Tag: Zakari

  • INEC excludes Zakari, other RECs from Collation

    As part of its commitment to transparency during next month’s poll, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has excluded all its National Commissioners from the collation of presidential poll results and other strands of elections.

    The commission has also decided to throw open its Situation Room to accredited observers, civil society organisations and the media.

    About one million (1m) Nigerians have applied for poll jobs as ad hoc staff.

    But INEC is still grappling with 639 court cases, arising from party primaries, barely 20 days to the general elections.

    It, however, said it is impossible for anyone, no matter how smart, to compromise Card Readers.

    According to a source, who spoke in strict confidence, neither the widely-criticised National Commissioner Amina Zakary nor any of the National Commissioners will be involved in the collation of presidential poll results.

    The source also said the Resident Electoral Commissioners have no business with collation of results.

    The source said: “No National Commissioner is in charge of collation of presidential poll results. It is true that there is what is called Collation Centre but it is separate from the Collation Secretariat, which is responsible for the collation of results.

    ”No National Commissioner will be appointed into the Secretariat Committee. So, Hajiya Amina Zakari or any National Commissioner does not have anything to do with the collation of results.”

    Responding to a question, the source added that INEC met on Saturday and resolved to throw open its Situation Room.

    The source added: “Related to the Collation Centre is our Situation Room. The international observers and other stakeholders want us to open up the Situation Room.

    ”The commission met on Saturday and decided that we will grant visitation rights to accredited observers, civil society organisations and the media.

    ”Observers might not be allowed to see all things but they can come in and out of the Situation Room. The greatest thing INEC has done with this is openness.”

    Regarding preparation for the general elections, the source said: “Our plans are on course, we are happy with the speed.

    ”We are almost through with the engagement of ad hoc staff. In most cases, we recruit from the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) but the irony is that we do not have enough corps members.

    “We will recruit students in final year or penultimate year in the universities where there is shortfall. We have established portals for the recruitment of ad hoc staff and as at Saturday, one million (1m) Nigerians have applied.”

    The source allayed fears that Card Readers can either be cloned or pre-loaded.

    The source added: “It is impossible to compromise Card Readers or pre-load the cards. We have enhanced the cards, we have increased the memory of every card and we have increased the capacity of the battery of each card.

    ”Nobody on the field can tamper with any card reader because you have to break the seal.

    On cases arising from party primaries, the source said INEC has been joined in about 639 cases.

    The source added: “Between August 2018 and last week, we have been dragged to court 639 times on matters relating to the conduct of party primaries.

    ”We have received about 584 requests for Certified True Copy (CTC) of documents. We also have 186 protests and petitions from aggrieved persons.

    “The management of litigations is going to be a big issue in February election.”

  • We’re pained by ‘blatant lies’ against Zakari, says family

    THE family of Mrs. Amina Zakari yesterday said it was pained by what it described as “blatant lies” that the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC’s) National Commissioner is President Muhammadu Buhari’s niece.

    A statement by the family, signed by Isah Zakari, a lawyer, said Mrs. Zakari, INEC’s National Commissioner in charge of Health and Welfare, is not Buhari’s blood relation.

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) had alleged she has blood relationship with the President, following her appointment as head of INEC’s Collation Centre.

    The PDP added that she was appointed in a bid to rig the general election.

    But, the family said Mrs. Zakari is a patriotic Nigerian, who has served her country faithfully and honestly for years without blemish.

    The statement reads: “We are, therefore, pained by the report that portrays Amina Zakari working to sabotage INEC’s firm determination to advance the democratic journey by creating a conducive atmosphere for citizens to exercise their voting rights.”

    Debunking the claim that she is related to the President by blood, the family said Mrs. Zakari’s mother was from Daura, but was born and bred in Kano and was not Buhari’s sister.

    “It is true that Buhari’s sister was once married into the family. The union was short-lived and did not produce a child. This all happened well before Mrs. Zakari was born,” the statement said.

    According to the family, a Kano politician, Alhaji Tanko Yakasai, who allegedly first made the claim that Mrs. Zakari was born by Buhari’s sister, had since recanted.

    The Zakari family said it was laughable that Mrs. Zakari, appointed as National Commissioner by former President Goodluck Jonathan, can no longer perform any function in INEC because she is a supposed relation of the President.

    The statement added: “The pieces of information being sold to the press about Mrs. Amina Zakari by the PDP are absolutely false, tendentious, malicious and highly reprehensible.

    “Mrs. Zakari has challenged anyone with evidence against her of any misdeed to come forth and prove their case.”

    Besides, the family said Mrs. Zakari diligently served under three different Presidents in various capacities, adding that it was rather unfortunate that she has been made a victim of “a vicious campaign to reduce her accomplishments to purported blood relationship while ignoring her vast and accomplished resume.”

    Highlighting the National Commissioner’s credentials, the statement said: “Mrs. Zakari attended the acclaimed Queens College on merit, being first from Kano State in the Common Entrance in her graduating year from primary school.

    “Mrs. Zakari also was one of the top students in her graduating Pharmacy B.Sc. class in Ahmadu Bello University.

    “She spent time raising a family giving birth to five children while her late husband took roles of increasing capacity in UBA and Union Bank.

    “She worked as a consultant for the Petroleum (Special) Trust Fund, but it is an absolute falsehood that she was appointed to that role by President Buhari.

    “She started as a sub consultant of Afri Projects Consortium and was eventually promoted to the health portfolio for the Consortium after the departure of the late Dr. Aminu Safana (whom she worked for) when he joined partisan politics in 1999.

    “She also served as Executive Secretary for Health in the FCT Administration under the Obasanjo administration’s second term.”

    According to the family, President Buhari did not attend the Council of State meeting, where President Jonathan presented her nomination.

    “What is unfortunate is, instead of celebrating an accomplished woman to support diversity in our polity and groom our future female leaders; we are stuck on belittling Mrs. Zakari’s accomplishments to mere familial ties.

    “If we begin to harangue and harass our officials for family ties (which they do not control) over competence, we shall have no one to serve.

    “A cursory review of INEC and other institutions will reveal a wealth of family and professional ties and contradictions. Does that mean everyone should resign?

    “Enough is enough. Leave our mother, daughter, sister alone to serve the nation as she has done so diligently over her life and career,” the family added.

  • Women group defends Zakari

    A CIVIL society organisation, Proactive Gender Initiatives (PGI), has described the allegations against Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC’s) National Commissioner, Hajia Amina Zakari, as gender-related violence against women.

    PGI’s National Coordinator Mrs. Esther Uzoma made the remark yesterday in a telephone chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    Some opposition parties and groups had kicked against Mrs. Zakari as chairperson of its National Collation Centre for the forthcoming elections, arguing that the national commissioner was President Muhammadu Buhari’s niece.

    Mrs. Zakari dismissed the argument as unfounded at the weekend in an interview with the BBC Igbo. Reacting, Mrs. Uzoma, who is also the alternate chairperson, Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room, said nobody believed that a woman could rise to such position by her own merit.

    She said since the national commissioner had not been found wanting in her responsibility in INEC before, there was basis for such allegations.

    He said: “I also strongly believe that all these people raising allegations against her are doing so because she is a woman.

    “It is one of the gender-biased violence. Nobody believes that a woman can rise on her own, by her own merit to that position.

    “Has she been accused of any crime at all, all the years she has spent in INEC? Is she under any form of administrative investigation?

    “So, I feel strongly that institution of INEC is bigger than any single individual,” she said.

    Mrs. Uzoma, who had served as local and international election observer, said the allegations against Mrs. Zakari had just gone to show that many Nigerians were yet to understand how INEC works.

    She said: “The assumption that one single person can truncate or rig this election, the assumption that she is so powerful to rig 2019 election in favour of one candidate underlines our gross ignorance of the workings of INEC.

    “No, it cannot happen; she doesn’t have that power. The way INEC is structured, no single person can do that.

    “The way the system runs, no individual can do that. It cannot happen because I have had the opportunity to interface with that institution strongly. That is my take.” she said.

    Also yesterday, former Ekiti State governor Ayodele Fayose, described Mrs. Zakari as moral burden on the Presidency and INEC.

    Fayose described the outcry over Mrs Zakari’s appointment as a moral burden on the President, his APC party and the electoral commission.

    He said the justification of the appointment by the Presidency and INEC showed desperation to rig the February 16 presidential election.

    Reacting to the controversies that have trailed the appointment in a statement yesterday by his media aide, Lere Olayinka, the former governor said: “A president, who took oath of office that he would be equitable and fair to all, must be seen to be acting in accordance with this oath and the moment issues like this are raised, it is not for INEC and the Presidency to be rigid and act as if they don’t care.”

    He described the Presidency’s defence that Amina Zakari was appointed by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government as puerile and unacceptable.

    The former governor that Mrs. Zakari was appointed at a time the President was not running for President on the platform of any party.

    “Now that he is candidate and also a sitting  President, fairness and equity demand she should step aside from playing any role in this election,” Fayose said in the statement, adding: “Certain things can be good, but might not be morally right.

  • INEC to PDP, others: WE WON’T DROP ZAKARI as collation centre chair

    THE Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday declared that it would not drop Hajiya Amina Zakari as Chairperson of the 2019 Elections Results Collation Committee. It said that contrary to fears in some quarters, Mrs. Zakari who is alleged to be a niece to the President will have nothing to do with the collation of the presidential poll results.

    It said by law, the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmud Yakubu is the Chief Electoral Commissioner and Returning Officer for the Presidential Election. Yakubu, according to the commission, cannot and will not delegate his responsibility as the Returning Officer to anyone no matter the circumstance. The position of INEC was made known by its Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Oluwole OsazeUzzi in an interview with our correspondent.

    “We cannot and we won’t drop Amina Zakari as the chairperson of the Collation Centre Management Committee. She is only in charge of a committee to prepare the facility for the collation of results,” Osaze-Uzzi said. “She was also very involved in negotiating with the ICC management in 2015 for the use of the facility so her duty is to ensure the facility is ready.

    She has no role whatsoever with the process of collation of results. “The job of the chairperson and other members is to make sure that the centre is conducive with internet access for INEC officials, representatives of political parties, international and local observers. “The committee has nothing to do with the process of compiling results. They are just blowing the scope of the committee out of proportion. It’s a needless controversy; not an issue at all.” Responding to a question, Osaze-Uzzi said: “By law, the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmud Yakubu will superintend over the collation of results. He cannot assign the responsibility and he has not assigned the responsibility to anybody. “He is going to be in charge of collation of results.  It is he who decides the validity of votes and any issues in the election as the Returning Officer.”

    “INEC wants to reassure Nigerians that its chairman as the Chief Electoral Officers will be assisted by trusted Nigerians who he will appoint as collation officers in all the states.” Another source in  INEC said: “Sections 27 and 28(2) of the Electoral Act spell out the collation and announcement of results and no single individual can hijack it. “In fact, those in charge of the elections are even expected to swear to an oath that they will be fair to all. “I think we should be careful in reading meanings and giving political colouration into every activity of INEC. Parties ought to be well-informed than other stakeholders.”

    Sections 27 and 28 (2) are as follows: 27. (1) The results of all the elections shall be announced by a) the Presiding Officer at the Polling unit; b) the Ward Collation Officer at the Ward Collation Centre; c) the Local Government or Area Council Collation Officer at the Local Government! Area Council Collation Centre; d) the State Collation Officer at the State Collation Centre; and (2) The Returning Officer shall announce the result and declare the winner of the election at(a) Ward Collation Centre in the case of Councillorship election  in the Federal  Capital  Territory; b)Area Council Collation Centre in the case of Chairmanship and Vice Chairmanship election the Federal Capital Territory; c) State Constituency Collation Centre in the case of State House  Assembly election; (d) Federal Constituency Collation Centre in the case of election to the House of Representatives; (e) Senatorial District Collation Centre in the case of election to the Senate; f) State Collation Centre in the ease of election of a Governor of a State; (g) National Collation Centre in the case of election of the President; and (h) the Chief Electoral Commissioner who shall be the Returning Officer at the Presidential election. 28. (1) “All staff appointed by the Commission taking part in the conduct of an election shall affirm or swear before the High Court an Oath of Neutrality as in the Second Schedule to this Act. (2) “All Electoral officers, Presiding Officers, Returning Officers and all staff appointed by the Commission taking part in the conduct of an election shall affirm or swear to an Oath of Loyalty and Neutrality indicating that they would not accept bribe or gratification from any person, and shall perform their functions and duties impartially and in the interest of the Federal Republic of Nigeria without fear or favour.” Moments after INEC announced the inauguration of the Zakari-led committee and the Electoral Logistics headed by Air Vice Marshal  Tijjani Mu’azu (retd.) on Thursday, the PDP  had called a press conference in Abuja vehemently rejecting the role assigned to Mrs.Zakari. National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, said her appointment could not stand because “she is President Muhammadu Buhari’s blood relation.”

    Ologbondiyan said such an appointment would assist Buhari, the APC and INEC to rig the presidential election. He also said it could fuel violence and harm Nigeria’s democracy. He asked the INEC chairman to rescind the appointment. Ologbondiyan had said: “Today, we have been informed that  Yakubu, apparently in furtherance of the plots to rig the presidential election, has appointed Mrs Amina Zakari, a blood relation (niece) of the APC candidate, President Muhammadu Buhari, as the chairperson of INEC Advisory Committee and Presidential Election Collation Centre Committee. “The PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation vehemently and unequivocally rejects, in its entirety, the appointment of Mrs Amina Zakari, President Buhari’s blood relation, as the head of the collation of results, in the same election in which his uncle, President Buhari, as a candidate, has displayed a huge desperation to win. “The appointment of  Zakari, who had been openly accused in various quarters as being the link person between INEC and the Buhari Presidency in their schemes to rig the election for President Buhari, constitutes a direct violence against the presidential election and the PDP will not, in any way, whatsoever, accept it.”,,

  • Presidency: Zakari,not Buhari’s blood relation

    The Presidency yesterday dismissed as a lie, claim by the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) that a National Commissioner of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC),Hajiya Amina Zakari is a blood relation of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The commission on Thursday named Mrs. Zakari chairperson of its  2019 Elections Results Collation Committee, prompting criticism from the party.

    The PDP rejected her appointment on the ground that she is a cousin of the president and would use   her position to rig the presidential election in favour of Buhari.

    But responding to the PDP allegation, the Presidency labeled it baseless and said the party was clutching at straws.

    The  Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Mallam Garba Shehu, said, Buhari and Mrs Zakari “don’t share a family relationship.”

    His words: “In another mendacious press release, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has continued their baseless accusations regarding Hajiya Amina Zakari, a commissioner in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), accusing her of partiality and casting doubts about her integrity as an electoral commissioner.

    “In their desperation, they forget that it was the PDP government that appointed her in the first place and they keep lying, as they have been caught doing on so many issues, by imputing a blood relationship between her and President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “An inter-marriage occurred in their extended families, so the imputation of blood relationship between the President and the electoral commissioner is a simple lie.

    “What is even more curious about all the fuss coming from the PDP is that they, as a ruling party picked Mrs Zakari, judging her by her own merit and made her an electoral commissioner.

    “She served so well with distinction as can be verified from the records that President Buhari approved the recommendation that she be reappointed, as he did other PDP nominees for second-term of four years.

    “PDP, therefore, has no moral right to keep harassing this hardworking mother unless they have a hidden agenda.

    “By this statement, the PDP is guilty of scoring an own goal and two, of harassing an innocent citizen on the basis of a lie, pure and simple.”

  • Zakari to cancel CS Sfaxien contract

    Zakari to cancel CS Sfaxien contract

    Allnigeriasoccer.com understands that Nigeria U-17, Lukman Zakari is back in Kaduna after his trip to Tunisia for contract talks with CS Sfaxien.

    The Unity Academy starlet and his intermediaries have agreed a five-year contract with the Ligue 1 side which will start running in December 2016 when he would have attained the age of majority.

    Contrary to reports, a transfer fee of $200,000 was agreed between Unity Academy and CS Sfaxien, with the Nigerian club expected to pocket $100,000 at the end of this year while the balance will be paid in another installment.

    Unity Academy have inserted a clause into Zakari’s contract stipulating that they will pocket 20 per cent of the transfer fees if the central defender is sold to another club before the expiration of his deal.

    The 17-year-old will earn $6,000 per month in wages in his first year at CS Sfaxien and will be paid a sign on fee of $50,000.

    If he manages to play seven competitive matches in his debut season, his contract will automatically be cancelled and be renegotiated.

    Every week Zakari will train twice with the first team and be with the youth team of CS Sfaxien for the remaining days, and a special coach has been employed to put him through his paces.

  • Zakari to cancel CS Sfaxien contract

    Zakari to cancel CS Sfaxien contract

    Allnigeriasoccer.com understands that Nigeria U-17, Lukman Zakari is back in Kaduna after his trip to Tunisia for contract talks with CS Sfaxien.

    The Unity Academy starlet and his intermediaries have agreed a five-year contract with the Ligue 1 side which will start running in December 2016 when he would have attained the age of majority.

    Contrary to reports, a transfer fee of $200,000 was agreed between Unity Academy and CS Sfaxien, with the Nigerian club expected to pocket $100,000 at the end of this year while the balance will be paid in another installment.

    Unity Academy have inserted a clause into Zakari’s contract stipulating that they will pocket 20 per cent of the transfer fees if the central defender is sold to another club before the expiration of his deal.

    The 17-year-old will earn $6,000 per month in wages in his first year at CS Sfaxien and will be paid a sign on fee of $50,000.

    If he manages to play seven competitive matches in his debut season, his contract will automatically be cancelled and be renegotiated.

    Every week Zakari will train twice with the first team and be with the youth team of CS Sfaxien for the remaining days, and a special coach has been employed to put him through his paces.

  • Zakari joins CS Sfaxien after ‘pressure’

    Zakari joins CS Sfaxien after ‘pressure’

    Nigeria U-17 defender Lukman Zakari has finally agreed to join Tunisian club, CS Sfaxien after he initially rejected the club’s offer and said he preferred to follow up possibilities in England and Spain.

    Sfaxien have agreed to fork out  $300,000 for Zakari, who featured at last year’s U-17 World Cup triumph in Chile.

    However, the deal was in danger of collapsing after the youngster turned it down after claiming he would rather pursue interests in England and Spain.

    “Everything has now been agreed with all the parties involved after the boy yielded to pressure for him to sign in Tunisia,” a source informed on Friday.

  • I’ve been a widow for 15yrs but have never asked any man for help  — Acting INEC chair Zakari

    I’ve been a widow for 15yrs but have never asked any man for help — Acting INEC chair Zakari

      The exit of the immediate past chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, no doubt created a big vacuum. More than 11 aspirants are presently jostling to succeed him. They include the Acting INEC Chairman, Mrs. Amina Zakari who, in this interview with select journalists, speaks about what she called unwarranted mudslinging against her person. YUSUF ALLI, Managing Editor, Northern Operation, was there. Excerpts: 

    WHAT are the things left undone by the former INEC chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, which you have to contend with now?

    There is a lot that has been done in terms of processes to conduct credible elections. The main issue now is to make our staff and internal processes more efficient. It has been a tough five years. When we came in five years ago, it was like a new commission. We did a lot of restructuring, re-organisation and strategic planning. So many things were happeningCVR, permanent voter cards, electionand the commission is the only agency that can conduct governorship elections and by-elections. So it wasn’t an easy five years. But thank God, we were able to surpass the expectations of Nigerians.

    Within those processes, however, we discovered a lot of human errors. Things that could be done easily were made more difficult because of the understanding of Nigerians, training of ad hoc staff and so many other issues. So, the concentration now is to inculcate some values. People need to understand that they have to work on a daily basis. They have to utilise their processes. In fact, we are working on a business process review, and I am chairing the committee. We have gone far in mapping out our business processes. All we need now is to keep on sensitising the staff so that we can have a changed management.

    We have done all we needed to do in terms of restructuring and re-organisation. But there is change management and that is one of the handover notes. The other handover issue is increased use of technology in the electoral process. I believe the use of technology increases transparency and efficiency of any process and we also need to sensitize our staff on the need to be ICT-efficient. This is the message I gave them all.

    In every election now, we must ensure that the staff is adequately trained. We must provide capacity building. We must go back and get those who are technologically ready, because if God willing I am allowed to continue, we are going to increase the use of technology. Even in our day to day activities, we realise we have a dearth of data management. After an election, you don’t know who conducted the elections. Who were the ad hoc officials? So that we can have a data bank of who has done elections before, so we could use them. With little training, you could re-use them, but every time we want to have an election now, we have to start all over again. So, if we have hands at the lower level who are technology-savvy in the use of computer, data management would not be an issue.

    Will INEC continue to use card readers?

    The card reader is here to stay. We are ensuring that the storage facilities are being run. We are doing an audit on our storage facilities and sometimes we get calls from the field that everything is fine, because we monitor to ensure that everything is fine. We’ll do an inventory of all our card readers and ensure that what we think we have in store is actually what we have in store. I will also do an inventory of the internal workings to see whether our SIM cards are still there or they are missing. You know we have to continually do the auditing. You can’t just leave it to chance until maybe 2019 when you open and discover that all your card readers are not functional.

    Will they be useful in 2019?

    Normally, the lifespan of the machine is five years, with proper storage. So, when we audit the storage, we would see if we need to rethink our storage strategy; maybe we have to store them in a central place where we can concentrate on providing a conducive environment for their lifespan.

    What value would you add to the electoral process if you are confirmed as substantive chairman?

    Like I said, I am a data and process person. The value I would add is to begin our process early so we do not get caught up in this ad hoc, fire brigade approach to activities. I know what we went through all these five years. We normally have to request for information. We request for somebody to do his job. So, the direction we have started giving the commission is that everybody has to do his job as and when due.

    You know we had a retreat in June when the former chairman was leaving with the other commissioners. We discussed with the electoral officers, the administration officers, the RECs and we made recommendations from the retreat. We have also compiled our 2015 election report and we have recommendations thereof.

    We also have reports from observers and monitors. So, we extracted all the recommendations and aligned them with the departments that should work on them as well as the RECs, and we gave it back to them. The very first week I came, I gave it back to the departments that these are the recommendations from the retreat, and the promise was that every recommendation would be looked into. You can’t just throw them away because these are issues that our staff brought up.

    Why did you lobby to become the INEC chairman?

    I did not lobby for it. I had packed all my things out of INEC and wanted to take a leave for the remaining three weeks. I felt that as the commission was being depleted, I had a responsibility to sit out my three weeks. Then I was called on my way home after the chairman (Jega) had handed over to Ambassador Wali. I told that the head of service was looking for me, and I said what for? I just continued driving. I was almost home when they said, ‘Come back, you have a letter to be the acting chairman.’ I said, ‘but somebody was appointed in the morning, take the letter to INEC.’ But they said, ‘It is in your name. You have to come and receive it. Just turn round.’

    While I was still arguing, my driver decided to turn round. I called the ambassador and told him, and he said, ‘Go pick your letter.’ I called the former chairman and he said, ‘Go pick the letter.’ I was confused and worried because it is 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.

    That means you still had three weeks left before you were appointed as the acting chairman.

    Yes, I had three weeks left.

    Do you believe you are up to the task of managing the commission?

    Having worked for five years in the commission, I have a good knowledge of what goes in it. I had more contact with the staff than the former chairman, and there was so much responsibility entrusted to me. I handled so many ad hoc assignments. I was in charge of managing the youth corps affairs, and it was a 24-hour duty on Election Day. Everyone would go home after the election, but I would still be on the phone trying to get them back to base. I managed the business process. I managed political parties for four years, and that was a continuous assignment.

    Some of the committees had their job towards the election, mine was a permanent assignment. I was working like an everyday civil servant. When I was moved out, I didn’t know there was life after political parties. I had to manage their factionalisation. I had to engage in dispute resolution. I became an emergency lawyer. So, it was an eventful five years. And now, I can look back and see where corrections and improvements need to be made. I have been part of the re-organisation. I had been in the security committee, operation committee, so many committees. I have a good knowledge of what goes on in INEC. I think in any organisation, continuity is good.

    Are you praying to be confirmed as substantive chairman?

    God decides who becomes leader. If God decides that I would be the one to continue, I will have to do my best.

    Having being entrusted with so many responsibilities by the former chairman, will it be correct to say that Jega prepared you for this position?

    I don’t think he deliberately prepared me. Maybe he saw certain qualities in me that he was able to tap into. Maybe that is why he gave me those responsibilities. Possibly, it’s the jobs I did, the quality of my presentations and assignments, that made him pick me. You know as they say, the reward for hard work is more work.

    Is it true you have familial or marital relationship with President Buhari?

    I would say Gen. Buhari did not appoint me as a commissioner; President Jonathan did. Before that, Gen. Obasanjo appointed me as a special assistant and I was 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 had integrity. That was what I was told, and I found myself in the commission and did my best. For somebody to now 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 for nepotism. 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 jeopardise that principle. I can’t say the general is my in-law. I am not married to his son and 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. This is a statement he sent to me. ‘Don’t do anything against your principle.’ Already, I have that principle and I will maintain it.

    Were you nominated by APC or any APC governor? Because that is the speculation…

    The President is a man of himself and people should not think that people influence people of power. Even when I was made a commissioner, was it somebody from PDP that recommended me? I know people in high places. I was acquainted with some of them. So, having somebody recommend you, does it make your job different from what you would do? I might as well have been recommended by a PDP person or a Labour Party person that is acquainted with the President. I think the President had a job to do. He was confronted with the information that this number of commissioners has left and these are the ones remaining, and he chose me.

    So I don’t think it’s about recommendation. We should think about the other administrative processes. I was still a commissioner. I am qualified to do it. And like he said, gender issues cropped up. He seems to be a traditional person and the gender activists started working on him. So, that might have informed the choice of the only female among the six commissioners remaining.

    Were you the most senior commissioner?

    Yes, there were two of us. 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 who became a chairman. When we came, Soyebi was acting commissioner and he handed over to Jega. And he conducted elections. He had done all the procurements. The commission was running before we came. In fact, with Soyebi and Umeadi, 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.

    Are you desperate for this position?

    There is nothing called desperation. Or have I portrayed that image?

    Your adversaries believe that you want to get the job at all cost…

    No, no, no. I am not desperate and I don’t have to get the job at all cost. I think even if I don’t get the job, I have made history as the first acting female chairman of INEC. Within this period, have I done anything good? Have I done anything to improve the process? Even if it is a two-day job, somebody has to do it and I happen to be the one doing it. If somebody is asked to come and take over, I will willingly hand over to that person. I am not desperate.

    I have been a widow in the last 15 years, no man or anyone will say I have ever knocked on his door to seek help to take care of my children. I was brought up with decency and I have tried my best to preserve and protect my integrity.

    The PDP has been criticising your appointment. Do you think this is justified?

    In politics, everything is justified. I don’t have a quarrel with them. I have worked very well with them being in charge of political parties. And at that time, there was no single complaint about me. Normally, you see somebody’s name being mentioned in petitions, but in all the four years, there was no time any political party or faction mentioned me in person as doing something to influence any of their activities. You would see tons of complaints and petitions from political parties. They would put our directors and everybody in the papers. Did you ever see my name crop up? That was the most sensitive and difficult assignment in INEC and I did it for four years. So for PDP to be saying they don’t like my appointment, that is politics.

    How many PVCs have not been collected?

    We have about 58million PVCs collected so far, which is about 81 per cent of the 68 million produced. We have about 10 million PVCs not collected. 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).

    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.

    What is the budget for Kogi and Bayelsa elections?

    For Kogi, am still expecting the budget, but we have done the budget for CVR and PVC distribution. They were approved when there were enough members of the commission. For Kogi, we are coming up with the budget. For Bayelsa, we have to go back to government for the budget. Nonetheless, we have started preparation. We had preliminary meeting with the RECs last Wednesday to discuss modalities for the CVR. We have a work plan for the CVR, so we want to start early. Then we would have a work plan for the elections. We should soon get approval for Kogi.

    We would get a memo and budget for Kogi. But for Bayelsa, we have to go back to government because we had anticipated Bayelsa to be in next year’s budget, but due to the timelines approved in the constitution, it is better to prosecute the two elections this year. Next year, we take Ondo and Edo, so that we can have a paced process so we don’t get inundated with too many elections like we did between 2011 and 2015, so we can tidy up and ensure seamless delivery of credible elections to Nigerians.

    The processes have started. We are comfortable. The RECs are already doing what they need to do at the lower level. I always told the staff there are soft issues you can do without money. You can begin preparations without money. While you are waiting for the core issues, you can begin with soft preparations and this is the example of what we are doing. In fact, our timelines have not been derailed for any reason.

    Is INEC broke?

    INEC is not broke. The releases are becoming a bit more difficult but INEC is not broke.

    What is the amount to be spent on Kogi election?

    Normally, for governorship election, it costs us between N500 million and N600 million. This is all inclusive. It includes payment of ad hoc staff and the bulk of our cost is usually the payment of honorarium to ad hoc staff. But we have some savings. We still have leftovers, non-sensitive materials from the 2015 elections, and we are not going to procure a lot. We will just concentrate on procuring the sensitive materials.

    When will voters in Kogi, Bayelsa and other states get their PVRs?

    I think Bayelsa and Kogi were among the first states where most of the voters have collected their voter cards. It is just a balance of the PVCs that are remaining and we are not sure if the people that own them are not dead. We are not sure if they are students, especially in Ogun where we did a scientific analysis and we have seen that they have so many universities and the students left and were not interested in coming back for the cards. That is why we can’t throw back the cards in the fields because we don’t want them to get into the wrong hands given that our card readers do not read all the fingers all the time. We have to be systematic about the distribution. That is why we are doing continuous voters registration for them. We are going to do pre-election registration to mop up the few people that need to register and for people to transfer their registration from polling unit. From inter-state and intra-state, they want to move to another local government. We are going to avail them that opportunity and we are trying to do it seamlessly on e-platform. We have started testing an e-transfer platform that does not need you to come back for capturing. We are working on that for the two states.

    When Jega came on board, he promised to prosecute electoral offenders. How many have been prosecuted so far?

    In 2011, we prosecuted up to 200 persons. The police have given us a report on that. For 2015, a lot more are in police net. Investigations are going on. We haven’t heard about the prosecution yet. In fact, some of them are our ad hoc staff. So we wait for the report. I know that the last Inspector-General of Police set up a special prosecution team for the 2015 elections. So we’ll await their report.

    There is this insinuation that you have a health challenge and that you had a heart surgery. Are you fit for the job?

    I don’t think the person saying that is a medical doctor. I am a pharmacist. If I had heart surgery in May, you would not see my face till the next six months because I have to recuperate to ensure that my heart is back to normal.

    I travelled to Saudi Arabia in May. Everybody went for thanksgiving after the general elections. I spent like 10 days, came back and went straight to Uyo for the retreat. We finished on June 15, right after the election, straight to London for an assignment, came back, went to Ummrah and came back. If I had appendix surgery, I will recuperate for two months. Heart surgery is not easy.

    You have seen me, I am fit. I have been veiling myself as a good Muslim. I need to veil myself more as the acting chairman. I am sure the person that made the insinuation is not a medical doctor.

  • Be impartial, Zakari tells RECs

    Be impartial, Zakari tells RECs

    Acting Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Amina Zakari has called on Resident Electoral Commissioner’s (RECs) to remain impartial and deliver credible electoral services.

    She spoke yesterday at a meeting with RECs at the Commission’s headquarters in Abuja according to a bulletin from the electoral commission.

    The Acting Chairman called for caution, noting that INEC was experiencing challenges in the management of the various cases before the election petition tribunals.

    “We shall continue to uphold our role as independent, non-partisan and an unbiased umpire.

    “We must ensure that we act according to the rules and remain above board, as well as cooperate with all stakeholders to ensure free, fair and un-interrupted dispensation of justice,” she said.

    Speaking on the agenda of the meeting, Amina Zakari said:  “Our meeting today is designed to enable us focus and re-strategize on key issues of the electoral process.

    “It is obvious that the recommendations from the Uyo retreat have been far-reaching.

    “We need to understudy those reports with a view to identifying suitable modalities for the implementation of the recommendations therein”.

    The recommendations, which required urgent attention, Mrs. Zakari said, include continuous voter registration and permanent voter cards’ distribution; improved communication strategies with internal and external stakeholders; Ad-hoc staff matters (recruitment, training and payment) and      Legal reforms among others.

    On the forthcoming Kogi and Bayelsa governorship elections, she challenged the RECs and staff of the Commission to ensure the exercise meet international standards.

    According to her: “It is important to begin to look towards the necessary mechanisms that would positively impact on the conduct of these exercises.

    “We have already set good records; but should still improve to  make the elections a world class exercise.”