Tag: Elections

  • Pray or elections may not hold, CAN declares

    The Christian Association of Nigeria has urged Nigerians to pray this week if they want the general elections to hold.

    President of the association, Rev Samson Ayokunle, made the declaration during a service at the Trinity Baptist Church, Ajobo, Ibadan, Oyo State capital, on Sunday.

    In his words: “About what is happening in the country, I want you to pray very well this week. If it’s about the things we see in the spirit, it is not sure that elections will hold at all. We won’t want elections to hold like they didn’t hold; if that should happen, it would cause trouble or even lead to war.

    “That is why we have asked you to pray this week. This is a week for prayers. Pray that bad people will not be involved in Nigeria’s affairs. About the elections, we will pray that they will not result in war or bring agony. People who think they are powerful and want to cause problems for us, God Himself will give them problems and bind them. God will take power from them.

    “Please, pray very well this week so that the elections might be able to hold on February 23 as the INEC has said. The postponement, to us, is a national embarrassment.”

    Speaking further he said: “And not only that, it is a setback for a nation that was ready to vote in their President. We believe however that God is still on the throne and the INEC chairman cannot play with the collective wish of Nigerians. He cannot joke with that. Be prayerful; gather this week to pray because prayers can do a lot within this week. If the writing on the wall, as revealed by the spirit, is anything to go by, if we don’t pray sufficiently, elections may not hold at all.”

    Recall that INEC had on Saturday, few hours before the presidential and National Assembly elections, deferred the polls till February 23, 2019 and others earlier scheduled to hold on March 2, 2019 to March 9, 2019.

    Ayokunle said CAN would play a vital role during the elections.

    “You know, for the first time in the history of CAN, we are sending election observers across the federation to observe how elections are going on. If there is any malpractice anywhere, they will report (it) immediately to the control room at the Christian Secretariat in Abuja. We are sending 1,000 election observers across the federation and we had never done that before. It costs money but we are committed to it,” he said.

     

  • BREAKING: Why we waited till Saturday to postpone 2019 elections — INEC Chairman

    BREAKING: Why we waited till Saturday to postpone 2019 elections — INEC Chairman

    The chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Mahmood Yakubu on Saturday explained why the commission under his leadership waited till the early hours of the election day to postpone the elections.

    Recall that the commission had earlier fixed Saturday, February 16 for the Presidential and National Assembly elections and March 2nd for the Governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections.

    The commission had also at various times reinstated its readiness for the February 16th and March 2nd polls

    However, Nigerians woke up to a rude shock on Saturday morning just hours before the opening ofthe polls with news that the commission had postponed the both the presidential and governorship elections by one week.

    According to the commission, the elections will now hold on February 23 and March 9 respectively.

    However, Nigerians in their numbers condemned the postponement, especially its timing, and have accused the commission of insensitivity, noting that INEC had must apologise for the inconveniences.

    At a news conference Saturday afternoon, the embattled chairman said the commission had been involved in large scale operations in preparations for the polls that “it is therefore not unexpected that such a tremendous national mobilisation of men and materials would encounter operational challenges.”

    He listed the key challenges to be delays in delivering ballot papers and result sheets, occasioned in part by flight challenges due to bad weather.

    He said apart from the logistical challenges, there were attempts to sabotage the commission’s preparations, listing fire outbreaks at INEC facilities that destroyed smart card readers and voter cars. The fire at Anambra was the most serious of all, he said.

    Mr Yakubu said despite those setbacks, the commission rapidly recovered by mopping up available card readers elsewhere.

    He said if the polls had gone ahead, it would have meant some states starting well ahead of others with the implication of the elections being staggered.

    Faced with these challenges, we initially thought that we only required a maximum of 24 hours to resolve the logistics issues involved and complete our deployment for the election,” he said. “This would mean shifting the elections to commence on Sunday 17th February, 2019. However, given the restriction of movement during elections, that could affect many voters who worship on Sunday. While the commission considering the following Monday, 19th February, 2019 as an option, our ICT department advised us that it would require 5-6 days to configure about 180,000 smart card readers earlier programmed to work only on election day, Saturday, 16th February 2019.”

    Speaking further Mahmood said: “There have been delays in delivering ballot papers and result sheets for the elections which are not unusual. However, one must emphasise that all the ballot papers and result sheets were ready before the elections despite the very tight legal timeframe for the nomination of candidates and dealing with the spate of legal challenges that accompany it.

    In this regard, the commission has been sued or joined in over 640 court cases arising from the nomination of candidates. As of today, there are 40 different court orders against the commission on whether to add or drop candidates.

    The net effect of these is that there is usually roughly a one-month window for the commission to print ballot papers and result sheets and either fly or transport them to several destinations until they finally get to each polling unit.

    Unfortunately, in the last one week flights within the country have been adversely affected by bad weather. For instance, three days ago, we were unable to deliver materials to some locations due to bad weather.

    We therefore had to rely on slow-moving long haulage vehicles to locations that can be serviced by air in spite of the fact that we created five zonal airport hubs in Abuja (North Central), Port Harcourt (South South and South East). Kano (North West), Maiduguri and Yale (North-East) and Lagos (South-West) to facilitate the delivery of electoral logistics.

    Apart from these logistical challenges, we also faced what may well be attempts to sabotage our preparations. In a space of two weeks, we had to deal with serious fire incidents in three of our offices in Isiala Ngwa South Local Government Area of Abia State, Qu’an Pan Local Government Area of Plateau State and our Anambra State Office at Awka.

    In all three cases, serious disruptions were occasioned by the fire, further diverting our attention from regular preparations to recovery from the impact of the incidents. In Isiala Ngwa South, hundreds of PVCs were burnt, necessitating the recompiling of the affected cards and reprinting in time to ensure that the affected voters are not disenfranchised. I am glad that all the cards were quickly reprinted and made available for collection by their owners.”

    In Qu’an Pan Local Government Area, our entire office was razed, destroying all the materials prepared for the elections printed register of voters, ballot boxes, voting cubicles and several electricity generating sets. ll Registration Areas and over I00 polling units were affected by the tire. We recovered quickly and have since replaced everything destroyed. In addition, we secured a suitable building from which to conduct the elections.

    Perhaps the most serious was the fire incident in our Anambra State Office at Awka, which destroyed over 4,600 Smart Card Readers being prepared for the elections. These Card Readers take at least six months to procure. Despite this setback, we have practically recovered from this by mopping up every available.

  • ICT experts call for contingency plan, backups during elections

    ICT experts call for contingency plan, backups during elections

    Information and Communications Technology (ICT) experts on Saturday urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to have contingency and backup plans that would help forestall challenges during elections.

    They told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in separate interviews in Lagos that the postponement few hours to the commencement of the Presidential and National Assembly elections by INEC showed that it did not prepare for eventualities.

    Mr Jide Awe, Chairman, Conferences Committee of the Nigeria Computer Society, told NAN that the postponement might be due to alleged technological issues.

    He said that one could have the best card readers and everything, yet, lacked good planning.

    “Unless something has happened that the commission does not want to tell the public because INEC is supposed to have a plan in place to ensure that things move smoothly today.

    “That the postponement was because of logistics as said by INEC chairman means that they are not ready to deliver and since this is so, the best is to postpone the elections.

    “There is definitely a problem with their planning and we should understand that nothing can be perfect in life.

    “There is the need to foresee certain things and have a plan to tackle it,” he said.

    Awe, however, appealed to intending voters to be calm and ensure they perform their civic responsibility on Feb. 23 and March 9 respectively.

    Also, Mr Rogba Adeoye, the former President, Information Technology Systems and Security Professionals (ITSSP), told NAN that the postponement called for adjustment of schedules and activities nationwide.

    “As a citizen I do not have much choice. INEC is saying that this is the best they can give us for now, what can we do than to be patient and wait for the D-day.

    “The one thing that is bad in the whole postponement issue is the impact it will have on the citizens especially those with other engagements aside the election workers.

    “Likewise, the students and teachers who were given midterm break will have their schools calendar disrupted again and this is not good for the educational system,” he said.

  • PDP forced INEC to postpone elections – Buhari’s campaign spokesman

    The campaign office of President Muhammadu Buhari has blamed the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the postponement of the 2019 presidential elections.

    Recall that Mahmood Yakubu, chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), announced at about 2:40 a.m. Saturday that the election had been postponed, barely hours after Nigerians were set to hit the polling units.

    The elections would now hold on new dates scheduled as February 23 for presidential and national assembly elections and March 9 for governorship and state assemblies elections.

    Yakubu said the announcement came hours after a string of strategic meetings were held by top INEC officials to review preparedness for the exercise. It was concluded that a rash of logistics challenges that arose on Friday informed the postponement.

    Ekiti, Niger and Taraba states were identified as some of the states that faced glitches of distribution of voting materials that would be difficult to resolve in time for the elections Saturday morning, thereby forcing the postponement.

    Festus Keyamo, a spokesperson for President Buhari’s reelection campaign committee, also expressed sadness about the development, and quickly heaped the blame on the PDP in a statement released minutes after the announcement.

    We condemn and deprecate this tardiness of the electoral umpire in the strongest terms possible.

    President Muhammadu Buhari had since cooperated fully with INEC by ensuring everything it demanded to conduct free and fair elections were promptly made available to it.

    This news is therefore a huge disappointment to us and to our teeming supporters nationwide and around the world, many of whom have come into the country to exercise their franchise.

    We do hope that INEC will remain neutral and impartial in this process as the rumor mill is agog with the suggestion that this postponement has been orchestrated in collusion with the main opposition, the PDP, that was never ready for this election.

    We note that all the major credible demographic projections have predicted a defeat of the PDP and it seriously needed this breather to orchestrate more devious strategies to try and halt President Buhari’s momentum.

    It did the same as the ruling Party in 2015, when it realized the game was up, by orchestrating the postponement of the 2015 elections by six weeks. Now, it may be up to its old trick again

    We have earlier raised the alarm that the PDP is bent on discrediting this process the moment it realized it cannot make up the numbers to win this election. We are only urging INEC not collude with the PDP on this.

    We are truly worried because as early as Friday morning, some known PDP Social Media influencers unwittingly announced this postponement, but quickly deleted the message and apologized to the public that it was fake news,” Mr Keyamo said.

    The spokesperson also urged Nigerians to support INEC in its challenges, and prevent the commission from being compromised by the opposition.

    We do not want to be forced to a situation of announcing our total loss of confidence in INEC, because we know where that would leave our democracy.

    It is in the light of the above that we wish to appeal to Nigerians and our supporters to be patient, calm and resolute despite this temporary setback.

    Let us not give anyone, especially the PDP, the opportunity to plunge this nation into a crises, which is what they earnestly desire. Its imminent defeat is just a few days away.

    Lastly, we wish to draw the attention of INEC and the world to observe that the PDP has clearly and openly said it plans to announce parallel results through some funny device it has procured or developed.

    We wish to reiterate that it is only INEC that is legally and constitutionally empowered to declare results and it constitutes an offence for anyone to do so.

    We urge INEC to speak up now and warn the PDP to desist from this ignoble act that is capable of plunging the nation into a crises of immeasurable proportions,” he said.

  • Buhari’s AGF speaks on writing INEC to postpone 2019 elections

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN), on Thursday, denied media reports that he wrote the Independent National Electoral Commission to postpone all the forthcoming general elections apart from the presidential poll in Zamfara State.

    Malami, through his Special Assistant, Media and Publicity, Mr. Salihu Isah, said in his statement that the media reports were false and misleading, as he had only asked the INEC to extend the time within which the All Progressives Congress might field candidates in the forthcoming elections in the state.

    The statement read in part, “The attention of the Office of the Honourable Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice has been drawn to a recent publication by certain social media and conventional news outlets stating that this Office had purportedly requested the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to postpone the elections in Zamfara State.

    The Office of the Honourable Attorney General of the Federation wishes to emphatically reiterate that this report is false and misleading.

    In our letter dated February 13, 2019 addressed to the INEC Chairman, the Honourable Attorney of the Federation in reacting to a petition from M.A Mahmud informing this Office of the subsisting Court of Appeal decision in CA/S/22/2019 which effectively upheld the APC primaries in Zamfara state, wrote to INEC informing them of this development and requested the Commission to comply by extending the time within which the political party candidate in the Gubernatorial elections.”

    The minister had in his letter dated January 13, 2019 and addressed to the Chairman of INEC, Mahmood Yakubu, asked the commission to comply with a certain judgment of the Court of Appeal affirming the primaries of the party in the state.

    Malami had urged INEC to grant the APC more time to field candidates for the governorship, National Assembly and state House of Assembly elections in the state, adding that section 38 and 39 of the Electoral Act empowered the commission to postpone the election.

    The minister, a founding member of the APC, said in the letter that the Court of Appeal’s judgment delivered on Wednesday affirmed an earlier verdict of the Zamfara State High Court which had held that the party conducted valid primaries for the various elective positions in the state.

    Malami said granting the concession of postponing the polls in Zamfara State in the light of the Court of Appeal’s judgment, was not a matter of doing APC a favour but a right the party was entitled to.

    His letter stated, “In view of the fact, now that the Court of Appeal has upheld the primaries as valid, the APC in Zamfara State will need a little time to catch up with its contemporaries in the election.

    Granting them this concession is not necessarily a favour but a right that inures to all contestants under similar circumstances.

    Consequent on the above, INEC is invited to comply with the judgement of the Court of Appeal by admitting the results of the APC Zamfara State Primaries and to also comply with the provisions of Section38 of the Electoral Act which empowers INEC to postpone the election for the governorship, National Assembly and House of Assembly Elections.”

  • IPAC reacts to AGF Malami’s letter, warns INEC against postponing elections because of APC

    IPAC reacts to AGF Malami’s letter, warns INEC against postponing elections because of APC

    The Inter Party Advisory Council (IPAC) on Thursday warned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) not to consider postponing elections in Rivers and Zamfara States because of the internal crisis rocking the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    IPAC is the umbrella body of all the 91 registered political parties in Nigeria.

    It made the call in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Imo Ugochinyere, amidst reports that the Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, had asked the electoral body to consider postponing elections in Zamfara State.

    Ugochinyere described Malami’s letter to INEC as an invitation to anarchy.

    He said all political parties were fully prepared for the election.

    He said it would be counter-productive if the commission begins to shift the date of elections due to the internal issues of any political party.

    The statement read, “IPAC wishes to also call on the commission to disregard the unconstitutional letter written by the AGF asking for election shift

    The letter is an invitation to electoral anarchy and a foundation for derailing the 2019 election.

    The Electoral Act forbids the shift in election by any litigation-related issues.”

    He recalled that during the last governorship election in Ondo State, the Supreme Court gave judgment declaring Mr Eyitayo Jegede as the rightful candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party just a few hours to
    election.

    He said INEC did not shift the elections as that candidate was not even able to campaign at all.

    He added, “If that was the decision then, what would warrant a shift in policy now to favour a party? Justice and fair play should be the rule of the game.

    We stand by the already existing standard as established in the case of Ondo State and state that the standard will put all political parties in check to know that their inability to resolve their issues in line with their constitutions could cost them dearly.”

  • Elections: Buhari addresses Nigerians by 7pm today

    Elections: Buhari addresses Nigerians by 7pm today

    President Muhammadu Buhari will Thursday broadcast to the nation at 7pm with a repeat at 9pm, a statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina has said.

    According to the statement; “All television, radio stations and other electronic media outlets are enjoined to hook up to the network services of the Nigerian Television Authority and Radio Nigeria for the broadcast.

  • Elections: NPS beefs up security in Enugu prisons

    The Nigerian Prisons Service (NPS) says security it has beefed up security in prison yards across Enugu State ahead of the forthcoming general elections.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Presidential/National Assembly and the Governorship/State Assembly elections will hold on Feb. 16 and March 2 respectively.

    The Controller of NPS, Enugu State Command, Mr Ndubuisi Ogbodo, disclosed this to NAN in Enugu on Thursday.

    Ogbodo noted the need for additional deployment of personnel, especially the armed squad in all the prison yards under the command.

    He also noted that the effort was being supported with deployment of armed mobile policemen and those of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    “The joint security committee for the election has found out that the prison can be a soft target for miscreants and hoodlums that might want to foment trouble during the elections.

    “So, being pro-active, the committee decided to deploy more security personnel and further fortify the prison yards in the state,’’ he said.

    Ogbodo, however, urged residents of the state to come out en masse and perform their civic duty by voting candidates of their choice without fear or favour.

    “The Nigerian Prisons Service and other sister security agencies will provide adequate protection for all,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that Enugu State has four prisons -Enugu, Nsukka, Oji River and Eziagu Farm Settlement Prison

  • Facebook promises to fight fake election news in Africa

    Facebook promises to fight fake election news in Africa

    With elections scheduled to be held in various African countries this year, Facebook has devised mechanisms to reduce the spread of fake news, the social media giant said on Wednesday.

    African countries, including South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Cameroon and Senegal are scheduled to have elections this year.

    Nigeria is scheduled to hold Presidential and National Assembly elections on Feb. 16 while governorship and state house of assembly elections come up on March 2.

    In a statement released in Johannesburg, the American tech company said it had teamed up with local fact checkers including Kenya’s Pesa Check and Nigeria’s Dubawa, among others.

    “We want to stop the spread of false news on our platforms.

    “These independent groups help us assess the accuracy of news shared on Facebook.

    “When they determine content is false, we reduce its distribution in the news feed so fewer people see it,’’ said Akua Gyekye, Facebook’s Public Policy Manager of Africa Elections.

    Gyekye said they have boosted digital literacy to help people spot false news.

    “We want to make sure people can spot false news and know how to flag it.

    “That’s why we’ve rolled out educational tips on national and regional radio and in print media in many African countries,’’ he said.

    In order to help prevent external interference, Facebook said it would not accept foreign election advertisements on Facebook in Nigeria.

    Some African governments have complained that social media are used to spread fake news and instigate civil unrest.

    Governments like the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and Zimbabwe had temporarily blocked the social media platform during elections.

     

  • 2019 elections: NAF commences airlift of electoral materials for INEC

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) says it has commenced airlift of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) electoral materials across the country for the conduct of Saturday’s elections.

    The Director of Public Relations and Information, NAF, Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola, made this known in a statement on Tuesday in Abuja.

    “The airlift includes day and night missions, during which both sensitive and non-sensitive electoral materials are conveyed in batches, with NAF C-130 Hercules aircraft from Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja, to airports across the country.

    “The materials are duly delivered by the C-130H aircraft crew to teams of INEC and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) officials, together with security personnel waiting at the various airports,” he said.

    Daramola recalled that the Chief of Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, had expressed the readiness of NAF to avail INEC its transport aircraft to enable expeditious movement of electoral materials, as done in the past.

    “It is pertinent to state that the transport aircraft are deployed solely to provide airlift support to meet INEC’s logistics requirements, in fulfilment of NAF’s constitutional role of providing military aid to civil authority,” Daramola said.