Tag: RECs

  • INEC redploys nine RECs

    INEC redploys nine RECs

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Wednesday announced the redeployment of nine of its Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs).

    This is contained in a statement signed by the Secretary to the Commission, Mrs Augusta Ogakwu in Abuja.

    The RECs affected in the redeployment according to the statement were Dr Lawrence Azubuike who was redeployed from Ebonyi to Anambra, Dr Ogbudu Ada was moved from Imo to Akwa Ibom while Sylvester Ezeani was redeployed from Cross River to Abia.

    It added that the commission had also approved the redeployment of Mr Sam Olumekun from Ekiti to Edo and Mrs Gesila Khan was moved from Rivers to Cross River.

    Also redeployed were Mr Austin Okojie from Akwa Ibom to Bayelsa; and Baritor Kpagih from Bayelsa to Delta.

    The commission also approved the redeployment of Mr Habu Hinna from Yobet to Taraba while Mr Ikoiwak Abasi was redeployed from Delta to Rivers.

    The statement said the re-deployment takes immediate effect and directed that the handing-over must be concluded on February 2.

  • INEC to meet with RECs, political parties, others

    INEC to meet with RECs, political parties, others

    Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will be holding separate meetings with the various stakeholders in electoral process.

    The meetings are scheduled to hold from Tuesday, 19th January to Thursday, 21th January 2016.

    The meeting with the RECs is scheduled for Tuesday, while the meeting with the leadership of the Political Parties will hold on Wednesday, 20th.

    The last in the series of consultations will be held with the CSOs and the Media on Thursday, 21th, January 2016.

  • 2015 poll: RECs under probe, says INEC chairman

    2015 poll: RECs under probe, says INEC chairman

    •INEC begins audit of PVCs
    •10m voter cards yet to be collected
    •400,000 PVCs not produced yet by contractors

    The Acting Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mrs. Amina Zakari, has admitted that some Resident Electoral Commissioners are under investigation, but the actual number was still unknown to the electoral body.

    She said the commission is only watching and waiting for the outcome of the ongoing investigations by security agencies.

    She, however, said the agency will give those affected the benefit of doubt in line with the legal framework that they are innocent until proven guilty.

    She also said the commission will soon begin a nationwide audit of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) because about 10million PVCs,  out of the 68million produced, have not been collected.

    But she said about 400,000 cards were yet to be delivered by the PVC vendors.

    Zakari, who spoke exclusively with THE NATION in Abuja, said she is not desperate to become a substantive chairman of INEC.

    She said she did not lobby to become the acting chairman of INEC.

    While admitting that some RECs and INEC officials are under investigation over 2015 poll, she was non-committal on the actual number or identities.

    She said: “For the commission, we won’t know the number of those under probe at the moment until the investigations are over. We always know that a person is innocent until proven guilty. For now, we are just waiting and watching.”

    She said upon the completion of her five-year term in office, she had already cleared her desk and was personally driving home when she was appointed as acting INEC chairman based on the fact that she was the most senior National Commissioner.

    “I did not lobby for it. I had packed all my things out of INEC, I wanted to leave on June 30th, I wanted to take a leave for the remaining three weeks. I felt as the commission was being depleted, that I had a sense of responsibility to sit out my three weeks. And then, I was just called on my way home after the chairman (Jega) handed over to Ambassador Wali. I was called that the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation was looking for me and I said, “what for?” and I just continued driving and I was by Bullet House by the time I got the call and I just continued driving; I was almost home when they said “come back, you have a letter to be the acting chairman” and I said ‘but somebody was appointed in the morning’, I said ‘take the letter to INEC’, but they said, ;it’s in your name, you have to come and receive it, just turn around.’ And while I was arguing, my driver decided to turn around and I called the ambassador and I told him and he said, “Go and pick your letter.” I called the former chairman and he said, “Go and pick the letter.”

    “I was confused and worried because it’s an enormous responsibility and I wasn’t really expecting it. I picked the letter and came back to the office the next day in a sober mood. I know the only thing left to do is to consolidate on the gains within this acting period, just maintain an administrative structure, try to keep the commission running administratively and then let’s see what happens, since I know the problems of the commission in terms of business processes, so we are working on communication, we are discussing with the directors, giving them responsibilities and hopefully, everything should be fine.”

    Asked if she was the most senior, she added: “Yes, there were two of us, but one of us turned 80 years and could not be appointed as acting chairman. The lot fell on me. We were the two most senior commissioners and this is not the first time INEC has had an acting commissioner. I understand Prof. Maurice Iwu was a commissioner that became a chairman.

    “When we came, Soyebi was the acting chairman and he handed over to Jega, and he conducted elections. He  had done all the procurement. The commission was running before we came. In fact, with Soyebi and Phillip Umeadi Jr., the same scenario happened. When Iwu left, he didn’t nominate an acting chairman, Umeadi took over, but the Presidency appointed Soyebi as acting chairman.”

    Mrs. Zakari said she has no filial or marital relationship with President Muhammadu Buhari, contrary to insinuations in some quarters.

    She said: “I would say Gen. Buhari did not appoint me as a commissioner; President Jonathan appointed me as a commissioner. Before that, Gen. Obasanjo appointed me as special assistant, posted to FCT where I was secretary for Health, Agriculture and Social Development at the same time.

    “At the time President Jonathan came, he was looking for people that have integrity, that’s what I was told and I found myself in the commission and I did my best.

    “For somebody to say Gen. Buhari knew me and gave me the job, obviously he knew I am a hard worker and he is a principled person. I have never known him to be nepotistic, he is a very principled person. If there are familial ties, the principle would have rubbed off on that family. I come from a very principled family, my father survived two regimes that were jailing and sacking people and he survived both and for that, I don’t think I would do anything that would jeopardize that principle.

    “ I can’t say the general is my in-law. I  am not married to his son; my daughter is not married to him, that is what I understand about being an in-law. But obviously in life, you have acquaintances, people you have known. But I think people should not get distracted by this ‘family or no family’. Am I competent? Can I deliver? Can I conduct my affairs with integrity? “The President’s message is for people to be honest and to have integrity.”

    On PVCs, Mrs. Zakari said INEC will soon begin a nationwide audit of the cards.”

    Pressed to talk on whether or not she is determined to head INEC, she said: “I am not desperate. God decides who becomes leader; if God decides I would be the one to continue, I will have to do my best.”

    She continued: “We have about 58million PVCs collected so far, which is about 81 per cent, out of 68million produced. We have about 10million PVCs uncollected.  We still have about 400,000 PVCs not produced. So, we are going to resume the distribution of PVCs, but we cannot just bring out those PVCs and begin to distribute them until we are sure they belong to living human beings.

    “We are planning our modalities for distribution. But before that we are going out to the field to conduct PVC audit in all the states. On Thursday, we had a meeting with all our Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) and the topic of discussion was resumption of PVC distribution and Continuous Voters Registration (CVR).

    Asked when INEC will go to the field, she added:  “Like I told the RECs yesterday, the audit will start by next week but as for the PVC distribution we have to come up with a water-tight process so that the PVCs will not get into wrong hands especially as we are having Kogi and Bayelsa elections. We have to scientifically determine how we are going to do the distribution, so that we just don’t go out to the field and it becomes a different story.

    For the CVR, the plan was laid out before RECs on Thursday, but they had reservations on the process and we have to go back to the drawing board and do a proper planning. We don’t mind to plan for six months so that when it takes off, we will ensure we have a plan that can withstand pressure,  except for minor changes,  rather than we just take off because we want to please Nigerians and we end up having complaints and hitches along the way. We have set up a committee to look at the modalities and then we will still call the RECs back and agree on the modalities, because the new direction of INEC is a bottom to top approach and take decisions in an inclusive manner with the people that implement decisions rather than the commission just deciding on the processes.”

  • RECs as election wrecks?

    RECs as election wrecks?

    •That appears the grim tales from Akwa Ibom, as the results of the April 11 House of Assembly election remain unreleased

    Can a resident electoral commissioner (REC), with a sacred mandate by law to conduct a credible election, turn a crass wrecker of the same election? The very thought of it is repugnant.

    But that appears the grim tale emanating from Akwa Ibom State, a clear 10 days after the April 11 election, thrusting  Austin Okojie, the Akwa Ibom REC, fairly in the eye of the storm.

    Indeed, suspicious manoeuvres appear to be on. Whereas both the Akwa Ibom governorship and state legislative elections were held on the same day, nationwide on April 11, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the state had released the governorship result; but not the House of Assembly ones. That contrasts the law — not to mention the trend nationwide. Except where results were not conclusive, as the case of Taraba, both results have been released.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state has, therefore, raised an alarm, accusing REC Okojie of allegedly fiddling the vote for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP); and calling for the cancellation of the entire exercise. Indeed, the APC claims no election took place on the day; and that INEC officials, with the alleged compromise of the REC, just wrote phantom figures for the PDP. 

    In a press briefing on April 16, John Harry, the APC candidate for Nsit Atai State Constituency, on behalf of his co-candidates in the election, alleged that INEC could not release the state legislature results because the gubernatorial result, won by the PDP candidate, was mere “magical allocations”, without any recourse to voting. He further alleged that, since no election took place, alleged thumb-printing was on. Even then, he said INEC was in a quandary on how its new set of magical figures could possibly match the governorship figures — hence the long delay.

    Aside from Mr. Harry’s allegations, election observers, foreign and local, had thumbed down the April 11 exercise — just as the March 28 one before it — saying the election was fatally flawed.

    Also, even some National Assembly members from Akwa Ibom, Senators Helen Esuene, Aloysius Etok and Ita Enang, themselves PDP partisans, had also decried the elections, virtually dismissing them as voodoo. Though the trio are estranged PDP members, chafing from alleged injustices in the PDP primary elections, that should not automatically negate their allegations.

    After allegations and counter-allegations, however, a damning issue stands: why should INEC release the governorship result without releasing the state legislative ones, when the law says both should be released as soon as results are collated — after the results had been compiled and duly signed by agents at the polling zones?

    On this sole question, the Akwa Ibom REC has a big question to answer. The Akwa Ibom APC has called for the cancellation of the exercise. They probably wear the shoe and know where it pinches most. 

    Before then, however, Prof. Attahiru Jega, the INEC chair and his top hierarchs owe it a sacred national duty to probe this seeming travesty. Even if the results are released now, the long delay would still be in breach of the law — except there are extenuating circumstances. Whoever are responsible for such cavalier breach of the law must face harsh sanctions. INEC too had better brace itself: it just might be condemned to repeating the April 11 elections in that state, given the state of things.

    But beyond immediate punishment, the Electoral Law, pertaining INEC conduct must be revisited. A robust check-and-balance system that assures restrains the autonomy for RECs is not a bad idea. But the whole essence is defeated, if RECs act in bad faith to subvert elections. That appears the building scenario in Akwa Ibom. The law therefore needs urgent tinkering to ensure such brazen rascality is never allowed again.  

     

    ‘After allegations and counter-allegations, however, a damning issue stands: why should INEC release the governorship result without releasing the state legislative ones, when the law says both should be released as soon as results are collated — after the results had been compiled and duly signed by agents at the polling zones?’

  • Jega to RECs: Ensure success of 2015 elections

    Jega to RECs: Ensure success of 2015 elections

    The Chairman, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, on Thursday urged Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) to strive towards a successful 2015 general elections.

    He made the call at the quarterly meeting with the RECs in Abuja.

    He explained that the RECs had recently participated in an election skill management seminar to prepare them for the challenges ahead.

    “This is to enable them to identify risk factors that can serve as a challenge to the conduct of the election,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the INEC boss as saying at the meeting.

    Jega said that there should be an effective working relationship at all levels, adding that the commission was saddled with two major assignments as the general election drew nearer.

    He said the assignments were the continuous voter registration and the preparation of constituencies in readiness for the elections.

    He stressed that it was essential that the RECs did their best to ensure that the tasks were accomplished.

    The chairman said that the lessons learnt from the Anambra elections would be factored into the conduct of subsequent elections.