Wednesday, 28 January 2015

Postponing the evil day:...as Groups call for postponement of 2015 election, threatens to take INEC to court





Emeka Ibemere
Less than 23 days to the general election in February 14, 2014, uncertainty has pervaded the much expected election with waves of doubts as to whether the election would hold or not continue to hover around it.
The uncertainty is followed by the shoddy preparation of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, in the distribution of the Permanent Voters’ Card, popularly known as PVC.
INEC has been accused by Nigerians for poor conduct of the re-verification of voters’ card which has created tension as regards the incoming election. Based on uncertainty of the election, a political cum social and cultural organization based in Abuja, Eastern Union has vehemently called for the postponement of the scheduled election until when INEC, was ready for the election. The Group also warned to take the umpire to court if they failed to address the situation concerning the PVC.
The national President of the Union, Charles Anike fumed on the incident and stated that INEC lacked credibility to conduct the election having failed to make the PVC, available to all eligible voters before the d-Day. According to the EU President, INEC has already disenfranchised millions of voters with their re-verification exercise and wondered why the electoral body was hoarding the PVC.
 “Eastern Union wants to call for the postponement of the elections. This is due to INEC, trying to disenfranchise many Nigerians whose PVC, are yet to be released. And many eligible voters were not registered”, he stated.
“Since after 2011 elections the electorate body have not lived up to their expectations. No proper re-registration exercise has been carried out”.
The Group President told Newswatch Times, that the survey conducted by the Union, showed that more than half of the registered voters were yet to collect their voters’ card.
“And all the millions of youths who were not of voting age during 2011 are until now not considered. The election must be postponed so that nobody will be disenfranchised. If not, we will take INEC to court”. Eastern Union President, vowed.
Meanwhile, the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), Imo State Chapter, has also threatened to take the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to court if it fails to provide Permanent Voter Cards (PVC) for its supporters by January 31, this year.
According to the party, the non-availability of the PVC, particularly in areas considered to be pro-APGA.
 The state Chairman of the party, Mr. Peter Ezeobi, disclosed that its governorship candidate, Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho and other party loyalists have not received their PVC.
He said: “Besides, the fact that our governorship candidate, Capt. Emmanuel Ihea
nacho, myself and a lot of other APGA loyalists have not gotten our PVCs, the non-availability of PVCs in areas like Owerri Munici­pal and Owerri North, areas known to have been voting for APGA since 1999, makes the issue worrisome.”
In another development, the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) Vice-Presidential candidate in the 2011 presidential election and pastor of the Latter Rain Assembly, Tunde Bakare, has also called on Nigerians, especially those in the position of authority, to suspend the 2015 general elections as a way to avoiding the imminent crisis that might trail the polls.
According to Bakare, a two-year transitional government should be put in place to adopt the report of the just-concluded National Conference as a way to avoiding the crisis that might follow the polls.
The cleric who contested as the vice-presidential candidate to former military Head of State, Major-General Muhammadu Buhari, made the call in his church in Lagos during a thanksgiving service marking the end of the week-long ceremony to mark his 60th anniversary.

He said in the face of the security challenges facing Nigeria; it would be in the best interest of the country to hold the elections at a future date. While emphasising that the current situation in the North-east would not allow proper election in areas affected by the activities Boko Haram terrorists, Bakare noted that Nigeria needs the two years extension of the election “like yesterday,” or that the political class should state how the election would hold without rancour.
“In my capacity as a servant of God and a watchman mandated to warn the nation ahead of impending danger, I have already made it clear to the nation that we need a transitional arrangement to pilot our nation out of this chaos before we can talk about elections. He who has ears to hear, let him hear because at this sensitive period in our polity when the nation seems to be tottering on the edge of a precipice, is a general election the solution to our crises or will elections aggravate the problem?,” he queried.
Bakare, reading from Habakkuk 2:1-4 and Ezekiel 12:26-28 to buttress his position based his argument on the dire security situation in the country and the political hostility between the northern and southern parts of the country ahead of the election which many Nigerians and international community consider a make or mar poll in the political history of Nigeria.

“With parts of the North under the siege of Boko Haram insurgents in the form of outright territorial control in some cases and guerrilla styled terror attacks in others and with the government failing to bring the situation under control, what is the guarantee that there will indeed be general elections in 2015?

“Even if elections are held successfully in some parts of the country, would results be conclusive without elections in the troubled parts? How would displace cast their votes or are they automatically disenfranchised? How safe would massive campaign rallies be? With politicians and their militant cronies on both sides facing up to one another ahead of the elections and sounding the drumbeats of war should the elections not go in their respective interests, what would be the aftermath of a general election”,? Bakare asked.

“We may argue that elections have been successfully held in some states under heavy military presence but let us not forget that we do not hold staggered elections in Nigeria. We are talking about general elections. If one were to ignore the atmosphere of intimidation and the warlike environment that such massive military deployment across the nation at the same time would create, do we even have sufficient security/military personnel for such a mission? What would be the impact of such a thin spread of our military on the safety of terror-stricken areas? In whatever way the results of the general election go – North or South – are we prepared for the reactions that could ensue?”

He said against the structural and systemic backdrop of the chaotic state of the nation, what was the wisdom in holding elections without dealing with these foundational problems adding that if the politicians ignore the salient questions and go ahead to juggle for power in the midst of chaos, that that would seem to lend credence to the allegation that the politicians do know what the Nigerian people do not know and are behind the crises in the nation,. He averred that competing among themselves to see who can best manipulate the situation for political gains, instead of caring how many lives are lost in the process as long as personal ambition is achieved should be their concern.
The activist cum Clergy said for the country to have a hitch-free election, certain actions must be taken to ensure peace and understanding among Nigerians
“We need to address firstly the underlying problems by joining forces to deal with insurgency, seeking national reconciliation and integration, forging a new people’s constitution, developing a blueprint for development along zonal lines, organising an accurate census and establishing a truly independent electoral commission whose head is not appointed by the president and whose financial allocation will be obtained from the first line charge of the federation account”, he added.

“We must understand at this crucial stage in the history of our nation that this is no time to engage in the blame game that has torn us apart these past 100 years: the blame game between the North and the South, the blame game between the Christians and the Muslims, the blame game among political parties and the blame game between the leadership and the people,” he advised.
However, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), in a statement said there was no plan by the commission to postpone the upcoming general elections which preparations had commenced in earnest.
INEC's National Commissioner, Ishmael Igbani made the clearance during the opening of a three-day training workshop for security personnel ahead of the 2015, general elections, organised by the Electoral Institute (TEI).
He said INEC had no intention or plan to postpone the elections, urging the Nigerian security operatives to internalise the modalities, procedure and rules of engagement in electoral process.
Igbani, who represented the INEC's chairman Professor Attahiru Jega, said many reforms and innovations in the electoral process of the commission had been made.

"It is important that all stakeholders, particularly the security personnel that will protect the process, get to know these measures and be aware of the developments. The security question in the country has widened the scope of electoral security with its attendant challenges”, he stated.
“In some countries of the world, security personnel are not deployed in the conduct of elections”.
According to him, security personnel should focus on three key areas during elections, namely, the security of personnel, election materials and voting environment.
Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, represented by police commissioner in charge of election planning and monitoring, Ghazzali Mohammed stressed the need for politicians to abide by the rules of the game.
Simeon Ndu lambasted those calling for the postponement of the election as an enemy of democracy and said they are the people fanning the embers of violence, disintegration of the country and confused people.
“Why are they calling for the postponement of the election at the odd hour? Why is it now that they want the election to be postponed and for what? They have come again and when it happened now they will be the first people to regret it”, Ndu quipped. 
“INEC should not listen to anybody; they should go ahead and conduct the election. They want to create confusion and arrange an interim government and before you know it another person will go to court against the interim government and the confusion will continue. Who are going to form the interim government? The incumbent executives or the military. People calling for the postponement are confusionists.”
Abudullahi Musa, bureau de Change operator refused to call for the postponement of the election saying it’s like time bomb and warned against it. He said it’s postponing an evil day and that its better is done now that the tension is on than when there would be apathy.

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