Tag: polls

  • 2015 polls and security concerns

    With the spate of  insecurity increasingly on the rise in the country, particularly in the North Eastern part,  the concern of the global community over the security situation in country can no longer be  ignored. Recently, the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Laurent Fabius,  urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)  to defend Nigeria and Africa’s image by conducting a credible election in  2015. His German counterpart, Dr. Frank Seinmeir, equally implored the  Federal Government to  increase its efforts to end insurgency ahead of the 2015 polls. It is;  therefore, clear that the security worries in the country  need to be tackled frontally  in order to have a conducive atmosphere for the conduct of the 2015 polls.

    Unlike what many  believe, insurgency is not the  only source of security fears in the country. There is, for instance, the  volatile issue of Fulani herdsmen who often attack their  victims after their  livestock have destroyed the latter’s farmlands. The  increasing incidents of kidnapping in some parts of the country equally remain an  immense source of  security apprehensions. Kidnappers have continued to operate  without borders, spreading  the nets of their nefarious acts to hold both locals and  foreigners captive. The aged,  clerics, government  officials, academics, professionals, women and children are  not speared by  those who engage in this despicable act.

    In some  other parts of the country, armed robbery has become a major threat to national  security with robbers throwing cautions into the wind in  their operations. Activities of political thugs have also become a serious cause for concerns in the country. Recently, in Edo state, the ancient Benin City was became a thereafter  of the absurd when political hooligans openly opened guns at  each other in a no-  hold -bar shooting spray that left in trail sorrow, tears and blood.

    Without  a doubt, the spate of kidnapping across the country, the  incessant wave of crime and armed robbery attacks and the incessant activities  of terrorists in  the country are all pointers to the fact that insecurity is  fast becoming a norm in Nigeria. The implication of this to the democratic health of the country  and the heightened  sense of insecurity among the populace cannot be quantified.

    If not quickly addressed, the effects of all these challenges could  constitute a clog in the  wheel of the democratic process come 2015.

    According  to English Political Philosopher, John Plamentz, democracy is “government by persons freely chosen by and responsible to the  governed” while an election is a formal  decision-making by which a  population chooses an individual to hold public  office. Election is universally used to select representatives of the people. Elections were used as early in history as ancient  Greece and ancient Rome, and throughout the medieval period to select rulers. The  modern  “election”, which consists of public elections of  government  officials, didn’t emerge until the beginning of the 17thcentury when the idea  of representative government took hold in North America and Europe.

    The basic  principles of democracy are the requirements to organize  regular, free and fair election, freedom of individuals to nominate candidates,  periodic revision of  electoral register, independent judiciary and freedom of campaign among others.

    But recent happenings in Nigeria negate these, as people live in fear, while  some have been out rightly displaced from their homes and  are now refugees in  their fatherland.  Consequently, some eligible voters in the Northern part of the country might be  disenfranchised in  the coming election no thanks to the criminal activities of  the insurgents in  that part of the country.

    The insurgents  have organized themselves into a  pressure group that seeks to influence the political structure and the  structuring of power in the country. This they have done by  hoisting their flag  not too long ago in some local government areas in the  north, with the declaration of an Islamic State as being done in Syria.

    Despite on-going talks  about a ceasefire agreement people still live in fear. Those  those were lucky  to escape, have had tales of woe to tell. Men and young boys  are being forcibly  recruited, while women and young girls are being enslaved,  physically and  psychologically.

    Confirming the  enormity of the effects of the  country’s security challenge on the 2015 polls, INEC chairman, Professor  Attahiru Jega recently expressed his fear by submitting that  the commission cannot risk its human and material resources, particularly in the three Northeastern States of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe. In same  vein, Ebonyi State Governor,  Martin Elechi, has expressed doubt over the possibility of  holding the 2015  elections in view of prevailing security situations in the  country. Similarly, Governor Babatunde  Fashola of Lagos State has also expressed  serious concerns over the spate of insecurity in the  country, which according  to him poses a threat to free, fair and credible elections.

    The governor made the disclosure while playing host to students from the Royal College of Defense  Studies, United Kingdom, UK, led by Rear Admiral Jonas  Haggren, at the State  House, Alausa Ikeja. According to Fashola: “Insecurity is  a threat every time.

    It is not only to electoral process, even to human existence  and business  activities.”

    However, in-spite of  the herculean security situation in the country, the 2105 polls could  still be held in a peaceful atmosphere. But for this to happen, all  stakeholders must be ready to  work for peace. While it is true that government is a key  player on security  issues, the reality is that without the active participation  of other members and groups in the society, government alone cannot ensure  security. This is why  it is important that those behind the insurgent activities  in the country must embrace the peace offer from the federal government. There is no level of discontentment that cannot be talked over. Throwing the nation into needless crisis over any issue, no matter how important, would ultimately be counter-productive.

    Therefore,  every well meaning Nigerian, groups and  agencies must partner with INEC to ensure free and fair  election. INEC alone  cannot ensure a credible election. It is a joint venture. It  is a Nigerian project.

    On a final note, no  meaningful development can take place in an atmosphere of  chaos. According to  Martin Luther King, “peace is not merely a distant goal  that we seek but a  means by which we arrive at that  goal.”

     

    – Bakare is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information & Strategy,  Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Minister seeks participation of IDPs in 2015 polls

    Minister seeks participation of IDPs in 2015 polls

    The Minister of Youth Development, Boni Haruna, has called for provisions that would enable internally displaced persons (IDPs) to participate in next year’s elections.

    The minister noted that IDPs, whether on account of insurgency or natural disasters, such as flood and any other circumstance, should not be disenfranchised to exercise their civic responsibility.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja, Haruna said amendments should be made in the Electoral Act to allow them cast their votes and for their votes to count for any party or any candidate they choose.

    He said: “That is actually the important thing. The National Assembly should take the fastest track to ensure that in the 2015 elections, such a provision is made for the IDPs in all parts of the country.”

    Haruna said creating an enabling electoral environment for IDPs was not just a matter concerning the Northeast alone, adding that they are all over the country.

    He said: “It will be unfair to deny them the opportunity to exercise their civic duty and their numbers run into millions. So, this is a personal appeal. I am sure I am speaking the minds of the IDPs.”

  • Ijaw group, Itsekiri leaders in Warri trade words over councils’ polls

    An Ijaw pressure group, Warri Ijaw Peace Monitoring Group (WIPMG) and Itsekiri leaders in Warri, Delta State, traded words yesterday over elective posts ahead of Saturday’s local councils’ polls.

    It all started with WIPMG threatening that “it will not be well with the Itsekiri in Warri”, if they corner all the positions for the Saturday’s councils’ elections in the three Warri local government areas.

    The group’s coordinator, Chief Patrick Bigha, said: “There will be trouble if they (Itsekiri) refuse the Ijaws to feature a candidate, especially in the Warri North and Warri South West state constituencies.

    “As it stands now, in all the three Warri local government areas, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) flag-bearers in the October 25 election are Itsekiris. They are hell bent in grabbing all the House of Assembly constituencies in Warri as well as the House of Representatives seats.

    “We smell danger in Warri, hence this warning,” he said in a terse statement made available to The Nation.

    Bigha advised the Itsekiris not to throw the state into another round of crisis over the issues.

    The Nation’s checks revealed that the Itsekiris are flag-bearers of the ruling PDP in the Warri LGAs and are poised to clinch the House of Assembly slots of the party in the primaries.

    But reacting to the threat, Itsekiri leader and chieftain of the PDP in Warri, Chief Ayiri Emami, said elective offices are not won by threat of war or violence as is being done by their Ijaw counterparts, but through negotiation and political lobbying.

    “It is unfortunate and sad that the Ijaws are making threat over an election that is product of lobbying and choice of credible candidates. People who ran away from the PDP cannot come and dictate candidates to the PDP,” he stated.

    Also, a prominent Itsekiri youth leader, who spoke on condition of anonymity, reminded the Ijaws that they “do not have a monopoly on violence.”

  • ‘Conduct Niger council polls now’

    ‘Conduct Niger council polls now’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Niger State has condemned the inauguration of caretaker committees in the 25 local government areas.

    In a statement yesterday by its Publicity Secretary, Jonathan Vatsa, the APC said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was “afraid” to conduct council elections.

    It said the appointment of caretaker committees was not only “unconstitutional, but a naked show of impunity, a trademark that has become the identity of the PDP”.

    The statement reads: “We view the excuse given by Governor Muazu Aliyu that the 2015 general elections are close as untenable and unacceptable. What is the Niger State Independent Electoral Commission (NSIEC) doing that it cannot conduct the election now? The councils have a three-year term, why should NSIEC abandon its constitutional responsibility? The electoral body, like the PDP government, has failed the people.”

    APC likened the inauguration to “a jamboree”, saying it was a of the state’s scarce resources in the face of many unmet needs of the masses.

    “Aliyu is afraid of holding local government elections for fear of defeat, hence the appointment of unconstitutional caretaker committees to continue to do his bidding and rig the 2015 general elections, but the chief servant should be told that he will meet his political waterloo at the polls, as the people have realised that the last seven-and-a-half years have been deceitful.

    “APC is ready for local government elections and we demand that NSIEC conducts elections in the 274 wards and 25 local governments NOW.”

  • Shelve it!

    Shelve it!

    •INEC should concentrate on its core duties, leaving listing and delisting parties until after the 2015 polls

    Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) plan to register more political parties before the 2015 general elections fixed for next February is difficult to understand. The commission’s chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega, disclosed that it would be exercising the powers conferred on it by relevant laws to deregister political parties considered moribund, as well as approve new ones that could field candidates for the presidency, governorship, federal and state legislature seats.

    The commission is apparently relying on provisions of Section 78(7) (i) and (ii) of the Electoral Act, 2010 which states that , “The commission shall have power to de-register political parties on the following grounds: “(i) breach of any of the requirements for registration; and “(ii) for failure to win a seat in the National or State Assembly election.”

    The power conferred by the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) derives also from sections 221 to 226 of the 1999 Constitution, and paragraph 14 of Part 1 of the Third Schedule to the Constitution.

    However, it is puzzling that the electoral commission is dissipating energy on issues that could be controversial instead of addressing more serious ones. In the first instance, while INEC considers the provisions of the relevant laws clear, other experts and political parties do not think so. They say the attempt to muzzle parties runs against the principle of democracy which is to open the door of participation to as many as possible. Some of the parties deregistered last year have gone to court to contest such powers and, if only to err on the side of caution, since it would not infringe any law in doing so, INEC ought to have awaited the final judicial pronouncement on the matter before taking any further step on the issue.

    It is our view that the spirit of the judgment delivered by the Supreme Court on the registration of parties in the matter brought before it by the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi on behalf of his party, the National Conscience Party (NCP) is enough to inform INEC that the supreme law of the land intends to allow as many associations as want to participate in the electoral process access to the soap box and ballot box. The apex court had, in the matter, ruled that the very general criteria stipulated in the constitution were sufficient to guide INEC in performing the task of registering political parties. It has also been argued that if the constitution meant to grant INEC power to deregister parties, it would have done so expressly.

    The commission may have a point in canvassing the view that, if the parties were registered on condition of the criteria spelt out in section 224 of the constitution, any time they fail to meet up the criteria, they should cease to function since they would no longer be better than those that failed the test.

    Whatever may be the argument, we fault INEC’s decision to exercise these powers at the moment given the closeness to the elections and possible futility of the action. The parties to be registered would have very little time to put in place the structure needed to elect candidates and canvass for votes against the already entrenched ruling and opposition parties. Besides, at a time that the existing parties have commenced canvassing for votes, it is too late to be bringing in new entrants.

    The task before INEC now is to ensure that the continuous voter registration is well handled; permanent voter cards get to all registered voters, controversy on new polling units is satisfactorily resolved and stakeholders are carried along on the journey. The commission has a responsibility to ensure that overzealous security men are tamed and that the voters have confidence in its capacity to deliver credible elections. It should therefore leave deregistration of parties out for now.

  • Lawmaker calls for free council polls in Delta

    Member representing Burutu North Constituency at the Delta State House of Assembly, Hon Daniel Yingi, has urged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to ensure free and fair local government election.

    He spoke at the formal declaration of intention by a PDP councillorship aspirant to contest the Seimbiri Ward in Okpokunou town, Burutu, also charged all aspirants to go about the contest like sportsmen.

    Yingi advised his party to allow free, fair and credible primaries, allowing every man with an aspiration to test his popularity in the open, thereby allowing the people to choose those they best trust to represent them at the grassroots level.

    According to him “I am appealing to leaders in various wards not to interfere with the forthcoming council polls in the state by imposing unpopular candidates on the people. Let there be a level playing ground for all aspirants to test their popularity with the people to allow them choose their grassroots leaders”.

    He also appealed to aspirants to play the game with love and develop the spirit of sportsmanship by accepting defeat without bitterness. “Everybody cannot win at the same time. There must be losers and winners in every election. If today is not your turn, tomorrow could be yours. Therefore, do not make it a do or die affair” he said.

    In his address, the PDP ward chairman, Kelvin Adamu, lauded the leadership qualities of Chief Daniel Yingi, Dr. Sunday Ezonfade and others who have joined him to rule smoothly without any trouble in Seimbiri over the years.

    He assured the party leadership to always be transparent in the conduct of ward party primaries. He pledged to play a level playing ground for all the aspirants to exercise their popularity on the primary election ground and vowed not to be intimidated with an imposition of aspirant on the party at the local level by godfathers.

  • As lawyers go to the polls

    SIR: I write this as a reality check based on status-quo as obtained in the Nigerian Bar Association today. I stand to be corrected. Conference and practising fees go up year in and out whilst welfare of members remains on the “miscellaneous” list of the national leadership. No professional body has lost touch with realities as the NBA as it is today which is one of the reasons why the annual general conference has turned into a quasi-tourist destination to cool off the stress of a tasking legal year rather  than a forum of intellectually stimulating and professionally rewarding discourses. Yet we are incapacitated to put good leadership in place, no thanks to the anachronistic delegate-voting system.

    To make it worse, these inauspicious signs are already rubbing off on the generation next known as Young Lawyers Forum. All hope is not lost, we can always get it right, starting with Abuja 2014.

    Delegates must go out decisively to vote for their conscience and credibility not endorsement or inducement under any guise.

    I look forward to a better, all-inclusive, active and reform oriented NBA leadership come August in Owerri.

     

    • Ogbeni Babatope Adebiyi Esq

    Ado-Ekiti

  • India: Polls close on final day of voting

    India: Polls close on final day of voting

    Polls have closed on the final day of voting in India’s marathon election, with the first exit polls predicting early gains for the opposition BJP.

    Led by Narendra Modi, the BJP has dominated the campaign but analysts warn exit polls have a mixed record in India, having proved wrong in the past.

    The main contest in the vote is between the ruling Congress and the BJP. Votes will be counted on 16 May.

    Election Commission officials say voter turnout is a record 66.38%. The figure beats a previous record set in 1984.

    Yesterday, millions voted on the final day of the election, with crowds turning out in the sacred city of Varanasi, a key battleground, where Mr Modi is being challenged by anti-corruption campaigner Arvind Kejriwal.

    Voting was also held in 40 other seats in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal states.

    The battle in this holy city is now being seen as a straight fight between Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist BJP and Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party.

    Mr Modi is still expected to win but many have been inspired by Mr Kejriwal’s anti-establishment message and his party’s determined door-to-door campaign.

    After being bombarded by all the parties for weeks, it’s hardly surprising that many voters were being coy in admitting who they were choosing.

    But there were some signs of nervousness among BJP workers manning a stand near one polling station. At one they were telling people ‘to vote for anybody, just don’t waste it on the Broom’ – short-hand for Mr Kejriwal

    The election began on 7 April and has been held in nine phases for security and logistical reasons. With 814 million eligible voters, it is the world’s biggest exercise in democracy.

    Mr Modi is being given a spirited fight by Mr Kejriwal of the Aam Aadmi Party, whose army of volunteers has been engaged in extensive door-to-door campaigning.

    There are a total of 42 candidates in the fray in the seat, including the Congress party’s Ajay Rai, a local political leader.

     

     

  • NULGE urges states to conduct council polls

    NULGE urges states to conduct council polls

    The National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) has urged the state governments to conduct the local government elections as prescribed by the 1999 Constitution.

    The association also reiterated its demand for council autonomy, stressing that it will make the local governmet more productive.

    NULGE complained that the hands of the state governments are heavy on the fledgling councils in terms of financial control, making them to perform below expectation.

    Currently, there are agitations for the conduct of council elections in Oyo, Osun, Ekiti, Ondo, Delta, Anambra states. In fact, since 1999, local government elections have npt been held in Anambra State.

    NULGE said in a statement in Abuja: “The people are denied the dividends of democracy at the grassroots. They lack the opportunity for the election of leaders and change of government at the local areas”.

    The association urged the National Assembly, which is currently reviewing the constitution, to grant autonomy to the local government so that it can discharge its duties to the local people.

    It added: “ Grassroots democracy is absent when the freedom of political choice cannot be exercised according to the law. Many states have breached the 1999 Constitution by refusing to conduct local government elections”.

     

  • 8,000 personnel for Edo council polls

    The Edo State Independent Electoral Commission (EDSIEC) is to recruit 8,000 ad-hoc workers for the April 20 council polls.

    EDSIEC Chairman Solomon Ogoh, who spoke at a stakeholders’ meeting, said members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) would be recruited.

    The chairman said problems during elections are caused by parties.

    He recalled an incident during the April 2011 general elections when a member of a party used snakes to chase electoral officers away and removed away ballot boxes.

    Solomon said the contributions of parties would assist in the conduct of a peaceful and credible local government election.

    He said: “We have no doubt that we will conduct an election that will be a reference point in this country.

    “We would like to assure you that as an unbiased umpire, the Commission will provide a level-playing field for all candidates.

    “This is our state and we have vowed to carry out our assignment satisfactorily as our contribution to the development of our people.

    “Parties should ensure peaceful conduct at the polling units.”

    The chairman urged parties to adhere to the provisions of sections 22 and 23 of the State Electoral Law (2012).

    He said the body was liaising with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to get the current voter’s register.

    The guidelines showed that party campaigns would start today. Primaries are expected to hold from January 25 to April 18.

    Campaigns are expected to end on April 18.

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was not present at the meeting.

    Its Publicity Secretary, Matthew Urhoghide, told The Nation that the party would review the legality of the constitution of the electoral body to avoid an illegality.

    Urhoghide said the party would provide the platform for any of its members who wants to contest in the election, if it agrees to participate in the election.