Jega Replies Police IG: You Can Wait And Protect Your Vote After Voting

The Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, and the Chairman of INEC, Professor Attahiru Jega, on Friday clashed over the police chief’s warning to Nigerians to “vote and go home.”
While the IGP had warned voters to go back to their homes immediately after casting their votes on election days, Jega said the electoral law did not state that voters could not or should not wait to watch and ensure that their votes are not manipulated.

The INEC chairman, who appeared as a guest on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily on Friday, said there is no part of the Electoral Act that forbids voters from waiting around the polling booths.

However, the All Progressives Congress tackled the IGP over the “unlawful order.”
In a statement in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party asked voters to rather listen to Jega and stayed behind to protect their votes after casting their ballots.

The statement read, “According to Jega, who appeared on Channels TV on Friday morning, the electoral law says anyone that has no business with the electoral process at the polling booths but desires to monitor events should stay at least some metres away from the polling agents and completely away from the ballot box after casting their votes.

“The INEC Chairman further clarified that all registered voters have businesses with the process and can therefore not be classified as people that don’t have businesses at polling units.

“Therefore, the IGP has no constitutional right or powers under the constitution or Police Act to rewrite the electoral law. The role of the police is to maintain law and order or such other assistance as may be sought from the police by INEC.”

 

Re: No Waiting At Polling Booths After Voting By Adeola Austin Oyinlade

ADEOLA AUSTIN OYINLADE, LLB, BL, LLM, United Nations Peace Ambassador
Email: adeolaaustinoyinlade81@gmail.com
_____________________________________________________________________________________
20th March, 2015
Mr. Suleiman Abba,
The Inspector-General of Police,
The Nigeria Police Force Headquarters,
Louis Edet House,
Abuja, Nigeria.

Dear Sir,
RE: NO WAITING AT POLLING BOOTHS AFTER VOTING
I want to commend you sir for the adequate preparation of the Nigeria Police Force in order to record violence-free, fair and credible 2015 general elections. I also want to use this opportunity to commend our service men and women for ensuring protection of lives and properties in Nigeria. No matter the reservation anyone has for the Nigerian police force, I make bold to say that without you and our officers on ground, lives will be ‘nasty, brutish and short’ in the words of Thomas Hobbes.
Kindly permit me to use this open letter as a concerned citizen of Nigeria to ask for your clarification on a statement credited to you sir and widely reported on the pages of Newspapers. A good example is the one on the front page and page 2 of The Punch Newspaper titled “No waiting at polling booths after voting – IG”, dated March 20, 2015. I understand that open letters in the last two years have served different purposes for different individuals, but this only seeks your clarification on what appeared not to be cleared to me and other well meaning Nigerians.
In view of the above statement credited to you sir, could it be possible to say that was an order or a piece of advice to Nigerians? As a lawyer, I have tried in vain to see whether such assertion has any force of law as no law stipulates a time where any eligible voters must vacate the polling booths. I have also checked my primary and secondary sources of law and I can say that there is no law in force in Nigeria against eligible voters from witnessing the count of ballot papers after voting.
I read that your justification for the declaration was that “the possibility of committing electoral offence was very high if voters stayed back at the polling booths for votes to be counted.” I strongly believe that the essence of security in this task is not only to protect INEC officials and electoral materials but also the citizens. I also believe that the police can invoke their power of arrest under the Police Act against anyone who may want to breach public peace before, during and after elections.
Sir, you will agree with me that the political atmosphere of Nigeria is tensed at the moment. The attention of the whole world is on Nigeria as we go to the polls. As a United Nations Peace Ambassador and resource person to African Union on the implementation of African Youth Charter, UNESCO and UNDP, I have being privileged to hear from people within and outside Nigeria their expectations about the coming polls. While I believe that waiting till ballot papers are counted will see the process to the legitimate end, I also believe too that seeing voters standing and with our service men and women on ground can make anyone planning to steal ballot boxes to have a rethink rather than asking eligible voters to leave.
I want to thank you in anticipation for this clarification.
I wish Nigerians an emphatic success as we decide again.
Yours faithfully,

Adeola Austin Oyinlade Esq

Views expressed are solely that of author and has no association with www.omojuwa.com nor its associates

Court Adjourns Suits Seeking Buhari’s Disqualification to March 24

A Federal High Court in Abuja has fixed March 24 for ruling in the suits seeking to disqualify the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Muhammadu Buhari from the March 28 presidential election.

At the resumed hearing on Thursday, counsel to Buhari, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) brought an application challenging the mode of service of the originating processes on Buhari. Buhari insisted that all the suits were targeted at stopping the presidential election.

He maintained that no court has the power to stop the Independent National Electoral Commission ( ?INEC) from conducting presidential election on March 28.

But counsel to one of the plaintiffs, Mike Ozekhome (SAN) urged the court to expedite hearing on the matter to enable it to determine the fate of Buhari before the presidential election.

Read More: Vanguard

PDP Chairman Confesses: We Can Not Have A Landslide Victory Again

The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, has opened up that there’s no way his party will get a landslide victory in the forthcoming general elections.

Mu’azu, a former governor of Bauchi State, made the remark in an unusual statement he signed in Abuja on Thursday to try to shore up the party’s dwindling fortunes and refurbish his relationship with the President. He has recently declared he would rather resign his chairmanship than insult General Muhammadu Buhari, the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress.

According to SR, he hinged the PDP’s hopes on wooing undecided voters as well as traditional rulers, whom Mr. Jonathan is known to have been offering large bribes.

“We are going around the country in search of undecided voters, who are the final battle ground where the election will be won or lost, he said, adding that the APC could continue to stir the rumour mills into believing that he and Mr. Jonathan are in disagreement, but that they are very serious about winning the presidential election.

Strangely, Mu’azu implicitly conceded that the party was doing very badly before the elections were postponed, thereby confirming popular speculation that that was why Jonathan worked so hard to force the postponement. After three weeks of town hall meetings, the National Chairman said, PDP was “inching its way to victory” in the presidential election, with that time-frame being the additional lifeline supposedly granted to it by the postponement.
?
According to him, “We shall continue this interactive engagement with Nigerians until 26th March when campaigns officially end before the March 28th Presidential elections, presenting our scorecard in government, our programme in the next four years to 2019, using the town hall format and meeting our revered traditional rulers…

“While I do not see a landslide victory coming, I am convinced that our party will perform creditably in the Southwest and the North of Nigeria and elsewhere in all the elections this year because the evidence is clear that despite our travails at the beginning, we have done very well over the past fifteen years of our nascent democracy since 1999 to record victory. Those who disbelieve our resilience will be surprised for victory is ours.’

INEC Seeks Partnership With Traditional Rulers For 2015 Elections

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has appealed to traditional rulers to support the commission in the forthcoming general elections.

During a sensitization visit to Nekede ancient kingdom in Owerri, Imo State, INEC officials led by the National Commissioner in charge of South East, Mrs Gladys Nwafor and the Resident Commissioner in Imo State, Gabriel Ada urged traditional rulers to use the opportunity of their closeness to the grassroots to assist the commission in conveying vital information on the need for rural dwellers to collect their permanent voter cards.

The team also took time to address a cross section of women in the community and also sensitize them on how they should vote on the day of the elections.

However, the paramount traditional ruler in Nekede ancient community, Stephen Agunmanu promised to support the commission in disseminating the necessary information to his people and ensure that elections in the area is violence free.

The post 2015 Elections: INEC Seeks Partnership With Traditional Rulers appeared first on Channels Television.

Nigeria’s Security Council Gives Condition For Elections To Hold In North East

*No news on abducted Chibok girls-Minimah
People of the troubled zone of North-east will exercise their voting rights in the coming elections only when all the structures of government and governance there are reinstated.

This was the outcome of a meeting of the National Security Council presided over on Tuesday by President Goodluck Jonathan.

The meeting, which was held at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, lasted several hours.
The chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, briefed the council on the readiness of his commission for the elections.

Jega, who left the Presidential Villa before the meeting ended, simply told State House journalists
that the meeting went well.

The INEC boss said: “I believe it (the meeting) went well.”

Jega, however, declined comments on his commission’s plan to use card readers during the elections.

But the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Kenneth Tobiah Minimah, who addressed journalists after the meeting, said the people of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States could only vote when the structures of governance there are reinstated.

On the fate of the over 200 schoolgirls of Chibok, Minimah said there was no news for now.

According to him, “You know Yobe and Adamawa States have been liberated completely and we look forward to the reinstatement of structures of government and governance. I’m also sure you know that in Borno State, out of the 27 local government areas, we have three local governments remaining: Abadam, Kalabaldi and Gwoza. And we are optimistic that with time, we will liberate those local governments”.

minimah

On whether the council discussed the forthcoming elections, Minimah said only the INEC was competent to talk about the elections, adding that the commission had to reassess and evaluate the situation in the three troubled states.

Minimah, who said the military had liberated areas captured by the Boko Haram sect, said: “I’m not competent to speak on that matter (elections). The INEC is still there. INEC has to reassess the situation and evaluate because the areas have been liberated, but I can also tell you that not all structures of governance have been reinstated and they will need to be reinstated so that citizens can go back to their areas, and it is then I think they can execute their rights as voters”.

Asked how soon those structures would be reinstated, the Chief of Army Staff said: “I don’t know”.

On the abducted Chibok girls, Minimah said: “No news for now. In all the liberated areas we have, we have also made enquiries, but the truth is when the terrorists are running away, they also run with their families, and those we have come in contact with have not made any comments suggesting that Chibok girls were there and taken away. But we are optimistic that as it becomes closer, the territory is becoming elusive to them. We will get further details on that”.

I’m Not Going Anywhere; I Will Conduct The Elections –Jega

Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega, has dismisses all the pressures on him to resign from office.

The INEC boss said that protests and calls by some groups for his resignation would not deter him and his team from delivering free and fair elections to Nigerians.

He said, “I have heard of the several calls for me to be removed. In fact, I am aware that some groups have been protesting. Well, I have a job to do and I will do it… all of us at INEC are focused on ensuring that this election is free and fair.”

In a clear response to the Presidency-sponsored protest for his removal, Jega said “I have a job to do and it would be a disservice to Nigerians for me to resign.”

On issues of election day, he gave assurance that voters whose fingerprints might not be recognised by card readers would be allowed to vote after they must have filled incident forms.

Jega assured Nigerians that INEC had put in place, some stringent measures to prevent multiple voting in the elections.

He said the time lapse between the accreditation and voting exercise was aimed at restricting movement of voters from one polling unit to the other and ensuring that people did not vote more than once.

He said, “Multiple voting is unfortunately the factor that has bedevilled many voting exercises in Nigeria. This problem is posed by politicians who pay voters to vote many times or plan to snatch ballot boxes once the voting exercise starts.

“But the time lapse will ensure that voting takes place and ends in the various polling units at the same time and voters who want to engage in this fraudulent act will not be able to move around.”

Presidency Sponsors Anti-Jega Protests As The Plot To Remove INEC Chairman Thickens

An investigation by Sahara Reporters has revealed that President Goodluck Jonathan and his associates are masterminding a spike in protests against Attahiru Jega, the chairman of INEC. Numerous sources within the President’s circle disclosed that Jonathan has accepted the advice of hawkish members of his kitchen group to ask Professor Jega to proceed on terminal leave next week.

In order to prepare Nigerians and the international community for the imminent sack of Jega, Jonathan was said to have approved the distribution of N200million in each zone of the federation to mobilize protests against the henchman of the electoral body.

“Mr. President and his close advisers feel that Professor Attahiru Jega is now too stubborn to eliminate the use of permanent voter cards and electronic readers for the 2015 elections,” one source said.

The spate of orchestrated protests started last week on a small scale in Nigeria’s capital of Abuja, then moved to the southeast where members of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), staged several large-scale protests demanding Mr. Jega’s removal.

jega protest
One source at the Presidency told our correspondent that the Odua People’s Congress (OPC) staged a rally in collaboration with a pro-Jonathan group in Lagos today and a few more protests are planned for other southwest states at the urging of sponsors who are embedded in Aso Rock, Nigeria’s seat of power.

In addition, a group of ex-militants from the Niger Delta are expected to stage protests too against Jega.

Once the orchestrated demonstrations reach a crescendo with the ones in the Niger Delta, the Secretary to the Federal Government, Anyim Pius Anyim, is expected to write a letter to the INEC chairman ordering him to start his pre-retirement leave.

Our sources said the Jonathan administration has concluded that the removal of Mr. Jega from the electoral commission would present the only hope that the use of biometric voters card and electronic card readers would be abandoned.

Once Jega is sent on compulsory terminal leave, said our sources, Jonathan will replace him with one of the national commissioners who is open to the idea of doing away with electronic card readers.

Even though Jonathan has often listed the introduction of permanent voters cards (PVC) as part of his legacy, he and his closest associates have been pushing for weeks, covertly and overtly, to abandon the system. The president’s team has argued that too many voters were yet to collect their PVCs.

But INEC has countered that most of the PVCs have been picked up. In addition, Jega and members of civil society groups have defended the system, calling it a key to combating rigging and other malpractices that have plagued past elections in Nigeria.

INEC Holds Town Hall Meeting

INEC on Monday held a town hall meeting with stakeholders involved in the 2015 electoral process. The meeting afforded the stakeholders and members of the public the opportunity to ask the commission questions bordering on its preparedness for the general elections.

The Chairman of INEC, Prof Attahiru Jega led other top officials of the commission to the event. Jega, who responded to most of the questions clarified some misconceptions concerning the elections.

On the failure of card readers, Jega says it has been agreed with political parties that accreditation will be suspended if a card reader fails and that a new card reader will be replaced within the time frame of the accreditation. He added that accreditation time will be extended to cover for the lost time.

On the on provision of security for the elections and arguments for/against the deployment of soldiers, Jega noted that role of the military, as defined in the constitution, is for the them to provide support to civil authorities if there is a breakdown of law and order.

He stated the military participated in the 2011 election within the confines of the constitution to provide military support to the police if there is breakdown of order.

On the clamour  for his resignation, he maintained that he was not ready to step down from the job, saying doing that at this period would be a disservice to the nation. He insisted he has not committed any offence to warrant him to resign.

Credit: NAN

UPDATE: INEC Warehouse Fire Outbreak

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has said that the fire that gutted some parts of its storage facilities in Abuja will not affect the upcoming general elections.
The Commissioner in charge of Electoral Operations and Logistics, Mohammed Hamanga, said that the affected materials, which were in the process of being destroyed, were obsolete, according to an update from Channels TV. The fire outbreak was as a result of a surge in electricity after three days of power cut, said the INEC official.
It was gathered that the fire which started at 11:00 PM was contained by 2:00AM due to the quick response of officials of INEC and the Federal Fire Service, who forced their way into the warehouse.
Read More: skytrendnews

Jega Says INEC Ready For Free, Fair, Credible Elections

The head of Nigeria’s electoral body said on Monday it was ready to conduct presidential and parliamentary elections in less than two weeks’ time, after the vote was delayed by security concerns.

Attahiru Jega told a meeting in the capital city Abuja that his Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had done “everything humanly possible” for a free, fair, credible and peaceful vote on March 28.

Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC,  Prof. Attahiru Jega

INEC has come under close scrutiny since last month when Jega was forced to postpone the February 14 general election on the grounds that troops could not provide adequate security on polling day.

Nigerian soldiers, backed by troops from Cameroon, Chad and Niger, are currently involved in a major offensive against Boko Haram, which has seized swathes of territory in Nigeria’s northeast.

The Islamist insurgency, which began in 2009, has killed more than 13,000 people and forced hundreds of thousands more to flee, raising the prospect that the displaced will be unable to vote.

Despite a series of claimed military successes, security fears remain over the safety of polling stations after an increase in bomb and suicide attacks in recent weeks.

Jega maintained that the election would be peaceful, despite the insurgency and election-linked violence, and said the six-week delay had given his organisation more time to prepare.

A week before February 14, INEC said that two-thirds (66.5 percent) of the 68.8 million registered voters had collected their ID cards, prompting claims that it was unprepared.

On Monday, Jega said 67.8 million cards had been produced and distributed to individual states, including to the internally displaced, who would be able to vote near camps in the north.

But he added: “The level of collection… nationwide is about 56 million out of these 68.8 million (81 percent).

“So, there are millions of cards out there that… people have not gone out and collected.”

President Goodluck Jonathan’s ruling party has raised concerns about the use of electronic card readers, claiming it is untested technology, as well as the rate of distribution of cards.

But Jega said the card readers, which scan fingerprints and record personal data against the electoral roll, will work and reduce the possibility of the persistent problem of fraud.

Cloned cards would not work, he said, adding that INEC had “cleaned” the electoral register since the last vote in 2011, removing over four million multiple registrations.

Jonathan is seeking a second term in office but has faced a strong challenge from the main opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler.

It Is An Election And Not War By Naufal Ahmad

A society that presumes a norm of violence and celebrates aggression, whether in the subway, on the football field, or in the conduct of its business, cannot help making celebrities of the people who would destroy it. Election is central to any democratic system, it allows ordinary citizens to choose who leads or represents them in governing their state, it also serves as a check on political leaders in the sense that they have to periodically seek the mandate of the people to either continue in office if the people are satisfied with them, or be voted out of office when the people are dissatisfied with their performances. It is through elections that they exercise their sovereign power, election is the yardstick for measuring the maturity of a democracy. A major cancer threatening our democracy is election violence. International Foundation For Electoral System (IFES) defined Electoral violence as “any act of threat of physical or psychological harm to a person or damage to property directly involved in an electoral process.” Political violence is one variant in the struggle for power in our democracy, since the return of democracy in Nigeria in 1999,the conduct of elections has been characterized by violence and wanton destruction of lives and properties,indeed electoral violence has caused division and stalemate in our developmental processes as a nation. _ If an election is characterized by violence it has the tendency of ushering a democracy into recession or eventual collapse, on the other hand a peaceful election enhances a democracy and consolidates a Nation.  Democracy in Nigeria is being threatened by violence along ethnoreligious lines, politicians desperate to stay  in power  stoke  the ethno-religious tension in Nigeria for political gains ahead of the 2015 elections. which poses a threat to Nigeria’s existence as a nation. Nigeria is one of the must ethnically and religious diverse places on earth with more than 300 tribes it’s therefore vulnerable to electoral and all other types of violence, we must therefore as politicians, as stakeholders, as citizens uphold the highest of virtues in our daily manifestation in order to maintain a peaceful atmosphere at this fragile stage of our democracy,we must learn from history,the case of South Sudan,the Hutu-Tutsi massacre, the Arab spring uprising, all these people are not half as diverse as Nigeria is if violence were to break it would bring double the damage it inflicted on those places aforementioned._ It has become clear that some politicians either due to sentiment of ignorance are trying so hard to force this country into violence either by action or by making dangerous statements around ethno-religios  lines,one governor was recorded referring to the opposition as “cockroaches”the word used by the Hutu against their Tutsi counterpart an incident that caused one of the worse massacres in human history claiming 800,000 lives, mostly innocent women and children._ One can’t help but notice the provocative actions taken by the incumbent PDP government to deliberately coerce Nigeria into violence  to achieve their political gains,the scandalous comments made by the vice president about the APC being an Islamic party would have caused mayhem in this country,desperation has caused them to use these emotive sentiments to mobilize votes the only time this “sentiments” become serious issues is when they want to stay in power it seizes to count as soon as the electoral process ends. Another fundamental issue that would have caused chaos was the unprecedented polls shift,an action seen by many as provocative,a deliberate attempt to coerce the country into violence in order to earn whatever legitimacy the government needed to declare a state of emergency that will permit them to stay in power, a plan that didn’t see the dawn of the day. In our present vigorous struggle for change, nothing  strikes so much fear into the heart of these cabals and their agents than that of the masses responding to the call to apply our final form of resistance, but we most do it positively and peacefully, we must weigh the pros and cons, taking in the end an informed decision that will liberate us safely. Nigeria has lost enough lives to insecurity, our valiant men and women of the military who died honorably defending us, and the over 13,000 innocent people mostly women and children whose lives were consumed by these bloodthirsty madmen called BokoHaram. As a country that went through a civil war, we all know the consequences of violence and what it inflicts to both the physical and mental state of a society. Beyond deaths and injuries, violence have serious lifelong scars physically and emotionally to the nation.  Nigeria cannot revert to violent struggle,we must exercise patience and stay vigilant of all the daily manifestations of our democracy, we must organize ourselves in preparation of the inevitable future of our beloved country. We all have roles to play in this  great quest of salvaging this great Nation,as individuals,as public office holders,as NGOs,CBOs,FBOs and community leaders as political parties.we must ensure an unconditional respect for the rule of law,ensure respect for the principle of transparency in the electoral processes by the electoral umpire,this impending election must be free and fair. engage in anti-violence campaigns aimed at educating the masses on the inevitable damage of violent activities in this fragile nation, sensitization of security agents involved in the electoral process too must be embarked upon. The future of this country depends solely on a peaceful and credible elections, injustice and peace cannot cohabit the same atmosphere, peace is in everyone’s best interest without peace there will be no country called Nigeria, without Nigeria there will be no country to call our own. Let peace reign

Naufal Ahmad

@9aufal
+2348132277510

Views expressed are solely that of author and has no association with www.omojuwa.com nor its associates

It Is An Election And Not War By Yadoma Mandara

A society that presumes a norm of violence and celebrates aggression, whether in the subway, on the football field, or in the conduct of its business, cannot help making celebrities of the people who would destroy it.

Election is central to any democratic system, it allows ordinary citizens to choose who leads or represents them in governing their state, it also serves as a check on political leaders in the sense that they have to periodically seek the mandate of the people to either continue in office if the people are satisfied with them, or be voted out of office when the people are dissatisfied with their performances. It is through elections that they exercise their sovereign power, election is the yardstick for measuring the maturity of a democracy.

A major cancer threatening our democracy is election violence. International Foundation For Electoral System (IFES) defined Electoral violence as “any act of threat of physical or psychological harm to a person or damage to property directly involved in an electoral process.” Political violence is one variant in the struggle for power in our democracy, since the return of democracy in Nigeria in 1999,the conduct of elections has been characterized by violence and wanton destruction of lives and properties,indeed electoral violence has caused division and stalemate in our developmental processes as a nation. _

If an election is characterized by violence it has the tendency of ushering a democracy into recession or eventual collapse, on the other hand a peaceful election enhances a democracy and consolidates a Nation.  Democracy in Nigeria is being threatened by violence along ethnoreligious lines, politicians desperate to stay  in power  stoke  the ethno-religious tension in Nigeria for political gains ahead of the 2015 elections. which poses a threat to Nigeria’s existence as a nation.

Nigeria is one of the must ethnically and religious diverse places on earth with more than 300 tribes it’s therefore vulnerable to electoral and all other types of violence, we must therefore as politicians, as stakeholders, as citizens uphold the highest of virtues in our daily manifestation in order to maintain a peaceful atmosphere at this fragile stage of our democracy,we must learn from history,the case of South Sudan,the Hutu-Tutsi massacre, the Arab spring uprising, all these people are not half as diverse as Nigeria is if violence were to break it would bring double the damage it inflicted on those places aforementioned._

It has become clear that some politicians either due to sentiment of ignorance are trying so hard to force this country into violence either by action or by making dangerous statements around ethno-religios  lines,one governor was recorded referring to the opposition as “cockroaches”the word used by the Hutu against their Tutsi counterpart an incident that caused one of the worse massacres in human history claiming 800,000 lives, mostly innocent women and children._

One can’t help but notice the provocative actions taken by the incumbent PDP government to deliberately coerce Nigeria into violence  to achieve their political gains,the scandalous comments made by the vice president about the APC being an Islamic party would have caused mayhem in this country,desperation has caused them to use these emotive sentiments to mobilize votes the only time this “sentiments” become serious issues is when they want to stay in power it seizes to count as soon as the electoral process ends. Another fundamental issue that would have caused chaos was the unprecedented polls shift,an action seen by many as provocative,a deliberate attempt to coerce the country into violence in order to earn whatever legitimacy the government needed to declare a state of emergency that will permit them to stay in power, a plan that didn’t see the dawn of the day.

In our present vigorous struggle for change, nothing  strikes so much fear into the heart of these cabals and their agents than that of the masses responding to the call to apply our final form of resistance, but we most do it positively and peacefully, we must weigh the pros and cons, taking in the end an informed decision that will liberate us safely. Nigeria has lost enough lives to insecurity, our valiant men and women of the military who died honorably defending us, and the over 13,000 innocent people mostly women and children whose lives were consumed by these bloodthirsty madmen called BokoHaram.

As a country that went through a civil war, we all know the consequences of violence and what it inflicts to both the physical and mental state of a society. Beyond deaths and injuries, violence have serious lifelong scars physically and emotionally to the nation.  Nigeria cannot revert to violent struggle,we must exercise patience and stay vigilant of all the daily manifestations of our democracy, we must organize ourselves in preparation of the inevitable future of our beloved country.

We all have roles to play in this  great quest of salvaging this great Nation,as individuals,as public office holders,as NGOs,CBOs,FBOs and community leaders as political parties.we must ensure an unconditional respect for the rule of law,ensure respect for the principle of transparency in the electoral processes by the electoral umpire,this impending election must be free and fair. engage in anti-violence campaigns aimed at educating the masses on the inevitable damage of violent activities in this fragile nation, sensitization of security agents involved in the electoral process too must be embarked upon.

The future of this country depends solely on a peaceful and credible elections, injustice and peace cannot cohabit the same atmosphere, peace is in everyone’s best interest without peace there will be no country called Nigeria, without Nigeria there will be no country to call our own. Let peace reign

Views expressed are solely that of author and has no association with www.omojuwa.com nor its associates

Presidency Explains Why It Is Against Card Readers

The presidency has come out to defend its earlier position of the ruling PDP on INEC’s use of card reading machines for the 2015 general elections. It did this by questioning the legality and efficiency of using the device in the forthcoming elections.

Vice President, Namadi Sambo who disclosed this argued that while his party was not against the use of card readers, which the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, believes will help curb electoral fraud, it was concerned whether the decision was backed by law and about the possibility of many Nigerians being disenfranchised.

Read More: dailypost

INEC’s Card Reader Passes Litmus Test

The Smart Card Readers (SCRs)were used by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the weekend for biometric  verifications of potential voters and a mock poll. It was without any major hitch. Stakeholders and observers say it has come to stay as an antidote to rigging. RAYMOND MORDI, LEKE SALAUDEEN and MUSA ODOSHIMOKHE take a look at the results from the states and the way forward as enumerated by experts.  

After the field testing of Smart Card Readers (SCRs) by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the weekend, the verdict was that it was largely successful. Going by reports from the 12 states where it was tested, the machines performed excellently. According to INEC, there are two steps to be followed in the usage of the SCRs. One is authentication; to ascertain that the card was issued by INEC. The implication is that if anybody brings a fake Permanent Voter Card (PVC), the machine will not authenticate or recognise it as INEC’s card. So, the issue of fake cards or clowned PVCs will not arise.

Impressive turnout in Lagos

The Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in Lagos, Mr. Akin Orebiyi said: “The next step, after the authentication, is the verification stage, where the bearer of the card will be asked to put his thumb on a particular point on the SCR, to verify whether he or she is the rightful owner of the card. The implication of this is that no person can use another person’s PVC. Impliedly, nobody can be accredited and possibly vote in more than one polling centre.”

The reports were the same from the 12 states chosen across the six geo-political zones by the electoral umpire to test run biometric confirmation of potential voters.

The states are; Lagos, Ekiti, Rivers, Delta, Ebonyi, Anambra, Taraba, Kano, Kebbi, Nasarawa, Niger and Bauchi.

Orebiyi said the mock poll was successful. According to him, there were hitches with few of the machines because the PVCs’ owners’ fingers were wet. The Lagos REC, in a telephone interview, told The Nation  that the aim of the test-run was to demonstrate the effectiveness of the SCRs to the public; to demonstrate that PVCs can only be used at the designated polling units. He said that many intending voters, who were not registered in Onigbongbo Ward where the mock poll took place, were rejected by the machines.

Orebiyi said the exercise has proved the efficacy of the new device.

His words: “There was nowhere the battery failed during the exercise. In few instances, where the cards could not be identified by the machines, we used the back-up register to identify the card owner. Those in this category were about five per cent.  May be their hands were wet but with the back-up register, we were able to identify them.

“The test-run has given us the opportunity to demonstrate the process for accreditation on election days. We will continue to educate the voters as we have planned to hold town hall meetings in all the 774 local government areas in the state, Orebiyi said.

Postpone Elections or Include Us on New Ballot Papers, New Party Tells INEC

Young Democratic Party,? a new party which a court compelled the Independent National Electoral Commission to recognise, has said the electoral body should either reprint the ballot papers to include it for the coming general elections or postpone the polls.

The stance of the party may have boosted ongoing efforts to scuttle the forthcoming elections. A Federal High Court in Abuja, Wednesday, ordered INEC to recognise YDP and accommodate it in the forthcoming elections that are about four weeks away.

Addressing journalists in Abuja on Thursday, the party’s Publicity Secretary, Ugo Nwofor, said INEC “has just two options,” adding that the party was ready for the elections. The conditions, according to Mr. Nwofor, include reprinting the ballot papers to accommodate the party and its candidates.? But if INEC does not have “appropriation for logistics?” for reprinting the ballot papers, Mr. Nwofor issued the second option which was that, “lNEC should postpone the elections to accommodate our party.”

Read More: Premium Times

PDP Dissociates Self From Fayose’s Call To Sack Jega

The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party has dissociated itself from Fayose’s statement calling for the sack of INEC chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega.The party said the Ekiti state governor was just expressing his own opinion and not that of the party

Fayose had earlier called for the sacking of Jega, adding that if President Goodluck Jonathan decided to remove him, heaven would not fall.

The Deputy National Chairman of the Party, Prince Uche Sedondus told journalists in Abuja on Thursday.He said,

 “We are not fighting Jega. The opinion expressed by the governor of Ekiti State on the INEC chairman remains his own. He’s not speaking for the party .Never, nothing like that is even cooking. There is no plan to remove Jega. “He added that the party “has absolute confidence in INEC and its leadership.
“We won’t bribe voters to return the President into office. As a matter of fact, we have never bribed voters before, during or after elections,”

We Are Not Afraid Of Card Readers – PDP

The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday debunked insinuations that they were against the use of card readers for the forthcoming elections.

The party, however, insisted on adequate test runs of the card readers before deploying them for use, in order to avoid chaos.

The deputy national chairman of the PDP, Uche Secondus, who stated this yesterday while briefing newsmen, further boasted that the PDP would win the 2015 election comfortably.

Secondus, who said the PDP was ready for the 2015 elections, said it had decentralised its campaigns from the wards to the polling units, stressing that claims that it was afraid of the use of permanent voter cards (PVCs) and card readers were therefore propaganda by the APC.

While responding to allegations that the PDP was jittery over the use of card readers, Secondus said, “Not at all. You know this is the first time that the party is going to try this technology. I think that this misinformation by APC must be corrected. The PDP is not against card readers.

The PDP believes that INEC should test it and it should be in perfect condition, so that we don’t run into problems. So that on that day, we don’t have problems of it working in some areas and in other areas it won’t work. I mean these are human feelings acoss not just PDP, but the entire country.

“Since it is the first time we will adopt this technology, it should be in perfect condition so that people will not have cause to complain.

PDP’s Objection To Use Of Card Readers Confirms Intention To Rig Election – APC

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) objection to the use of card readers in this month’s rescheduled election confirms its accusations that the ruling party was doing all in its power to either prevent the election from holding or to rig it.

The party, in a statement issued in Lagos on Thursday by its national publicity secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, described as very curious the fact that the PDP, which had rushed to the press to deny the APC’s claims had turned around to confirm them.

APC said, ‘’At the press conference we addressed on Wednesday, which rattled the PDP and the Jonathan Administration so much, we listed the conditionalities of the PDP/Jonathan administration for holding the election: No PVCs, No Card Readers, No Jega and the fact that they want the military deployed to harass and intimidate voters.

“We mentioned ‘Card Readers’ at least three times during the press conference, and said they (PDP/Jonathan Administration) are doing everything possible to sabotage the machine and prevent its use.

“Both the spokesmen for the PDP and the Jonathan Campaign Organisation rushed to the press to deny any such ‘reprehensible’ plan. But a few hours later, the spokesman for the campaign organisation told an incredulous country that they would oppose the use of Card Reader, apparently after the spokesmen were overruled by their party.

“Obviously, these men are outsiders in their own party and it is now obvious that the opposition knows more about the inner workings of their party than they do.”

Court Orders INEC to Register New Party

The rescheduled general election on Wednesday suffered another setback following the judgment of the Federal High Court in Abuja, which ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to accord full recognition to the Young Democratic Party.

The judgement is coming barely three weeks to the commencement of the elections. Justice Ahmed Mohammed made the order in his judgment on the suit filed by the party, challenging its denial of registration by INEC.

The judge held that YDP was deemed registered when INEC failed to inform the then political association? of its decision not to register it as a political party within 30 days of receiving its application, as required under Section 78 (4) of the Electoral Act, 2010?.

The judgement is definitely going to affecte INEC’s preparations for the elections as the commission would now have to accomodate the new party in its programmes.

Read MoreThisday

PDP Accuses APC of Bribing INEC

PDP says the string of false alarms and outright lies that characterized Wednesday’s press conference addressed by the APC has clearly justified its profiling as a party of ‘one week, one lie’.

PDP National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh in a statement on Wednesday said Nigerians are, however, not surprised that the APC has officially adopted the use of fabrications having exhausted its fake campaign promises which were not able to upstage the verifiable achievements of the President Goodluck Jonathan-led PDP administration.

“Indeed, Nigerians are not surprised at the contents of the recent false alarms by the APC as they are undoubtedly a reflection of the character, inner thoughts and ideology of its leaders. These ignoble ideas are clearly incompatible with the ideology of the PDP and President Jonathan who has overtime demonstrated the qualities of a true democrat and not a reformed one,?” the party said.

Read More: dailypost

Find Out Why INEC May Reprint Ballot Papers

Preparations for the March 28 and April 11 elections may have suffered a major setback, as a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to include the Young Democratic Party, YDP in the lists of its duly registered political parties.

 By this judgement, INEC would be required to reprint new ballot papers for the elections which is three weeks away. Justice Ahmed Muhammed delivered the judgment in Abuja on Wednesday.
Read Moredailypost

INEC To Conduct Polls In IDP Camps

INEC has reaffirmed its preparation to conduct elections in Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.

The Chief Press Secretary to INEC’s Chairman, Kayode Idowu, said on Tuesday that the Commission’s arrangement was limited to the three states. Idowu said that the Commission had made it clear that it could not ‘put so many irons in the fire at the same time’. “This is the first time that Nigeria was attempting an arrangement of conducting voting at designated centres for IDPs.

“So, the commission cannot extend its capacity for now beyond arrangement in those states,” he said.

He said that displaced people that wanted to vote could do so at their states where arrangement had been made for them. Idowu said though the arrangement INEC made before the counter-insurgency operations was to conduct election at safe designated centres, saying it would be too early to determine what exactly would happen. “People who are displaced can have opportunity to go and vote in the voting centres in the states if it will still be in the voting centres because events are unfolding by the day.

“By the counter-insurgency operations going on, territories are being reclaimed, we don’t know people will still be displaced or restored to their communities as we move closer to the elections,” he said.

He added that the commission was embarking on necessary preparations that would enable it conduct free, fair and credible election. Such preparation, according to Idowu, includes the Commission’s meeting with Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) by March 4, as well as the stress test of its card readers.

He said that the stress test would be conducted on March 7 in two states in each of the six geopolitical zones. The states, according to him, are Ekiti, Lagos, Anambra, Ebonyi, Delta, Rivers, Kano, Kebbi, Bauchi, Taraba, Niger and Nassarawa. “There will be a mock-poll in a whole ward. People will bring out their cards and their PVCs will be read and authenticated just like it will be done on election’s day”.

Credit: NAN

134 000 Corps Members to Participate in Polls

The Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brig.-Gen. Johnson Olawumi has said that about 134 000 corps members have registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to be used in the conduct of  the forthcoming election.

Olawumi  explained that although at the end of the exercise, about 168 000 corps members registered to participate in the poll, among them were 34 000 of the Batch A who had passed out on February 19 and will not participate as corps members but ad hoc staff of INEC.

“INEC asked interested corps members who want to participate in the election to register online. At the end of the registration, there were about 168 000 registered.

“We always have three batches of corps members and because the election was slated then for February 14, the Batch A of last year that registered and were supposed to participate in the election passed out February 19.

Our plan initially was that they would participate in the process but when the election was postponed, we saw that we could not keep them or we would violate the NYSC Act. They numbered about 34 000”.

Credit: NAN

Court Fixes March 16 To Hear Lawyers’ Suit Against INEC Over PVCs

Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court in Lagos will on March 16 hear a suit filed by three lawyers against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over their inability to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

The lawyers are asking the judge to declare that their civil and legal rights would be breached if INEC does not issue them their PVCs or provide them an alternative means of exercising their franchise.

The lawyers, Chijioke Emeka, Kalu Uduma and Emeka Odikpo, are also seeking an order directing INEC to issue them their PVCs or make other alternative arrangements to enable them vote.

The plaintiffs want the court to hold that should they be excluded from the March 28 and April 11 elections due to no fault of theirs, they are entitled to legal damages.

More Pressure Mounts On Presidency Over Jega

Pressure mounted, weekend, on the presidency not to compel Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega to proceed on pre-retirement leave as reportedly being canvassed by some concerned stakeholders in the polity.

The anti-Jega forces had been pushing the presidency to remove the chairman from office, a move that was last night described as dangerous by notable lawyers. The pressure came in the face of heightened tension in the commission over the alleged moves. The chairman’s five-year term comes to an end on June 30 and though he is qualified for re-appointment, the chances of such have become remote given recent allegations of bias against the chairman by campaign officials of President Goodluck Jonathan.

The mood at the headquarters of INEC, weekend, was that of resignation to fate, as most of the officials, adopted a ‘wait-and-see’ disposition over Jega’s fate following claims of surreptitious moves to force the chairman out of office ahead of the first of the national elections on March 28.

Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC,  Prof. Attahiru Jega

A top official of the commission told Vanguard, yesterday that they were still working with the hope that the elections would hold as rescheduled and that the chairman would be allowed to conduct it before going in June.

The tension followed claims by the All Progressives Congress, APC, Senate caucus of the discovery of a plot by the presidency to send Jega on pre-retirement leave as a way of clearing the way for the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, to emerge victorious in the forthcoming national elections.

PDP officials had in recent times kicked against the insistence of the commission to use the card reader and the Permanent Voter Cards, PVCs.

Among those who spoke against the alleged move to send Jega on pre-retirement leave were Prof. Itse Sagay, SAN, Mr Femi Falana, SAN, Chief Olisa Agbokoba, SAN, Chief Mike Ozekhome, SAN and Prince Orji Nwafor-Orizu. Chief Fredrick Fasheun, who is also a supporter of the second term aspiration of the president, also opposed any premature exit of Jega.

Constitutional lawyer, Professor Itse Sagay said that any attempt to remove Jega from office through what he called “political retirement” would set the country on fire.

In a telephone interview with Vanguard, Sagay said the INEC chairman cannot be removed from office at this time under the pretence of retirement on two grounds.

He said: “The appointment of Jega as INEC boss was ratified by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and his removal under the law must be ratified by two-third majority of the Senate.”

Besides, he opined that the appointment is political and that he is as such “not a typical civil servant who is expected to proceed on leave after spending 35 years in service or attained the mandatory retirement age. So any attempt to force him out of office through political means is an attempt to set the country on fire.”

APC Accuses Jonathan Of Planning To Remove Jega Next Week

?Chairman of INEC, Attahiru Jega, will be directed to proceed on terminal leave next week, APC senators caucus in the national assembly has said.

Speaking at a press conference at the national assembly complex in Abuja on Thursday, George Akume, former governor of Benue state and senate minority leader, who represents Benue west, said the APC have received information that the head of service would direct Jega to proceed on terminal leave next week.

The senators condemned the attempt to remove the INEC chairman under any guise, saying his removal would be tantamount to “subversion of the system”.

“Only dishonest politicians fear Jega as chairman of INEC. We have received information that next week Jega will be served a letter from the head of service directing him to proceed on terminal leave?. We wonder why the government wants to tamper with the current arrangement of INEC.”

Read Morenaij.com

The Secret Reason Why Jonathan Wants Jega To ‘Be Sacked’

The All Progressives Congress (APC) caucus in the Senate has raised the alarm over an alleged plot by the presidency to send the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Attahiru Jega, on terminal leave next week.

According to the leader of the caucus, Sen George Akume, the plan is aimed at ensuring that Jega will be removed to pave way for a more pliant person to take over so that the presidency can use him to achieve its agenda.

Speaking to Senate correspondents yesterday, Akume, who led other APC senators to a briefing in the National Assembly said, “we received information from very, very informed sources, very credible sources, that next week, the chairman of INEC will be served a letter by the office of the Head of Service directing him to proceed on terminal leave.

Whether the letter is from the Head of Service or the presidency, it doesn’t make sense”.

Noting that as a political appointee, Jega does not operate under civil service rules, the senators said the preparations for elections have gone too far for anyone to want to slow the process down with any unnecessary change.

“After bringing the issue of card readers, they are now trying to hang Jega. It won’t work”, the caucus stated, while adding that they will resist any attempt to undermine the credibility of the elections.”

Source – OsunDefender

Religious Campaigns Will Be Fined 1M- INEC

INEC in Bauchi State has issued a stern warning to any political party using religion as part of their campaign.

The statement, made during an interactive session with stakeholders in local government, has warned parties that they will be issued with a N1 million or face a 12 month prison sentence should they use religion as a tactic during campaign season.

The warning comes hot on the heels of allegations made against politicians who allegedly threatened PDP supporters in Darazo Local Government, based on their choice of presidential candidate.

According to Emmanuel Umenger, INEC Administrative Secretary in the State, electioneering campaigns based on religious sentiments provided grounds for political parties to be prosecuted.

Read More: Vanguard

76.15% of PVCs Now Collected –INEC

The Independent National Electoral Commission has said that the number of people that have collected their Permanent Voter Cards has risen to 52,419,495.

The Chief Press Secretary to the INEC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, who stated this in an interview with our correspondent in Abuja on Sunday, said the figure represented 76.15 per cent of 68,833,476 registered voters.

INEC had on Tuesday said that 52,275,367 people had collected their PVCs out of 68,833,476 registered voters.

Responding to questions from our correspondent, Idowu said, “The update I have with me now is for February 18 and it is 52,419,495 (76.15 percent).”

Idowu also stated that card readers would be deployed in 152,031 polling units across the country during the March 28 and April 11 elections, adding that INEC had procured 26,000 extra card readers.

“Card readers will be deployed at 152,031 voting points. But the Commission also has more than 26,000 spares,” he said.

According to him, ad hoc workers for the elections (excluding INEC members of staff and returning officers) are about 684,000.

He explained that the scheduled training for the ad hoc members of staff ended February 12 in readiness for February 14, the initial date for the presidential elections.

Idowu said because the elections had been rescheduled, there would be more extensive trainings, especially on the card readers.

According to the figures released by INEC on Tuesday,   Nasarawa State led other states in terms of the PVCs collection with 96.29 per cent of the 1,196,583 registered voters having their cards.

Coming second is Gombe State where 95.05 per cent of the 1,120, 023 voters had collected theirs.

Jigawa State came third with 93.20 per cent of the 1,831,276 voters receiving their PVCs as of Monday.

Jigawa and Katsina came fourth and fifth respectively.

While the percentage of the registered voters who have collected their PVCs in Jigawa stood at 93.20 per cent from 1,831,276 registered voters, that of Kastina was put at 92.68 per cent.

General Buhari, INEC & The PDP By Presley Akhigbe

It is a shame that this is where we are as a nation. INEC has just one job, one job only; conduct elections. Providing the means and platform of conducting election are all sub of the main function of INEC and in spite of all preparations, the federal government is subtly spreading the propaganda that INEC isn’t prepared to conduct the February 14th election, in spite of a four years preparatory period. The fact is that if the FG claims that INEC isn’t prepared, that is a vote of no confidence on INEC and more on the FG (their usual trademark in all aspects especially the economy of the country)

Supposing this whole election postponement is all a gimmick of the ruling party in the face of calamitous defeat in the hands of the main opposition, General Mohamadu Buhari. The PDP has been scheming deftly in the realisation of the little chances of their party to win the presidential election and have played all forms of cards in their deck and even very demeaning cards laden with devilish lies and deliberate twisting of historical facts. All these still somehow leading to the soaring popularity of General Mohamadu Buhari.

The various senseless cards that have been played against General Buhari has included:

(1) Religious Fanatics: out of the blues the PDP through clowns like Femi Fani Kayode and the other uncultured media advisers have been inundating hapless and ignorant Nigerians that Genaral buhari was going to Islamise Nigeria once he assumes the mantle of leadership and as such he should not be trusted and voted for. The noise of this theory was very loud that it might even confuse a few gullible southerners. No sooner had they labelled General Buhari as an Islamist that will Sharialise Nigeria that they took a volte-face to say he is a fake Muslim because he chose a Christian with 5000 churches as his running mate. This new theory was indeed stupid and senseless. As if to add insult into injury, the ruling party who constantly sound like the opposition came around to say General Buhari’s party is a Christian party and has more Christians as its components so, people should not vote for General Buhari. The people who concoct all these charades and childish ideas are they really using their brains at all, the answer is left to all sensible Nigerians to decide.

(2) The health/age factor: Nigerians and Africans are known globally to care most for the elderly and show respect too for the elderly especially in western Nigeria. But hey, politics is here and Genereal Buhari seem to be leading the poll as likely winner in the coming presidential election and as such cultural values and religious sacredness would have to be slaughtered on the platform of PDP. Then came a certain Fayose wishing death on General Buhari because he senses that he might be impeached if a sane candidate like General Buhari assumes presidency of Nigeria. Death wish was then a card played by PDP to the extent that the executive members of PDP started writing and tweeting on social media why it is wrong to vote for and elderly candidate. A very ridiculous doctor’s report that was doctored by a semi illiterate started circulating on social media that General Buhari had a terminal ailment from the Medical centre in Katsina. That is going too far, to wish someone death or terminal ailment because you want certain characters to remain in power albeit running the lot of the country. Of course, like other previously poorly scripted cards the PDP has played, the health/age card also failed woefully.

(3) The Documentary: among other schemes of the PDP, the malicious, false and very debilitating documentary aired by the appendages of PDP(AIT & NTA) to demonise General Buhari and describe him as a brutal dictator even worse that the inglorious General Abacha was a show of desperation. The documentary indicated that the PDP was fast loosing grounds and supporters with the “Sai Buhari” movement sweeping the country. The most disgusting part of the documentary was that it was riddled with lies and it shows the low level the Nigeria press/media can get because of money. There is no gainsaying that investigative journalism and professional journalism is dead in Nigeria. Not with all those Nigeria stations and the print media all trying to outdo themselves in the show of shame and denigration of the press. They compete daily to achieve a level of ridiculousness and retrogressions. Thank God for other good stations in South Africa, Ghana and Kenya that beam professional broadcast to the world to report Africa otherwise those who dissipate their time to watch eye sores like AIT, NTA and Siverbird TV will assume that we are animals in this part of the country. If not for CNN, BBC, Aljazeera and the likes, we would never have been updated about the things that are happening in Nigeria. Those tales by moonlight TV stations in Nigeria will never cease to beam nonsense and criminally insultive contents. In the midst of all these madness by Nigerian TV/Radio stations, one would ask, where is NBC….? Oh, you all should know the answer, they are experiencing hangover from too much ogogoro

(4) Serial Looser and others: The most painful part of all these drama being unfolded by the PDP towards casting aspersion on General Buhari, instead of reeling to Nigerians what the ruling PDP has done/achieved in the last six years, they accuse General buhari of being a serial looser. Under normal circumstances and apart from rigging, General Buhari would never have lost those elections he previously contested and even at that, the General is never a quitter like most of them and they label him a serial looser. Every sensible student of history will tell you about Abraham Lincoln who lost seven times before he eventually won to be one of the greatest presents in USA history. Also they have accused General Buhari that he is still a dictator and will be a dictator if he wins. Are these people all clueless too or they just want to perpetually be bereft of sensible ideas. From their various evaluations, the proponents of all these cards played against General Buhari has increased his popularity and they need to make some more drastic moves which brings us to:

(5) Certificate: These PDP folks have all come that a retired Brigadier General of the Nigerian army is not qualified to contest for elections. They have further said his documentation is faulty and he should be disqualified. Laughable. What are they afraid of? They are trying to use the court to place an injunction to postpone the elections so that more manipulations can be done against General Buhari. It will not work

From nowhere while they are trying to use the court to get postponement, they come up with the issue of PVC distribution, as if INEC was just established and tasked with that responsibility last week. The PDP schemers are clamouring that they don’t want Nigerians to be disenfranchised, as if they care about Nigerians like that. It’s all a big ruse, they have perceived and felt the defeat looming in their backyards and so they want postponement to give room for manipulations. It will not work.

I am convinced that the strategist of the APC, Kayode Fayemi, Raji Fashola, Atiku Abubakar, Rotimi Amaech and the Don Corleone Bola Ahmed Tinubu have insights into the level of craftiness that is hatched by the minute to forestall the inevitable change that will propel General Buhari as President so that the type of abracadabra that happened in Ekiti state will not befall Nigeria.

This piece is not to jump the gun but to pre-empt Nigerians to counter every moves by the PDP from throwing Nigeria into chaos with a criminally motivated intention of postponing the elections.

Presley Akhigbe

Views Expressed Are Solely Author’s…

Ban Ki-moon Asks INEC to Embark on Rapid PVCs Distribution

The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, has asked INEC to take advantage of the shift in polls to embark on rapid distribution of the remaining Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to all registered voters.

This is contained in a statement from the Secretary-General on Sunday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on the postponement of Nigeria’s elections, initially scheduled for February 14 and 28. The statement was made available to the media by Oluseyi Soremekun, National Information Officer, UN Information Centre in Nigeria.

He urged, “the electoral authority to take all necessary measures, such as the rapid distribution of the remaining PVCs, to enable all eligible voters, including those displaced, to exercise their right to vote in a timely manner.  This is imperative for ensuring a credible, free and transparent election,” the statement said.

The statement also said that the UN scribe had spoken in a telephone conversation with President Goodluck Jonathan on Saturday over the postponement of the election, and also to Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd).

He had encouraged both Jonathan and opposition candidate Buhari to respect the Abuja Accord they adopted and which commits them to non-violence, peace and tolerance during the elections. “He looks up to Nigeria’s authorities to uphold their commitment to ensure a violence-free election and put in place adequate security measures, so that citizens across the country are able to exercise their civic duty safely and without fear,” the statement added.

The secretary-general expressed the hope that the forthcoming elections would meet the high expectations of the Nigerian people and the international community. “The successful conduct of these polls would strengthen Nigeria’s democracy and enable the country to continue to play a leading role in the promotion of regional peace and security,” Ban said.

Credit: NAN

INEC Urges Voters to Bring Camera to Polling Units

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has urged voters to come to the voting centers with cameras to capture any ugly event that may unfold.

Edwin Nwatarali, the Resident Electoral Commissioner of Anambra State, said this will help forestall sharp practices by staff of the commission and politicians. Nwatarali, who was speaking at a stakeholders meeting organized by the commission in Awka, said the commission can not act on electoral offences committed by its staff without proof.

The tapping of such sharp practices ,according him, will serve as proof that the commission can use against electoral offenders.

Read MoreDaily Times

14,000 PVCs Snatched By Hoodlums in Rivers, Says INEC

INEC has said hoodlums forcibly snatched about 14,000 Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs) from officials of the commission during the collection exercise in Rivers State.

The state Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Mrs. Gesila Khan, made the disclosure while speaking to journalists in Port Harcourt on Friday. She said some of the cards were stolen from local government collection centres where the PVCs were deposited at the close of the collection exercise to enable the rightful owners pick them up at their own time before the elections.

Khan also said over 50,000 PVCs would be distributed to their owners before the general election, adding that more than 80 per cent of the registered voters in the state have collected their PVCs. She stated that her office received 2,990,056 PVCs and distributed 1,869,379.

Read More: thisdaylive.com

INEC Declares PDP Reps Candidate Winner 19 Days to Election

INEC has declared Christian Adabah Abah, the only candidate validly nominated to contest the Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadigbo Federal Constituency seat in Benue State. The declaration which was made yesterday is in accordance to the provisions of the Electoral Act.

This declaration has made the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to be winner of the first seat in the House of Representatives this year. This came less than three weeks to the start of the forthcoming general elections.

INEC Disqualifies 7 Gov Candidates- Vanguard

THE Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has declared the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP candidate for Ado/Opoku/Ogbadibo Federal Constituency in Benue State, Christian Adabah Abah, as winner of the February 14, 2015 general elections.

INEC also disqualified seven governorship candidates from various parties from participating in the February 28 governorship election for failing to nominate their running mates.

Explaining reasons for declaring Abah winner for the election that was yet to hold, INEC said it was because he (Abah) is the sole candidate seeking election into the House of Representative election.

These were contained in INEC’s daily bulletin on the election yesterday, saying that the common offence of the governorship candidates was their inability to nominate their running mates.

In a Decision Extract signed by the Director (Commission’s Secretariat), Ishiaku Gali, INEC has also approved that the House of Representatives election in Ado/Opoku/Ogbadibo Federal Constituency of Benue State, being uncontested, the nominated candidate should be declared elected on the day of the election by the Returning Officer,” adding that, “Section 41 (1) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) provides that: If after expiration of time for delivering of nomination papers, withdrawal of candidates and the extension of time as provided for in this Act, there is only one person whose name is validly nominated in respect of an election, other than to the office of the President or Governor, that person shall be declared elected.”

Read More: vanguardngr.com

What the INEC numbers are telling us  – by Ayisha Osori

In the last couple of weeks, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has led the news. About everything from undistributed, stolen and rescued permanent voters cards (PVCs) to well meaning encouragement for INEC to bare its fangs at election related hate speech. And then there are the kites zigzagging everywhere: postponing the elections because INEC is not prepared and not using the PVCs and card readers – never mind that some politicians have allegedly invested in fake PVCs.

However, INEC should be in the news for other reasons as well but few seem to be paying attention. The first is the INEC voter register for the 2015 general election published January 14 2015. We now know that we have sixty eight million (68,833,941) registered voters, fifty four million (54,341,610) PVCs ordered and thirty eight million PVCs collected. What we do not know is why or how INEC decided to make only 54 million PVCs when we have 68 million registered voters. It is also curious that while INEC admits that there are 16M (16,927,045) registered voters yet to be provided their PVCs it is not clear if these 16M are part of the 54million ordered or entirely separate. If you add the 16M to the number who have collected (38M), we get 55M – which is 1M higher than the number INEC says it ordered. Or is this 16M the balance of what has not been ordered out of the original 68M? No. Because when you deduct 54M from 68M you get 14M – 2M less than the number of registered voters INEC says have not been provided PVCs. The numbers are do not provide a complete picture.

The FCT has 881,472 registered voters but only 850,360 cards were ordered. Adamawa has 1,559,012 registered voters but only 1,529,636 cards ordered, Delta 2,275,264 registered and 1,909,291 ordered. Every state had numbers shaved off. Yet, for those who thrive on mystery, conspiracy theories and the improbability of coincidence, when we compare the 2015 register with the 2011 one, we find that the NE, NW and NC, lost 3M voters while the SS, SW and SE gained 1.6M.

INEC’s voter register also tells us that the NSA, Sambo Dasuki is wrong about 30M uncollected PVCs because INEC’s register indicates that 71% of the 54M ordered have been collected, which
leaves 15.5M as of January 14. Logically and hopefully this number is much reduced since then.

The second reason we should be talking about INEC is the House of Representatives and Senate candidates’ list. 90% of the attention is on a few presidential candidates, 9% on some of gubernatorial candidates – while thousands of candidates are escaping scrutiny and we are loosing the chance to examine the impact of electing them in February. We are also ignoring the opportunity to engage the candidates who claim to be running on certain demographic issues.

The top contenders for the presidency have had a few political ads talking about gender inclusivity, with one candidate admittedly with more of a track record than the other. However, INEC’s lists do not support their words. For over 1600 candidates for the House of Representatives, PDP have only 19 female candidates, APC has 26 and Labour, 15. The party with the highest number of female candidates for the House is the Mega People Political Party (MPPP). The numbers are worse for the Senate. Out of a total of 747 Nigerians vying to get in PDP, APC and Labour out did themselves and fielded 7 each. MPPP led again with 16. In summary, women did not do well in any of the major political parties.

When it comes to age, youth fare no better. The Senate is still the retirement home of old generals, ex governors and ex any government position. The youngest candidate for the Senate is 25 – but this could be 52 written backwards considering the minimum age in the Constitution is 35 while the oldest is 74 with a lot 60+ candidates.

There is a lot more the numbers are telling us – including about the States but our ears are filled with defamatory words and our eyes blinkered with derogatory cartoons and tasteless newspaper ads. We stubbornly refuse to see the big picture about democracy and what it is supposed to mean, not just for participatory representation but also for the delivery of good governance and fulfilling the contract between citizens and government.

Until those of us with PVCs press ink stained thumbs on the ballot papers next month, there is still time to absorb the information we have and do the right thing: to think right and vote right.

No Delay Needed for Election Says INEC

The head of Nigeria’s electoral body on Friday maintained that elections set for next month will still take place, despite concerns about whether voter cards will be distributed in time.

Nigeria’s national security adviser, Sambo Dasuki, told a conference in London on Thursday that the February 14 poll should be delayed to ensure that registered voters received their cards. But the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Attahiru Jega, said there had been no discussion on postponement.

Asked whether the presidential and parliamentary vote will still take place as planned, he told delegates at a meeting in Abuja: “I have said so. “I have said everything we are doing, including the challenges of the distribution of Permanent Voters Card, we believe is something we can address long before February 14. We issued (the) election timetable for February 14 almost a year ago? and we have been very busy working to implement that timetable to the letter.”

Read More: vanguardngr.com

 

INEC Cannot Disqualify Buhari – Jega

Prof. Attahiru Jega, the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has insisted that the commission cannot disqualify the All Progressives Congress presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, even if he does not present his senior school certificates in the future.

According to Punch, Jega, disclosed this on Wednesday night during an interview on Channels TV programme, titled, Straight Talk With Kadaria, said those asking the commission to disqualify Buhari were free to go to court.

He said the Electoral Law permitted any presidential candidate who can not cite any documents that he could not produce, to swear an affidavit.

On the issue of Buhari’s eligibility and the calls for INEC to disqualify him, Jega said, “When a political party presents a candidate and he meets all the requirements of submission -deadline and the forms- INEC cannot reject such a candidate.

 Read More: naij.com

How INEC Intends to Protect Corps Members During Election

National Youth Service Corps members who would be participating in the 2015 general elections have been assured of their safety during and after the elections.

This assurance has been stressed by both the leadership of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, and the Independent National Electoral Commission

Speaking with newsmen, The Director General of the NYSC scheme, Brigadier General Johnson Olawumi, said provision has been placed on ground to ensure the protection of lives of NYSC members before, during and after the electoral activities.

He revealed that the NYSC was partnering with some Nigeria security agencies to see that the lives of all the corps members are protected and also to ensure that their welfare and logistics were adequately taken care of during the election.

INEC’s Resident Electoral Comminnisoner in Cross River State, Dr Okay Ezeanyi, while visiting the NYSC secretariat in the state, equally assured corps members that they would be secure. “It is the duty of INEC to provide adequate security for corps members, who will be used as ad hoc staff for the 2015 elections.”

While advising corps members to be of good conduct during the 2015 elections activities, Dr. Ezeanyi noted that they would be paid for their services.

Credit: vanguardngr.com,

Card Readers Will Stop Impersonation At Feb 2015 Polls – INEC

The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has said the electoral body decided to introduce card readers for February elections in order to verify the rightful owners of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

This was disclosed by Mr Abdulganiyu Bello, the Electoral Officer for Baruten Local Government Area of Kwara on Tuesday in Kosubosu at a meeting with stakeholders in the area.

He said the device would stop impersonation and voting by proxy during the general elections.

He called on the voting populace to cooperate with INEC officials in ensuring a hitch-free exercise.

“Let’s target peaceful electioneering; I want to urge politicians not to cause any disruption because you believe a particular place is a stronghold of opponents.

“The result in that place might be helpful in the eventual outcome,” he said.

Bello also said the commission would ensure that no polling unit had more than 750 registered voters.

Jega And Our Right To Vote By Femi Gbajabiamila

Human suffrage (the right to vote) is so fundamental and inalienable that it has found its way into many constitutions all over the world including ours. For hundreds of years, many and different classes of people, women, blacks etc. fought and died for this right. It is a proprietary and intellectual right as it is a medium of expression of political opinion and thought and it is all a citizen has that should never be taken away from him. Every citizen possesses that right to determine who he wants to govern or represent him. That freedom of expression can be found in Section 39 of the Nigerian constitution.

Mr. Chairman, I will take the liberty even at the risk of boring you to refer to several other provisions of the constitution which I believe you like me swore to defend and which is supreme to any law or guidelines the Independent National Electoral Commission may issue.

Mr. Chairman, it is common knowledge that the issuance of the Permanent Voter Cards for the 2015 elections has been at best shoddy. Many Nigerians stand the risk of not being able to exercise perhaps their most important civic responsibility. The old, young, male, female, rich and poor have cried out on their inability to collect their PVCs for various reasons none of which has anything to do with a failing or negligence on their part but on the part of INEC. It becomes illogical, illegal and even immoral for INEC by its guidelines to attempt to disenfranchise millions of Nigerians who are able, willing and determined to exercise their franchise. Mr. Chairman, all INEC has done is to inadvertently create room for suspicion. The Electoral Act in Section 16(1) states clearly that:

“The Commission shall design, cause to be printed and control the issuance of voters’ cards to voters whose names appear in the register” (emphasis mine).

In other words, the issuance of voter cards to registered voters is mandatory. Beyond the Act itself , let’s examine the provisions of the constitution as they relate to the right to vote. I do this, Sir, to underscore the point that INEC’s directive that only those with the PVCs will be allowed to vote can only pass constitutional muster if the PVCs are available and voters refuse to pick them up.

Section 77(2) of the constitution provides:

“Every citizen of Nigeria who has attained the age of eighteen years residing in Nigeria at the time of registration of voters for the purpose of election to a legislative house shall be entitled to be registered as a VOTER for that election.”

Section 132 (5) of the same constitution also provides:

“EVERY PERSON who is REGISTERED to vote at an election of a member of a legislative house, shall be ENTITLED to vote at an election to the office of PRESIDENT.” (emphasis mine)

I took the pains of regurgitating the provisions of the constitution of which you are all to familiar so as to drive home the simple point that no guideline of INEC can trump the provisions of the constitution as provided in section 1(3) of the constitution which says:

“If any law is inconsistent with the provisions of this constitution, this constitution SHALL prevail, and that other law SHALL to the extent of the inconsistency be void”

Therefore, Sir, I respectfully submit that your guidelines which seek to or have the potential of   disenfranchising many Nigerians due to no fault of their own remain void being inconsistent with our constitution. We must stop this incessant penchant of punishing Nigerians for the inefficiency or negligence of government. It happened during the fuel price hike and subsidy crisis and is happening now with the introduction of austerity measures due to economic mismanagement. We must not add this to the comedy of errors. Presently, there are over 30 million Nigerians yet to collect their PVCs, half of the registered number. Indeed, many communities and polling units actually have no records of registration of voters.

To make sure I am not misunderstood, Sir, I will stay just a little longer on the constitution by referring to Section 14 of the constitution which states:

(1)“The Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be a State based on the principles of DEMOCRACY and social justice

(2) It is hereby accordingly declared that

(a)      SOVEREIGNTY belongs to the PEOPLE of Nigeria from whom government through this constitution derives ALL its powers and authority;

(b)      The security…and

(c)      The participation of the people in their government SHALL be ensured in accordance with the provisions of this constitution”

Mr. Chairman, nothing can be clearer than the above provisions. Sovereignty belongs to the people not to the National Assembly, not to the Presidency and not to INEC. You MUST review your guidelines. Nigerians who want to vote must not be stopped but must be encouraged. Democracy in its classic dictionary definition is government of the people, for the people and by the people. This is echoed in Section 14 above. If we disenfranchise and stop people from voting, how can the resultant government be described as by the people and how can ours be described as a democracy?

Never before have we seen Nigerians so energised and eager to vote either for change or for continuity. The most commonly used electoral language today is every vote must count but pray tell how do you count the votes that have not been cast? Surely, the votes must be there before they can be counted.

For your information, I have since last year filed a matter in court for adjudication on the constitutionality and proprietary of your guidelines but I am not confident that the case will be determined before February 14. I have also successfully tabled and argued a motion just a few days ago on the floor of the House of Representatives for a review of your guidelines. However, so as to leave no stone unturned and so as to make assurances double sure, I have decided to appeal directly to your sense of duty and love of country, to do the needful to ensure all eligible Nigerians vote in February and determine whether or not they want change or they want continuity. Let Nigerians take their destiny into their own hands. If you insist on the PVCs, then ALL registered voters must collect their cards before February 14.

I plead passionately on behalf of my constituents, Lagosians and Nigerians and I believe from the little I know of you, I trust you will consider this plea with patriotic zeal and fervour.

– This Best Outside Opinion was written by Femi Gbajabiamila is the Leader of the Opposition, House of Representatives

Views expressed are solely that of the author and do not represent the views of www.omojuwa.com nor its associates

INEC Approves 88 Election Observers For 2015 Polls

The Independent National Electoral Commission has approved 88 observer groups to participate in the 2015 general elections scheduled to begin on February 14 with the  Presidential and National Assembly polls.

The governorship and House of Assembly elections will hold on February 28, 2015).

INEC said  this was sequel to the compliance with the requirements and guidelines issued by the Commission for accreditation of observers.

It said in a statement on its website on Thursday night that groups were to obtain and complete form EPMC 02 for the elections from the Elections and Party Monitoring Department, INEC Headquarters, Maitama, Abuja, between 8am and 4pm from Monday to Friday, starting from January 15 to 26, 2015.

The commission added that in order to ensure prompt and efficient processing of ID cards, it called on all the accredited observer groups to compile the photographs of their members with the names and submit hard and soft copies to the commission before January 26.

“Please note that distribution of observer kits (including ID cards for individual observers) will be done by the EPM Desk officers at INEC state offices between February 10 and 13, 2015,’” the statement added.

INEC Dismisses 3 Workers Over Theft Of PVCs

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Thursday announced the dismissal of two of its officials for alleged theft of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs). In its daily Bulletin issued in Abuja, the commission said that the officers allegedly committed the offences in its Patani Local Government Area office of Delta. It gave the names of the affected staff members as Mr Collins Omofoma and Mr Onome Avbunudiogba.

The bulletin added that the commission also terminated the appointment of Mrs Obi Chinwoke Ugochi, an Administrative Officer in its office in Anambra. The commission explained that Ugochi was relieved of her duty for alleged absence from duty without leave. According to the bulletin, the dismissal and termination were part of the outcome of the commission’s meeting on Jan. 8.

See Names of Presidential Candidates Compiled by INEC

The independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has published names of 14 presidential candidates for the 2015 general elections.

The candidates are Sen. Tunde Anifowose-Kelani as the presidential candidate of Accord Alliance (AA) and Mr Ishaka Paul as his running mate, Rufus Salawu as Presidential Candidate of AD and Akuchie Clif as his vice president.

Also published on the commission website were Alhaji Ganiyu Galadima and Ojengbede Farida as the presidential and vice president of ACPN, as well as Dr Mani Ahmad and Obianuju Murphy-Uzohue as president and vice president for ADC.

Others are Ayeni Adebayo as president and Anthony ologbosere, female for APA, Muhammadu Buhari and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo as president and vice president for APC, while CPC has Chief Sam Eke as its presidential candidate and Hassana Hassan as vice president.

The Hope Party has High Chief Ambrose Owuru and Alhaji Haruna Shaba as president and vice president, while KOWA party has
Comfort Sonaiya and Alhaji Seidu Bobboi as president and vice president.

NCP has Chief Martin Onovo as president and Ibrahim Mohammed as vice president, while PDP presidential candidate is Dr Goodluck Jonathan, and Namadi Sambo as his running mate.

The PPN has Allagoa Chinedu as presidential candidate with Arabamhen Mary (female) as vice president, while Godson Okoye is the presidential candidate of UDP and Haruna Adamu as vice president.

For the UPP, the presidential candidate is Dr Chekwas Okorie and Mr Bello Umar as his running mate.

Credit: vanguardngr.com

Hoodlums Snatch 4,503 PVCs In Akwa Ibom

The Independent National Electoral Commission has lost 4,503 Permanent Voter Cards to hoodlums in five local government areas of Akwa Ibom State, Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr. Austin Okojie, has said.

Of the 4,503 PVCs snatched, Abak LGA lost 664; Ikono, 96; Mkpat Enin, 208; Oruk Anam, 2333; and Ukanafun, 1202 to hoodlums.

Okojie, who addressed traditional rulers during a state summit on peaceful conduct of 2015 elections in Uyo on Tuesday, revealed that 1,468,780 permanent voter cards were sent to the state.

“We had a security issue where a total of 4,503 of the permanent voter cards were snatched during the exercise in five local government areas of Akwa Ibom State,” he said.

Presenting status of the PVC distribution, he stated that 1,177,910, representing 80% of PVCs have been distributed, leaving a balance of 284,915 to be claimed.

Okojie urged the traditional rulers in the state to ensure free, fair, peaceful and credible elections by using their positions to appeal to members of their communities to go for their cards between now and the next four weeks to enable them exercise their voting rights during the forthcoming elections.

Reps Order INEC to Allow use of Temporary Voter’s Card in February Elections

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was yesterday directed by the House of Representatives after passing a resolution to allow Nigerians eligible to use their temporary voters’ card in February polls.

According to the honourable members, this step became necessary due to the fact that a lot of Nigerians are yet to get their Permanent Voters’ Cards (PVCs) and many may not be allowed to perform their civic right as long as the commission insists on PVCs during the polls.

 The House also resolved to look into the issue of a political party hacking into INEC’s database as alleged recently by the Department of State Security (SSS) in which it stated that the All Progressive Congress (APC) was planning to hack into INECs data base in other to increase the party’s membership and influence vote.
Read More: dailypost.ng

Elections May not Hold in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe – Jega

The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, may have soft pedaled on its insistence that elections will hold in the troubled states of the Northeast despite sustained state of insecurity in the region, as the Commission’s Chairman, Professor Attahiru Jega has expressed fear that elections may eventually not hold in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states if the attacks on Permanent Voter Card (PVCs) centres are sustained by the insurgents.

This fear was expressed yesterday by Prof. Jega at a forum organized by the African Policy Research Institute at Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja.

The INEC boss stated that unless there is a significant improvement in the security situation in the North-East, the general elections may not hold in the area.

Read More: dailypost.ng

Buhari’s Qualifications: Go To Court If You’re Not Satisfied, INEC Tells PDP

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has reacted to the claims of complicity levelled against it by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) over the controversy surrounding the educational qualifications of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari, restating that the commission has no powers to disqualify any candidate sent to it by the political parties and has advised the PDP to challenge Buhari’s candidature in court.

INEC, which was responding to the allegations made by the PDP presidential campaign spokesman, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, said if the ruling party feels so strongly about the matter, “it knows what to do”.

Speaking on the issue on Sunday, INEC’s Director, Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Wale Uzzi, and its Director, Legal Services, Mr. Ibrahim Bawa, stressed that the commission has no constitutional power to disqualify any candidate presented to it by the political parties.

According to Uzzi, “In line with Section 31 of the Electoral Act, the commission has no powers to disqualify any candidate whose name has been submitted to INEC.

“This is the power of the law and it is expected that a political party in the calibre of the PDP should know this aspect of the provision of the law.

“If the PDP feels strongly about this matter, it knows what to do. It should take him to court and that is the only option. If any political party is aggrieved and is serious about it, the only option available is the court.”

Read More: thisdaylive.com

INEC Explains Reasons For Valentine’s Day Presidential Elections

votelove
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Thursday said it had not fixed the Presidential and National Assembly elections on February 14, to rub Nigerians of the joy derivable from the Lovers’ Day.
The Chief Press Secretary to the commission’s Chairman, Kayode Idowu, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that the election date was a coincidence.
“When the commission was taking that decision, it never even occurred to the leaders of the commission that it was Valentine’s Day.
“But then, it is a day for showing love and if we can show love that will discourage people from fomenting violence.
“That will discourage you from being hateful towards another person on that day. It will make the election peaceful. So, it is a good coincidence. ’’
He, however, urged Nigerians to be guided by the meaning of Valentine’s Day to make the election peaceful.

“The message of the day is to show love for one another and therefore, there is no basis for violence, acrimony and being unruly because that day is a day for showing amenable conduct towards others.
“So, that should guide the behaviours of voters as they go out to vote.’’
Idowu also said that the task force set up by the commission on how to ensure that Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the country were given the opportunity to cast their votes in the forthcoming elections had submitted it report to the commission.
Kayode, however, did not gave details of the recommendations but said the report was now going through the internal processes of the commission.
“Very soon, the specific modality will be announced as to how the IDPs will be able to vote,’’ he said.
NAN recalls that the task force was given seven work days to submit its report, beginning from Dec. 22, 2014.
The terms of reference of the task force, include examining the legal, political, security and administrative challenges in achieving IDPs’ voting during the election.
“To evaluate the standards and recommendations emerging from conferences and workshops by international and local agencies on IDP voting, and determine their applicability to Nigeria for the 2015 election.’’
It was also mandated to review the experiences of other countries in dealing with the challenges of IDPs voting.
Photo Credit: NAN-PHOTO/www.headbutler.com

APC Planned to Hack into INEC Database— DSS

The Department of State Services, DSS, has accused the All Progressives Congress, APC, of an elaborate plot to hack into the voters registration data base of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC. It alleged that the purpose was to clone voters and party membership cards to match those in the data base.

The DSS claim was based on what it allegedly recovered from the invasion of the APC data centre in Lagos on November 22, 2014.

The charges were immediately rebuffed, by the APC which described the findings as hogwash, a “disservice to Nigeria and an embarrassment to all intelligence-gathering organizations around the world.”

Revealing the alleged findings from the outcome of its investigations, DSS spokesperson Marilyn Ogar, at a press conference in Abuja, said its operatives recovered a computer hard drive containing a video of 21 hacking tutorials during the raids on the APC centre located at 10 Bola Ajibola Street, Ikeja, Lagos State.

Ogar, a deputy director, Public Relations in the DSS, said the tutorial video focused on how to become a hacker and steps to take to avoid detection in the process of hacking web servers.

Ogar also alleged that the video explained how to hack into the systems of media houses, with the purpose of broadcasting fake stories or headlines.

She said the DSS also discovered that the APC registered under-aged persons including several infants and babies, foreigners and security personnel as members of the party.

Credit www.vanguardngr.com

We Won’t Postpone Feb Polls — INEC

The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, yesterday, rebuffed entreaties to postpone next month’s round of elections, saying it was financially and mentally set for the polls.

The commission, nevertheless, affirmed that the go-ahead for elections in the troubled Northeast would be given by security agencies. Also yesterday, the Inspector General of Police, Sulieman Abba, vowed to deal with errant politicians who heat up the polity through negative utterances, saying he would show to them that no one could be above the law.

The assertions at a workshop for the training of security agencies ahead of the general elections came as INEC said the conduct of election in the troubled Northeast would be determined by the counsel of security agencies. Chairman, INEC Electoral Training Institute, Dr Ishmaeal Igbani, who spoke on behalf of the commission in giving the readiness of the commission for the polls said the commission was comfortable with the fund it has at its disposal at the moment.

He said: “Anytime there is election in Nigeria, there is always some form of tension. I have been around for a while and I don’t think it is something new. I don’t think people should be afraid. But it is also essential that we get ready just in case.” Lagos pastor, Tunde Bakare had last Sunday called for the postponement of the elections for the purpose of allowing tension among political gladiators to ebb. According to him, “it is also very important that we have peaceful elections, it is also important that voters come out to vote without fear. It is also important that the personnel who will work for us and the environment itself is peaceful and for it to be peaceful, it is important for the security agencies to be alert and ensure that they do what they are supposed to do.”

He said a minimum of 50 personnel were being trained, adding: “We call this cascade training. After this training of trainers who will now go to their various security organisations to train others and so forth which will go down the line in that way. More will be trained in a more cheaper way.“

Credit: www.vanguardngr.com

41 Days to Presidential Poll: Millions in South may not Vote

Shambling and shambolic!  Those are the words that best describe what has become of the distribution and collection of the Permanent Voter Cards, PVCs, which represents a very significant aspect of Nigeria’s electoral process.

Indeed, these are not the best of times for Professor Attahiru Jega, National Chairman of Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

With just some 41 days to the most crucial in a series of elections, that is the presidential election, fresh facts emerging suggest that millions of Nigerians may be barred from participating in the process.

This is so because the sine qua non for voting, which is the PVC, is not in the hands of many Nigerians – without it, they cannot participate in the voting exercise for the different categories of election.

By the same token, a number of Nigerians have arrogated to themselves the role of loco parentis.

That is not all.What this means, strangely, is that whereas the Electoral Act and the guidelines provide that individuals are to collect their PVCs in person, duly signed for after due identification as the bonafide owners of the PVCs, some District Heads in some states of the North are being allowed to collect and warehouse PVCs on behalf of their wards in the district.

The real danger for Nigeria’s crucial electoral process is that Jega’s INEC, either through sheer incompetence, egregious design or just as a victim of the now too familiar but retrogressive malaise afflicting the nation known as the Nigerian factor, an exercise that should ordinarily bring Nigeria closer to electoral civilization, has been made to look like rocket science through the instrumentality of an unscrupulous engagement.

The data in possession of Sunday Vanguard shows that the PVCs’ collection, an exercise which the All Progressives Congress, APC, leadership alleged was being manipulated by Jega’s INEC and the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, as well as the Presidency, to achieve an expected end, has been orchestrated in such a way that, on balance, there are more PVCs in the hands of the electorate in the North than those in the South – as at today.

Sunday Vanguard learnt that the PVCs collection exercises across the country, an engagement that was fraught with inconsistencies, disorganization and confusion, did not meet the expectations of even the leadership at the Commission.

Although, after the public dramatization of the collection of PVCs, prospective voters, who did not get their PVCs, were expected to proceed to the local government offices of INEC to collect them, many have come back with tales of disappointment.

Done in phases, that aspect of the electoral process demonstrated to a large extent the level of unpreparedness of INEC for next month’s elections.

Sunday Vanguard’s usually dependable source at the INEC headquarters disclosed that one of the major problems, which have given rise to this present state of stasis, is Jega’s decision to constantly micro-manage the process.  Whereas Jega’s insistence of micro-management may be hinged on his intention to deliver free and fair elections, the enormity of the workload is such that cannot permit micro-management but delegation. And even in instances where Jega was said to have delegated, the individuals he has put in charge have almost always had an agenda allegedly hinged on sectional, primordial and prebendal considerations.

A clear indication of this played out when one of such individuals in the Commission came up with a sharing formula for 30,000 additional Polling Units, PUs, whereby the North got over 21,000 leaving the South with just a little over 8,000.

The consequence of the needless time, logistics and defence of the lopsided allocation of the PUs, is what has now come back to haunt Jega’s INEC with the shambles that the PVCs allocation has become.

Sunday Vanguard was informed that Jega has been having and is still having sleepless nights because of the developments surrounding the PVCs collection.

Though some officials of the Commission continue to put up a bold face, sometimes lying about the status of the percentage of collection so far, there is a glaring mismatch with reality.

The latest data as procured from INEC shows that with the round of PVCs collection at the PUs across the country, the collection status are as follows:

South East, 59.22 Collection

South South, 66.66 Collection

South West, 43.15 Collection

North Central, 69.89 Collection

North East, 81.09 Collection

North West, 80.18 Collection

Read More: www.vanguardngr.com 

 

 

Why I Did Not Submit My Certificates To INEC – Buhari

A former head of state and the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress in the 2015 general elections, Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), has explained why he did not submit his certificates and credentials to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Journalists, who were at the headquarters of INEC in Abuja, could not find Buhari’s academic qualifications unlike those of other presidential candidates, including President Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

Explaining the development in an affidavit he deposed before an Abuja High Court, Buhari said that all his certificates were with the Secretary, Military Board.
The affidavit was dated November 24, 2014 and was stamped and received by INEC on December 18, 2014.

Buhari, in the affidavit, said “I am the above-named person and deponent to this affidavit therein. All my academic qualifications documents as filled in my presidential form, President APC/001/2015, are currently with the Secretary, Military Board, as of the time of presenting this affidavit.

“The affidavit is made in good faith and for record purpose. The affidavit is made in good faith and for record purposes.”

 

Source – Daily Post Ng

Buhari Fails to Submit Academic Qualifications to INEC

Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Alhaji Muhammadu Buhari, did not present his academic qualifications to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, even as he prepares for the 2015 presidential contest.

Unlike his Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, counterpart, President Goodluck Jonathan, whose academic certificates were conspicuously displayed by the commission upon presentation, Buhari’s credentials were visibly without trace at the commission’s office at Area 10, Abuja.

The former Head of State, explained in an affidavit he deposed, which he submitted to the commission that all his academic credentials were with the Secretary, Military Board.

The affidavit deposed at the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court, Abuja and dated November 24,2014, was stamped and received at INEC headquarters on December 18, 2014.

In the affidavit, Buhari said: “All my academic qualifications (documents) as filled in my presidential form, President APC/001/2015, are currently with the Secretary Military Boards as at the time of this affidavit.” He added: “The affidavit is made in good faith and for record purpose.”

Credit: www.vanguardngr.com

 

INEC To Train Security Operatives Before 2015 Elections — Jega

Ahead of the 2015 general elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said on Wednesday in Abuja it was working closely with security agencies to provide additional training of security officials on election duty.

Its Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the additional training became necessary because election duty “requires specialised training“.
Jega said the additional training would be on a train-the-trainer basis whereby officers trained would train other officers in their various organisations ahead of the 2015 general elections.
“In the Inter-agency Consultative Committee on Election Security, we have severally discussed the need to ensure that security agencies are well trained.
“A number of programme of activities has been designed for the training of security officials on election duty.
“Security officers are trained on their jobs of maintaining law and order but election duty also requires specialised training.
“As I speak with you, the Electoral Institute of INEC is working closely with many security agencies trying to organise what we call a training of trainers so that each organisation will send some people, who will be trained at our institute, so that they can go back and train others in their own organisations.
“So, I want to assure you that everybody – both INEC and the security agencies – have seen the need to provide additional training for security personnel who are going to be involved in elections.
“And a lot of measures are being put in place to ensure that is done before the 2015 general elections.“
The INEC chairman said the commission was working hard to see that the salaries and wages of staff members of the commission were improved and made commensurate with the “special“ and “risky“ nature of their jobs.
“Since we came in as a new commission, we have done our best to improve the welfare of our workers.
“The only thing we have not been able to do is to increase their salaries; and that one is difficult because salary and wage review is normally done at a higher systemic level.
“But we have been pushing and dialoging with government, trying to argue that INEC staff members discharge special, risky responsibilities and therefore deserve special salary scale.
“And we are doing our best; our hope is that sooner or later we will be able to have a separate salary structure for the staff members of the commission.
“But even before we are able to get that we have been doing everything possible to improve their welfare and their conditions of work.’’
He said the new INEC management had given some of the commission’s offices a facelift.
Jega said the headquarters of the commission had been decongested by renting offices nearby.
He said, “whatever we can do within the limit of our resources and permissible by law, we have been able to do and will keep on doing.
“The welfare of our workers is primary and whatever is possible within the law we will do so that they can be contented and motivated to give their best to the country.’’

Source – Daily times Ng

Jega Pledges for #VoteNotFight

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INEC chairman, Attahiru Jega signs to pledge for #VoteNotFight. The hashtag meant to promote a non violent election in 2015 has been soliciting for support from well meaning Nigerians to sign in and pledge for #VoteNotFight.

Super star celebrity, Tu Face Idibia shared some photos of the Chairman’s signing and also revealed a new voter card reader, which will be used for the upcoming elections, with USAID Nigeria Misson Director, Mr. M. T. Harvey observing.

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Senate C’ttee Asks INEC To Stop New Polling Units…Reps Suspend Debate On Electoral Act

The Senate Committee on Electoral Matters has written to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) asking it to stop the creation of additional 30,000 polling units across the country.

Committee chairman Andy Uba told journalists in Abuja yesterday that while the idea behind the creation of additional units was good, the timing was wrong and as such it must be stopped.

“We have sent a letter to the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, and we expressed our reservations over the planned creation of additional polling units across the country,” Uba said.

“What he is doing is good but the timing is wrong. We are close to an election year and we have so many displaced people in the North eastern part of the country.

So where will the INEC put the new polling units?”

Uba also said, “If they (INEC) continue with it (new polling centres), we will pass a resolution to overrule it. It is simple, and once we pass our resolution is he going to go ahead that he doesn’t care?

“There are consequences when you say you don’t care, that is what it is but I know he (Jega) is a gentleman and he is a man that keeps to his words. We had a meeting and have sent him a letter.”

Read more at http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/daily/top-stories/35749-senate-c-ttee-asks-inec-to-stop-new-polling-units-reps-suspend-debate-on-electoral-act

 

APC Blasts INEC For Refusing To Stop TAN’s ‘Noisy’ Campaign For Jonathan

The All Progressives Congress, APC, has faulted the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, for allowing the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria, TAN, to run adverts for President Goodluck Jonathan’s second term bid.

APC in a statement issued in London by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said INEC’s silence over the development was a disadvantage to other candidates and political parties, adding that it was against the electoral act.

The opposition party wondered where INEC had been when TAN was organising “noisy rallies across the country, attended by government officials and designed to benefit President Jonathan and his party, the PDP”.

Sole Candidacy : Jonathan’s Victory before Election?

“For to win one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the acme of skill. To subdue the enemy without fighting is the acme of skill.”~ Sun Tzu

The man Mr Jonathan is someone that doesn’t feel comfortable with contests. His rise to power already reflects that. Thus, as much as possible GEJ only submits himself to contests that are seemingly inevitable. Talking about knowing how to fight and run away? You are thinking Big Joe.

 Thus, few days ago the National Executive Council of his party, PDP adopted him (Goodluck Jonathan) as the Sole-Candidate for 2015 Presidential election basing their logic in accordance with the American style of Incumbent Rights of First Refusal. In the words of Adamu Muazu, NEC “unanimously without any reservation decided to endorse the sole candidature of President Goodluck Jonathan in the 2015 election”. Senator David Mark, the Senate President also corroborated this decision saying, ““At the PDP Caucus of the National Assembly, we have decided that a sitting and performing president should be given a chance to continue to perform even better?.”

As if to say that this came as a surprise? By calculation GEJ seemed convinced that to win his party’s Presidential Primary would be pyrrhic.  He would need to compromise so many things which changing his running mate may be one of. He won’t want to be held hostage by powerful adversaries like OBJ and others. Also, to gamble with a uniting Northern front can be suicidal. He would have been a fool to have envisaged a smooth ride with several “mind-prepared” ambushes waiting expectantly.

What’s more to add? An assessment of Jonathan’s tactics so far has always thread in that direction. It’s becoming so natural that it looks like the new scripture for morning devotion in Aso Rock is none but Sun Tzu’ s Art of War. This man is really picking his battles wisely and it seems to be performing the magic.

With all the tantrums that he could employ, including subtle threats of punishment, Big Joe made sure that the endorsements were overwhelming. So compelling  that the likes of Governors Sule Lamido, Aliyu Babangida and the rests who were hitherto anti-Jonathan suddenly turned soft-critics with equivocal sermons. Somehow GEJ, at least within the PDP, has achieved what Sun Tzu suggested in Chapter 3 of  the Art of War. According to Tzu; “the best victory is when the opponent surrenders of its own accord before there are any actual hostilities… It is best to win without fighting.”

Hence, by choosing the battle and the climate, he holds a firm grip on his party and a soft ride to concentrate fully on crushing the opposition totally. Like an examiner, one can judge from all indications that Jonathan is learning so fast!

But then what’s hard not to learn when the environment is enticing? Power is magnetic enough to drag necessary resources to fight any cause irrespective of it’s morality. Mr President is stopping at nothing to make his re-election dream come true. Is this end not worthy enough to justify any means?

Consequently, political strategies have been reduced to how to beat the system and flaunt orders, and politicians are trying their best to think outside “legitimate boxes” without tampering legality. Organisations like Transformation Agenda of Nigeria or TAN now runs like a political party with membership base and flag bearer for 2015. Perhaps, if TAN had shown keen interest in “walking alone” in 2015 it could have applied to INEC for registration.  But for the now it will exist as a unit of the PDP Conglomerate. That’s good news,too to men like Orji Uzor Kalu who sees the party as a viable investment should it go public.

TAN may be the big fish, but there are also Small scale political groups that have bought the GEJ/TAN franchise which are running into over 8,000 in numbers as one associate revealed. Business is real good selling emotions.  It is big hustle and who is to say what becomes of us if we don’t support this man?

There are several issues in the Art of War that are now evident but who dares to point out?  Only one factor is hanging in tomorrow because of the unknown which is never dictated by the whims and caprices of men’s actions. It is Night and Day and with internal and external reactions waiting we earnestly await the becoming.

*Showunmi Rex ( @remirex)

Views Expressed are Solely Author’s