entire 2,980 polling units that are domicile in the 329 wards of the thirty-one local government areas of Akwa Ibom state where election on the 16th February – National Assembly and the Presidential election will open and thereafter, on the 2nd of March we will be having the governorship and the 26 State Constituency election in Akwa Ibom.

    “Here in Akwa Ibom state, the people contesting for office should do well enough to go and campaign, endear themselves to the electorates because in this state, there will be election in the entire polling unit. In this state, nobody should ever think of snatching of ballot boxes or ballot papers because anywhere that ballot boxes or ballot papers are snatched, it is immediately cancelled.

    “No result can ever emanate from a polling unit(s) or wards or local governments where ballot papers or results are snatched and taken to anywhere to produce results that will ever be accepted by the commission,” he noted.

  • REC advises INEC staff to earn public trust ahead of 2019 elections

    REC advises INEC staff to earn public trust ahead of 2019 elections

    Mr Mike Igini, the Resident Electoral Commissioner ( REC ) in Akwa Ibom, has advised staff of the Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) to work hard to earn public trust ahead of 2019 elections.

    Igini gave the advice in Uyo at the end of a tour of INEC local government offices in the state.

    The REC, who reported for duty in the state in September, noted it had been observed all over the country that the electorate do not trust INEC staff, adding that this situation was worrisome.

    “Before my posting to this state, the commission has been doing so much in the course of preparing for the 2019 elections.

    “I have now come to join all of you to help make that preparation. There is need for change or re-orientation of mindset of staff as it will no longer be business as usual.

    “No election can be credible where people believe that votes are sold and bought and election outcomes do not reflect the wishes of the people as expressed at the polling units.

    “INEC staff must earn public trust and confidence, as these are bedrock principles that underpin a credible electoral process.”

    Igini advised urged all staff members to create and sustain an environment of trust, openness and inclusiveness.

    “The perception of impartiality on the part of INEC staff lends credibility to the commission and the electoral process.”

    He said that his tour of the 31 local government area offices of INEC had helped to acquaint him with the staff and their working environment.

    The REC stressed that staff members were the most critical asset of the commission and emphasised the need for them to demonstrate competence, impartiality and neutrality in the elections.

    “I have toured the entire local government areas and today, Uyo, which is the state capital and the biggest with 175 polling units is the grand finale of the tour.

    “And having gone round the 31 local government areas, I have been impressed by what I have seen since Oct. 30 that the tour commenced.”

    He observed that though some areas had challenges in terms of physical infrastructure, the state was blessed with good road networks.

    Receiving the INEC Commissioner, the Uyo local government Electoral Officer, Mr Onyemaeze Mba, complained of poor facilities in the office and appealed for urgent repairs or replacement.

    Mba, who was represented by the assistant Electoral Officer, Mr Sebastian Etefia, explained that the office had no electricity for over eight years, following disconnection due to unpaid bills.

    The electoral officer further said that poor work environment had resulted in truancy as staff members had no desks to enable them to settle down and perform their duties responsibly.

    “The office has remained without electricity since 2009 when the Power Holding Company cut the light because of outstanding unpaid bills.

    “There are no furniture for staff to use and no borehole for water supply. The office has an uncompleted fence, the doors to the offices are all in a deplorable condition.

    “The office building needs a facelift. As INEC office in the state metropolitan town, it should ordinarily serve as an annex to the commission’s state Headquarters office,” the electoral 0fficer said.

    NAN

  • Edo: Three corps members arrested for selling ballot papers

    Three members of the National Youth Service Corps who served as ad-hoc staff during the April 11 House of Assembly election in Edo State have been arrested for allegedly selling ballot papers and other sensitive materials.

    They were alleged to have sold the electoral materials for N40, 000.

    The state’s Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mike Igini, who disclosed this while reviewing the 2015 polls said 15,000 workers were used for the conduct of the elections.

    Igini said the three corps members sold two packets of ballot papers.

    He stated that two staff of the commission who could not account for election materials given to them were suspended.

    The REC said investigations have commenced to determine the culpability of the two INEC staff in the incident.

    “The ongoing investigations will determine whether their act was deliberate or out of sheer negligence.

    “With respect to the NYSC members, they were given ballot papers of which they sold two packets and were nabbed,” he stated.

    Igini, who described their offences as severe, said they would be dealt with ruthlessly.

  • Igini: We need death penalty for corruption

    Igini: We need death penalty for corruption

    In this interview, Cross River State Resident Electoral Commissioner Mike Igini, who reflects on the centenary celebrations, laments that successive governments have abandoned the governance framework bequeathed by the founding fathers. He also contends that the country needs a virile federal constitution to resolve its crises of nation-building and development. EMMANUEL OLADESU met him.

    What is your position on the centenary celebrations?

    It is an apt opportunity to ask ourselves why we abandoned the governance framework bequeathed by Sir Alhmadu Bello, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Dr. Nnamidi Azikiwe after series of conferences where they finally agreed to promote rapid development and settled for the federal system of government. Why is it that we have refused to reconcile ourselves and build a country of equal opportunity for all? Our reality is that, after these many years, we have not arrived at a consensual agreement of who we are, what we want to be and where we want to go. We are still grappling with the intricacies of nationhood. We are yet to be at peace with one another after 100 years. In other words, we have not realistically formulated a common acceptable shared vision that would generate common determination to achieve common goals. Every group in virtually all parts of the country is making demands on the nation and the reality of Nigeria in the 21st century is quite different. The idea of a national discourse or dialogue has not been fully embraced. We should confront our realities, accept our mistakes, correct them and move forward boldly. We can only do that by formulating an acceptable constitution.

    Can we confront the leadership challenge in Nigeria?

    In conceptualising leadership, we must first be mindful that leadership is about being effective in meeting collective goals of society. The goals that a leader wants to meet are the key to effectiveness. Now, in the leadership of nations, the goals that must be met are numerous and complex. So, no person has the capacity to meet all these goals without many informed inputs. It is the rule of the inner cycle in leadership and getting the inner cycle right that some people refer to as the core group around any leader. The history of very successful leaders is the history of competent members of the inner cycle around the leader and not having a coterie of people, who are more interested in money making and spending more time in acquiring property, instead of critical thinking on key issues of public administration.

    One of the most successful United States President of our time, Bill Clinton, had in his inner cycle exceptionally competent six Jewish Americans during his two terms as the governor of Arkansas and during his eight year s in the Presidency that recorded the highest economic records. The task of leadership is very serious. It requires knowledge and competence and inputs of different people with varied competency and proficiency. The effectiveness of leadership therefore, is reflected in the quality of advice and information, which such leadership gets and utilises from his inner cycle or think-tank. When such an nformation is provided, the leader must make optimising decisions by scanning these inputs, and considering them and their alternatives.

    The national conference is about to hold. What are your expectation?

    I agree that centrist policies are not good for our progress. This is why I advocate that, among other things, the civil society advocacy must focus on two key deliverable. These are increasing bottom-up participation for development through increased subsidiarity and improving the control mechanisms for making the leadership at all levels of the three arms of governance more accountable and less susceptible to impunity. This is necessary, since all federal states are so created because of an acceptance of the diversity of the components of such states and an embrace of the strengths, which such diversity offers to the whole. I believe we have retreated from that fact because we have acquired a mind-set of wealth sharing rather than wealth creation. There should be further devolution of responsibilities from the centre that is overcrowded with obligations on matters that should be handled better at local levels. The colonial government had a strategic interest in centrism and only fostered federalism to give a satisfying semblance of diversity to the subjects. But, having become independent, rather than invest in each region to become more self-sufficient and self-sustaining, the post independent elite, particularly from the Second Republic, have concentrated on amassing personal, rather than collective wealth and power. That mind-set must change because Nigerians will only embrace our diversity when they realise that we need every part of the country because of what each part offers, and that we are stronger when the sum of our collective contributions is greater than the contributions of the individual parts. To reach that point, we must aim towards a balanced development that creates wealth from all parts to enrich the collective faith, through self-sufficiency of each section and not the excessive strengthening of the center, which leads to an excessive struggle for central power which elites see as a grand prize.

    Some of the problems in the polity often begin within the parties.Why is it difficult for INEC to promote and deepen internal democracy in our political parties?

    From my experience, it appears that politicians prefer chaos to order. Perhaps, they feel that order will not be in their favour. Otherwise, how can we explain the sudden removal of Section 87(9) that gave the INEC some quasi -dministrative powers to ensure internal democracy and, instead, they introduced a proviso to Section 31 of the Electoral Act, to the effect that, whatever list submitted to INEC as candidates cannot be rejected for any reason “whatsoever’’ whether there was a primary election or not. What then, do you want the INEC to do, given the existence of such a law? The only beneficiary of chaos is chaos, because one chaos will beget another. But, if all accept order, then, in the end, the system will benefit and a stable system is beneficial to all because everyone will be subject to the same rules of engagement. The impunity with which political parties retreat from the requisites of internal democracy is bad for the party membership, because the only thing that sustains growth in party followership is when party members know that they have a reasonable chance of predicting how the rules work in their parties and that these rules will sustain. They should be able to tell how such rules can be modified when it does not serve the required purpose for which it was made and needs to be changed, because when a rule is inadequate it will require amendment, but the process of doing so must not only be fair but seen to be fair by all stakeholders, so there should always be give and take, trade-offs for the collective good but it should be balanced and not opaque.

    How can corruption be tackled efdfectively in the country?

    Any society that accepts corruption as an article of faith will never attain its full potentials. As I have just related in regard to electoral offences, a significant stumbling block to the anti-corruption battle of all kinds in Nigeria is the sense of impunity built by years of a lack of effective judicial consequences. No doubt, there have been many convictions for crimes in Nigeria. But, regarding fraud, especially the type of fraud which threatens our economic growth and development in many dimensions. The judiciary should lead the way on that count. That is why we have separation of powers with the judicial arm and that is why democracy is always qualified with the mantra “and the rule of law” , for as St Augustine insisted, a country is nothing but a gang of rogues without the rule of law. The rule of law should start from amongst the elite. First, there should be some unacceptable conduct among the ruling elite for which sever sanctions, including excommunication from leadership roles should be agreed among them as a convention. Then, in the larger society, this conviction will be used to promote and enforce the extant laws. Where the fight against pernicious corruption is not a shared elite value, a society will come to ruinous end. When the elite share such a conviction, it is regarded as enlightened self-interest.

    What type of serious consequence ?

    The way we are going now, with our value pyramid upside down; a society where money is everything, no sense of shame and nobody is afraid of anything, except death, we may have to go for death penalty. Going to prison do not seem to scare this tribe of treasury looters because there is sufficient money to live well in prison and after serving. Those who do the wrong things that endanger our collective wellbeing are the very ones that would tell to you to go to court and boast of their influence and how they will stall the trial through frivolous legal applications upon applications up to the Supreme Court . Even in our churches now, pastors would announce during thanksgiving that members should take their personal effects when dancing to the altar because of the fear of stealing even in the house of God. This is how terrible our society has declined. In addressing this problem, we should adopt these three approaches in addition to others. Firstly and curatively, we should ensure that proven cases of corruption are met with maximum judicial consequences. Secondly, preventativel measures by ensuring that regulative and normative control measures in both private and public sectors are in place and effectual and are reviewed from time to time.

  • Electoral fidelity is job for all, says Igini

    Electoral fidelity is job for all, says Igini

    Comrade Mike Igini is the Cross River State Resident Electoral Commissioner ( REC). In this interview with AUGUSTINE AVWODE in Calabar the state capital, he reflects on the Anambra State governorship election and its lessons.

    The preponderance of opinion is that the INEC bungled the Anambra State governorship election. How do you react to this?

    Elections are very sensitive issues and there are multiple interests. First, the isolated polling units in the Ndemili North LGA that brought about this challenge was acknowledged and the staff, whose action brought what the chairman had described as ‘’sabotage’, is under interogation for further action. We should isolate this LGA from the other 20 LGAs, where the exercise went very well, baring little delays in commencement. But, more seriously, given what we have achieved previously, we should endeavour to distinguish between election irregularities, such as delays in commencement, from election malpractices, and electoral fraud. The delays were due to failure of the recruited NYSC corpers to turn up on the election day in the Anambra election. There were also reported instances of protest by some security personnel on election day, who insisted that they would not escort materials, if not paid. such actions that were adverse to early commencement are understandably, attributed to the INEC who are the election managers, unfortunately.

    The actions and inactions, particularly negative ones, of stakeholders outside our control in some or many instances, should be separated from the malpractices in which election managers or other key stakeholders fall short of professional expectations, and this must also be separated from outright fraud, in which criminal and deliberate breaches of election laws and standards occurred. I must inform that in every election, the Commission strives to surpass previous benchmarks since 2011 and subsequent elections in Edo and Ondo. It has made strenuous efforts through innovations to prevent and minimize irregularities, malpractices and to possibly eliminate fraud.

    Did the INEC prepare well for the poll?

    I know that, in this election, for the very first time in our electoral history, the commission introduced the process of customising result sheets, that is, Form EC8A, from polling unit to polling units, so that you cannot use a result sheet from one polling unit in any other place, just at it has been using customised ballot papers which also makes it difficult to take the ballot papers meant for one area to another. Also in the Anambra election, for the first time, registered voters could confirm their registration status through GSM phone text messaging by texting Anambra State and a code including the last four digits of your voter registration number to a particular number. Additionally, logistics arrangements were made to improve early commencement, following the effective use of the created super-RACs at Registration Areas/Ward levels, which involved the conveyance of materials from proximal registration area centers to polling units to avoid conveyance issue on election day. But like the literary giant said, just as the hunter has learnt to shoot without missing, you still will find some electoral birds who learn to fly without perching, so we have to keep improving.

    Despite these attempts, where obvious failings have occurred, the commission will make efforts to sanction malpractices and prevent them, but where there is electoral fraud, it must be punished by the law. This is why the present INEC leadership is on record to be the first commission leadership in Nigerian history to secure the conviction of election offenders. But we can only do this better, if we institute a specialized Election Offences Commission to deal with this matter as the legal resources of INEC are limited.

    When are we going to achieve the goal of quality elections?

    That is a challenge for all of us. It is a multi-stakeholders responsibility that involves you and l and all stakeholders, if we are committed. The quality of election is an issue that has occupied much practical and theoretical studies, if you search the internet for the term “ election integrity” you will find a plethora of literature on Election Integrity, specifically concerning Africa, you will find literature from authoritative sources like Bratton as well as Lindberg; all elaborate on the fact that improving the quality of elections is an evolving matter that improves from lessons learned from previous failings and successes, but one thing that we cannot run away from is the fact that the most important indicator for assessing the quality of elections is the qualitative response of voters.

    Hence, the central question is; do the voters in most cases accept that the outcome of the election reflects their votes? We must t review other parameters both qualitative and quantitative for judging the standards of election. The parameters for doing so are fairly well known and all such parameters often go towards accessing three broad issues, namely; was there fair participation? Was there fair competition and is the outcome legitimate? So, we must then ask, that regarding the Anambra election, was there fair participation, was there fair competition, and is the outcome legitimate.

    From the reports of the two directors I nominated to participate in the election, based on requests from the National Headquarters, who managed two LGAs, as well as the reports of 348 academic dons from the University of Calabar that collated the results brought to them from the polling units, the main issue of concern was with the participation of voters in some areas, in one LGA out of 21, there were really limited or no significant adverse reports in 20 LGAs where the 23 candidates freely participated and competed. In the latter connection, the commission took the lawful steps of putting in abeyance election in the affected areas in that LGA, to be concluded at a date to be appointed and final return made in respect of the election to make it conclusive.

    All the Local Government Collation Officers were from UNICAL, Cross River State. Do you have any input in their being posted to Anambra State?

    It was the commission’s decision. Our remit was essentially to train and shortlist those who could perform the assignment and, of course, these university dons have done this previously in our elections here in calabar and even, in the same Anambra State last year when a court ordered for a senatorial election that l supervised in that state. From Monday to Thursday, I personally participated in the training process and they all travelled on Friday to Awka. Please note that a collation officer only receives, results from polling units which he certifies having been satisfied that they comply with expected standards. I was also supposed to be in one of the local governments but was indisposed due to a slight ailment.

    Would you say they were given adequate training for the job they went to do?

    Indeed, they were well trained. In fact, there has been a lot of commendation from high ranking members of the commission and even candidates that contested the election for their diligence and competence. As I indicated, I personally partook in their training, moreover many of them have participated in several elections before in the same capacity in Cross River and Anambra State.

    The voters register has come to be the major headache in achieving credible elections in the country.

    How can we get a good voter’s register?

    Around the world and in countries where identity cards with high fidelity are managed by central systems, a national identity card is often sufficient proof because it carries many other demographic indicators and transactional histories of interface between the individual and the state, such as your age and a history of your address or addresses, tax, mortgage and utility registrations, hence it is difficult to assume such identity overnight. Hence, we hope that the new Identity framework of permanent voters card will reduce the current anxieties, by helping to strengthen the fidelity of the voters register which is a statutory requirement for good elections.

    But for now, despite the challenges that you have alluded to, the biometric registration of voters conducted by the INEC has reduced the scale of the problems and our data remain the most comprehensive biometric data base across the 774 LGAs where Nigerians are domiciled. However, the Commission acknowledges and observe the issues raised for improvement because a voter’s register is the foundation of free, fair and credible elections. Additionally, if you peruse the extant Electoral Act, especially Sections 10 (3-6) and Section 11 (2), the fidelity of the voters register is reliant on the electorate and the public when they raise proper and timely objections in the register.

    Analysts have already written off the commission, saying that it cannot conduct a credible election in 2015…

    Electoral job is fast becoming that of a football coach that previous victories do not really matter except a win in the current match. But should that really be so? We should recall where we are coming from given years of rogue elections before the current efforts of building a new electoral order for a sustainable democracy.

    You see, every election has its successes and pitfalls, and unfortunately, in our political ambiance, it is rare to find people wholly accepting election outcome without some complaints. I support genuine protest and, if necessary, litigation of unfair processes for correction in future elections, because that is the only way the system can improve when its reliability is brought under scrutiny. Again, this is not merely a local problem and that is why Prof. Elkit, a renowned authority on election integrity stated that “election integrity is conceived as a state of affairs in which a specific democratic election is “perfect, at least with nothing whatsoever to complain about” and that such a state is aspirational, based on current realities. Thus, Shein and other authorities on the same issue, maintained that the actions of election managers should be to eliminate fraud and minimize to the barest possible minimum, professional failings and logistical challenges where they emerge.

    This does not however, excuse irregularities that were avoidable and outright cases of fraud. The complaints of stakeholders may or may not be legitimate, but we must all accept that, despite the problems, we have covered some level of electoral mileage, having regard to 2003 and 2007 elections. We must convince the political elite, that it is in their best interest to institute more reforms, because, when you ask them to do so, many often feel they can benefit from the weaknesses and hence, they pay lip service to requests for reforms, but they often end up as victims. So, to ensure a level playing field they should all empower the voters more by improving the legislative framework so as to deepen democracy.

    Which aspect of the Electoral Act should be reviewed and why?

    The INEC as a commission has made several presentations to the National Assembly on weaknesses in the legislative framework, the isue of the breach of the Electoral Act bothering on fair access to media by all political parties and candidates. Also, the commission has called for the reinstatement of Section 87(9) that was removed from the Electoral Act and the urgent need to delete the proviso to Section 31 of the extant Electoral Act, which suggests that; whether parties conducted primaries or not in accordance with the law, whatever list of candidates presented by political parties INEC cannot reject for ‘’any reason whatsoever.’’

    I am even surprised that these political parties have not presented Chinese and people from Malaysia as candidates since they have been given the fiat to present candidates whatsoever way the deem fit for elections, since INEC has been stripped of administrative power of control to the extent that even when INEC is invited to ‘’observe primary exercise it cannot even say anything if an individual who did not participate in the primary election is presented to it as candidate for election.This provision is an attack on the internal democracy of parties, it whittles if not completely disempowers party members and empowers the leaders and ultimately weakens the control of the quality of candidates presented for elections. And the legal and orderly nomination of candidates for election is the most important functional service that parties provide for society after the articulation of developmental policy. As we speak now pre-election issues from the 2011 primary elections are still in our courts on-going in 2013, many of which might not be decided till 2014, the eve of another general elections.What is wrong with us really? Is our problem that of the lbo saying that “the problem of the smelly he-goat is in the he-goat that the heaviest rainfall cannot wash away”?

  • ‘Judiciary hasn’t done much on conviction of electoral offenders’

    ‘Judiciary hasn’t done much on conviction of electoral offenders’

    Mike Igini is the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Cross River State. He was in Kenya to observe the recent presidential polls and shares his experience there with some reporters in Calabar. Nicholas Kalu was there.

    You were in Kenya to observe their presidential elections. How would you describe the experience?

    I would say it was an interesting experience, being the first post-conflict election; one observed the collective will and determination of a nation to avoid a repeat of the tragedy of the 2007 election. That crisis led to the death of over 1,200 people, like the post-election violence in Nigeria after the 2011 election. There are still 600,000 displaced people yet to be rehabilitated five years after the 2007 election in Kenya. But for the Mobasa separatist pre-election violence that led to the death of policemen and civilians, the general impression one got from the Kenyan people was a determination to put such ugly electoral history behind them.

    On election procedure, there were efforts to speed up the process by using electronic accreditation with standby manual registers of same data as well as electronic transmission of already counted results from polling stations. However, because there were some hitches, the IEBC had to revert to the manual processes and all results were brought in from the collation centres to be counted centrally.

    A significant difference between the system and ours was the expeditious zeal with which the judicial system handled electoral offences. For instance, a supporter of an MP was found trying to induce voters with money neatly packaged in envelopes during elections on Monday 4th, and by the next day, Tuesday the 5th, while the electoral process was still ongoing, the culprit was arraigned before a magistrate court, convicted and sentenced to three years imprisonment, with no option of fine.

    One significant lesson on the use of electronic voting process is that it requires robust systems with early warning feedback loops that allow instant remediation of glitches because election processes are highly sensitive issues which cannot allow for prevarications. Also, there is a need to always have manual back-ups as we did here in Nigeria because dispensing with the manual system could be costly if very serious challenges develop.

    How would you describe their electoral system compared to Nigeria’s?

    An electoral system has many contextual peculiarities, so it is often best to talk in relative terms when comparing. However, there are significant parallels and differences between our system and theirs. As you may already know, the electoral system relies on many factors from the general country context, the legislative framework, the attitude of stakeholders and the rule of law. In general, my impression is that the same historical background of colonialism with voters aggregating around primordial ethnic comfort zones rather than policy issues, obtains in Kenya as it does in Nigeria. This is a problem that the Ghanaians had significantly overcome although there were some remnants of the problems, hence voter awareness was still a significant problem as with Nigeria. But the Kenyan electoral system has acknowledged this by introducing the presidential debate that was focused on issues of development that really matter and thus educate voters on policy benefits. Another significant difference in my view is the issue I mentioned earlier relating to the expeditious consequences for electoral fraud. In the Kenyan situation the judiciary clearly was not ready to brook such threat to their democratic progress, whereas here we would find judicial officials vacillating on the same issue which is an existential threat to our democracy. I say this with all seriousness because until 2010, it is on record that our judiciary had not done much on conviction of electoral offenders, and even when INEC made strenuous efforts to push for such consequences, we met with significant structural resistance to maintain the status quo ante, except for just one conviction we secured here in Cross River. This is bad for our progress.

    Could corruption be the reason for the failure in virtually all spheres of government?

    Any society that accepts corruption as an article of faith will never attain its full potentials. As I have just related in regard to electoral offenses, a significant stumbling block to corruption of all kinds in Nigeria is the sense of impunity built by the years of a lack of effective judicial consequences. No doubt there have been many convictions for crimes in Nigeria but regarding fraud, especially the type of fraud which threatens our economic growth and development in many dimensions, there is a significant deficit in consequences, and the judiciary should lead the way on that count, that is why we have separation of powers with the judicial arm and that is why democracy is always qualified with the mantra “and the rule of law” , for as St Augustine insisted, a country is nothing but a gang of rogues without the rule of law.

    How can corruption be addressed?

    The way we are going now with our value pyramid upside down; a society where money is everything, no sense of shame and nobody afraid of anything except death, we may have to go for death penalty. Those who do the wrong things that endanger our collective wellbeing are the very ones that would tell to go to court and boast of their influence and how they will stall trial through frivolous application upon application. Even in our churches now, pastors would announce during thanksgiving that members should take their personal effects when dancing to the altar because of stealing even in the house of God. This is how terrible our society has declined. In addressing this problem, we should adopt these three approaches in addition to others; firstly and curatively we should ensure that proven cases of corruption be met with maximum judicial consequences; second preventatively by ensuring that regulative and normative control measures in the private and public sectors are in place and effectual. Regulative controls involve the bureaucratic, financial, quality and other measures of control that are the organisational practices for decades and normative controls includes the evolving codes of expected good practices which are reviewed from time to time.

    Is it right that we celebrate 100 years of amalgamation at a time when the country is faced with issues of insecurity and others?

    It is an apt opportunity to ask ourselves why we abandoned the path of governance framework Sir Ahmadu Bello, Awolowo and Zik, after series of conferences, finally agreed on to promote rapid development? Why is it that we have refused to reconcile ourselves and build a country of equal opportunity for all? Our reality is that after these many years we have not arrived at a consensual agreement of who we are; what we want to be; and where we want to go. We are still grappling with the intricacies of nationhood. We are yet to be at peace with one another after almost 100 years. In other words we have not realistically formulated a common acceptable shared vision that would generate common determination to achieve common goals.