Jega, INEC And Ability To Deliver
Credible Polls
Uzo Chikere
Since the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
announced the rescheduling of the dates for the elections in Nigeria from
February 14 and 28, 2015 to March 28 and April 11, 2015, there has been so much
buzz in the polity. And it is not about to stop as it is being speculated that
the electoral body has continued to exhibit symptoms of seeming inability to successfully
see to the conduct of the general elections even as it had been rescheduled.
Before the postponement, the INEC chairman, Prof. Attahiru
Jega, had boasted that his Commission was fully prepared for the exercise. But
according to him, based on advice by the military chiefs, to the effect that
they could not guarantee the security in the event of elections being conducted
in the troubled states of the North-East states of Bornu, Adamawa and Yobe, it
became expedient to shift the dates of the polls.
But at a National Council of State meeting where the
security chiefs’ advice concerning insecurity, was said to have prompted the
postponement of the polls, it would seem that this provided Professor Jega and
his INEC a veritable lee way to gain time over which to fine tune its
unfinished arrangements for the important national exercise.
For the elections which had been earlier billed for February
14 and 28, 2015, as at February 17 the major instrument for the participation
of the electorate, the Permanent Voters’Cards (PVCs) were yet to be adequately
and evenly distributed to registered would-be voters across the country. And
yet the INEC chairman insisted that the Commission was fully ready to conduct
free, fair and credible polls on the hither-to scheduled dates.
As at the time under review, INEC according to its claim had
been able to distribute in all the six geo-political zones of the federation 75.88%
of the PVCs. while the average collection percentage for all the zones excluding
the North East and North West regions was below the 75.88 percentage.
A close look at the breakdown of this shows a huge disparity
between the north and south; North East – 82.95%, North West – 88.66%, North
Central – 73.78%, South East – 73.35%, South West – 63.20% South South – 74.09%.
Curiously, by March 8, 2015 all elections would have been
concluded even with the results announced INEC under Prof. Jega’s record of PVC
distribution and collection could only amount to 80%. According to the Commission’s
National Commissioner in charge of publicity and Voter Education, Dr. Chris
Iyimoga,: “I am delighted to report that as I speak to you, we have surpassed
the 80 % threshold for the collection of the PVCs nationwide. We have
distributed 55,234,874 PVCs to 68,833,476 registered voters.”
The fact of the matter is that INEC with Prof. Jega on the
saddle is pretentiously making progress after the postponement of the election
whose date he had persisted would be February 14 and 28. However, following its
shift to later dates, they realized that it was time to latch onto the
postponement to correct their inadequacies regarding their ill preparations for
the polls.
Even as INEC held that card reader machines had been tested
and met the required expectation, the electoral body still found it expedient
to use the extension period of the elections to test-run the devise in two
states of each of the six geo-political zones on Saturday, March 7, 2015.
The states selected for the exercise included, Ekiti and
Lagos, (South-west); Anambra and Ebonyi, (South-east); Delta and Rivers,
(South-south); Kano and Kebbi, (North-west); Bauchi and Taraba, (North-east);
Niger and Nasarawa, (North-central).
Again, the electoral body for the umpteenth time recently extended
the period for the collection of PVCs to March 22. 2015,six days to the postponed
presidential polls.
For some politicians, it is either that Jega is incompetent
or trying to use Nigerians. According to him, Jega should have test-run the
card reader machines before pushing them out for the botched February 14
elections.
In the view ofDelta State governorship candidate of the
Labour Party (LP), Great Ogboru, Jega should have test-run the card reader
machines before pushing them out for the botched February 14 elections.
“Till today”, he noted,” nothing good came out of Jega’s
Electronic Machines; now he has come with Card Reader Machines’ I think it is
high time he stopped using Nigeria as a testing ground; the commission should
do what is needful."
For the chairman of the Conference of Nigerian Political
Parties (CNPP) in Cross River State, Mr. Cletus Obun, the Chairman of INEC,
Prof. Attahiru Jega, is incompetent. Hinging his reason on the postponement of
the polls, Obun said it was wrong for Jega to have caved in to the pressure
mounted on him, on the excuse of insecurity in the North-east of Nigeria, more
so, when the military has no constitutional role in the conduct of elections.
It is also no secret that INEC under the leadership of Prof.
Jega had before now started exhibiting signs of decline in the performance of
its mandate to deliver to the electorate free fair and most credible election.
It will be recalled that the commission under the watchful eyes of its chairman
bungled the November 16 Anambra gubernatorial poll when he admitted that the exercise
was an electoral gain reversal.
Even as the INEC
helmsman owned up the shoddy performance of the body in the South-East state,
he promised that all hopes were not lost, stressing that the electoral body
would do well in future.
Said he: “Anambra is
an election we fully prepared for. We worked more than we had ever done in any
state. Regrettably however, what we saw was evidence of reversal in Delta and
Anambra. We are disappointed with the reversals,” the INEC chairman said. “But
we are not leaving any stone unturned at unraveling what actually transpired.
We will investigate Anambra thoroughly and meticulously. We will do a thorough
enquiry in Anambra. We cannot afford to lose hope. We will do better in the
future.”
Presently, activities
of the commission in the build-up to the polls appear to cast doubts on the
ability of its topmost man to successfully deliver the expected mandate of a
near flawless election in the couple of days ahead.
Close observers of the country’s political environment are
of the strong view that the signals coming from the commission are wrong. They
argue also that there was incongruity in the way Prof. Jega pursued the
canceled February 14 and 28 polls considering that by the statutory provisions
regarding his appointment his terminal leave was expected to commence on March
28 pursuant to his disengagement from office.
By the same token, according to a school of thought, the
hurry by the INEC chairman to prosecute the elections in February despite that
the commission was ill prepared for it, could be on purpose to act out a
sinister script.
As the elections fast approach, it behoves Prof. Jega and
INEC to show proof of diligence and ability to deliver to the Nigerian populace
and in deed, the international community what seen to be highly credible
elections even as time is of utmost essence.
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