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‘Why RECs Are Reckless’ —Justice Uwais Report

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Last week’s declaration of All Progressives Congress, APC, governorship candidate in Adamawa State, Aisha Dahiru, popularly known as Binani, as governor-elect by the state Resident Electoral Commissioner, REC, Hudy Ari, against the stipulations of the law, has heightened concerns over the conduct of RECs and its implications on the electoral process.

Ari, who had no power under the Electoral Act 2022 as amended to do so, had gone ahead to declare the APC standard-bearer winner of the governorship election when the collation of results was still ongoing, creating tension in the polity.

The action had set in place what could have been a dangerous political stalemate, crisis and precedent until the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, invalidated it.

Section 25 of the Act empowered only the Returning Officer to declare the winner of an election at the state collation centre.

Law

Specifically, the law says: “The results of all the elections shall be announced by the: Presiding Officer at the Polling Unit; Ward Collation Officer at the registration area or Ward Collation Centre; Local Government or Area Council Collation Officer at the Local Government or Area Council Collation Centre; and State Collation Officer at the State Collation Centre.”

Since what happened in Adamawa didn’t only contravene the law, but also usurped the powers of the Returning Officer, there are worries over its symbolism in the country.

READ ALSO: Adamawa: Why Binani, REC, Indicted Security Officers, Others Must Be Punished – Falana

This is irrespective of INEC’s nullification of the action and the subsequent suspension of the REC, who is believed not to be ignorant of the position of the law as regards the declaration of results.

In the buildup to the general elections, Sunday Vanguard had, in a report titled: Tension over RECs, BVAs, Seven Other Issues, observed that neutrality of RECs was an issue of worry.

The alarm was premised on two factors: One was the suspected affiliation of some commissioners with interested parties. There was also the issue of capacity as some were found to be supervising elections for the first time.

“There are worries about some of its Resident Electoral Commissioners, RECs, who were accused of having affinities with parties. Questions have also been raised about some National Commissioners, who would be superintending over elections for the first time,” this paper observed in the report.

In 2008, the Justice Muhammadu Uwais Electoral Reforms Report shared a similar sentiment about the managers of Nigeria’s elections.

It observed: “The independence and impartiality of the country’s election management bodies, that is, the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, State Independent Electoral Commissions, SIECs, and other institutions involved in election matters, have been questioned by the generality of Nigerians who submitted memoranda and made presentations during the public hearings of the Committee. INEC and SIECs have generally been adjudged as operating as appendages of the ruling party and the executive arms of government. This perception stems mainly from the mode of appointment of key officials of the EMBs and their funding which rests exclusively with the executive branch of government. The same perception of partiality, ineffectiveness and inefficiency affects the other institutions, especially the security agencies, critical for credible elections.”

READ ALSO: Suspended Adamawa REC’s Whereabouts Unknown, Says INEC

To a large extent, what is now known as the failed ‘Adamawa coup’ has confirmed the fears highlighted in that report.

The development, which stands in a class of its own at a time INEC was accused of not playing by its rules during the presidential election, has once again brought to the fore the need to reform the Commission.

Since the first post-military rule election in 1999, calls for electoral reforms have followed the aftermath of every general election.

Controversy

This has majorly been precipitated by an unbroken cycle of controversial elections believed to have been caused by disregard for rules, weak institutions, infirm legal frameworks, poor political culture and excessive use of money among others.

For instance, in the report of the Uwais Electoral Reforms Panel submitted to President Umaru Yar’Adua, it was observed that outcomes of Nigerian elections have consistently degenerated.

“The 85-year-old history of Nigeria’s elections shows a progressive degeneration of outcomes. Thus, the 2007 elections are believed to be the worst since the first elections were held in 1922. The compelling need to embark on electoral reforms is thus obvious,” it stated.

READ ALSO: BREAKING: Buhari Approves Suspension Of Adamawa REC

Of the electoral reforms initiated since 1999, election stakeholders believe the Uwais Panel on Electoral Reforms stood out given its wide-reaching findings and recommendations.

It is believed that the events that necessitated the inauguration of the panel by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua in 2007, share many similarities with the conduct of the 2023 polls: They were as controversial as the conduct of the last exercise.

And the uproar that followed at the time was as deafening as the current outrage over the last elections’ outcome, forcing the President to constitute a 22-man panel headed by retired Justice Muhammadu Uwais.

With membership drawn from critical sectors including the media, academia, judiciary, and civil society, the committee went round the country, gathering opinions on how to improve the electoral framework.

The outcome of the 16-month exercise was a 297-page document titled: Report of the Electoral Reform Committee.
To date, its recommendations are adjudged the best proposals to ensure Nigerian elections no longer have credibility issues.

Some key excerpts gleaned from recommendations submitted to President Yar’Adua in December 2008, read:

Re-organisation of INEC

“INEC should be re-organized and re-positioned to ensure its independence and professionalism in the conduct of elections in the country.

READ ALSO: Why Buhari Didn’t Intervene In Adamawa Governorship Saga — FG

“The 1999 Constitution should be amended to ensure that INEC becomes truly independent, non-partisan, impartial, professional, transparent, and reliable as an institution and in the performance of its constitutional functions. INEC should consist of: a board that formulates broad electoral policy and direction for the Commission; and a professional/technical election management team to handle the actual conduct of elections.

Funding of INEC

’Section 84 of the 1999 Constitution should be amended by adding subsection (8) to read as follows: The election expenditure and the recurrent expenditure of the Independent National Electoral Commissioners offices (in addition to salaries and allowances of the Chairman and members mentioned in subsection 4 of this section) shall be first charge on the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation.”

Composition of INEC Board

“The membership of the Board of INEC should consist of the following: A Chairman – who must be a person of unquestionable integrity; a Deputy Chairman – who must be a person of unquestionable integrity. However, the Chairman and Deputy must not be of the same gender; six persons of unquestionable integrity, two of whom must be women and 1 of whom must come from each of the six geo-political zones of the Federation; one nominee of Civil Society Organizations working in the area of elections and accredited by the proposed Political Parties Registration and Regulatory Commission; The National Judicial Council shall advertise all the positions, spelling out requisite qualifications.

Tenure of office

“The tenure of office of the members of INEC’s Board should be five years subject to renewal for another five years. At the national level INEC’s management team should consist of professional/technical/operational officers as follows: Secretary, Departmental Directors

“At the State level, the State Independence Electoral Commission ,SIECs, should be re-organized and incorporated within the structure of the INEC to form a single election management body for the country. The state level Secretariat of INEC should therefore consist of 37 Directors of Elections, one for each State and the FCT, appointed by INEC, trained and posted to states.

READ ALSO: Why We Nullified Binani’s Declaration As Adamawa Gov-elect – INEC

Security of Tenure of INEC Chairman and members

“The Chairman and members of the Board of INEC may only be removed by the Senate on the recommendation of the National Judicial Commission (NJC) by two-thirds majority of the Senate which shall include at least 10 members of the minority parties in the Senate. Section 155 of the 1999 Constitution should be amended to provide that the tenure of office of the Chairman and members of the Board of INEC shall be five years from the date of appointment, renewable only once.

“The process of renewal of the appointment of members of the Board of INEC shall be by the Senate on the recommendation of the NJC.

Conclusion of election disputes before swearing-in

“There is need to produce rules and procedures that enhance speedy disposal of election petitions. The law should shift the burden of proof from the petitioners to INEC to show that disputed elections were indeed free and fair and complied with the provisions of the Electoral Act. Rules of evidence should be formulated to achieve substantive justice rather than mere observance of technicalities.

“Elections to the office of President and Governors should be held at least six months before the expiration of their terms. A maximum of four months should be devoted to hearing petitions by the tribunals and another two months for hearing appeals by the Court of Appeal or Supreme Court. No executive should be sworn in before the conclusion of the cases against him/her. In the case of legislators, no one should be sworn in before the determination of the case against him/her. INEC should have no right of appeal.

Curbing violence

“There is the need to deal with incidents as well as the root causes of violence related to elections. Quite often, attention is focused on incidences without a longer-term view of how to address the root causes of the problem. For example, only sustainable, systemic reform measures can provide employment and curtail the profound phenomenon of youth unemployment, which feeds into, and fan violence related to elections.

“There is a need to effectively regulate the behaviour and actions of contestants, voters, officials, etc in the entire electoral process and to carefully frame rules and regulations covering all aspects of the electoral process. No stone should be left unturned in this regard. There is a need to effectively police the election process and enforce rules and regulations by assigning well-trained, impartial and honest law enforcement and security agents and agencies to help police and secure the electoral process.

READ ALSO: BREAKING: Drama As INEC Voids Declaration Of Binani As Gov-elect, Summons Adamawa REC

Prosecution of Electoral Offences

“Amend Section 174 (c) of the 1999 Constitution such that the constitutional power of nolle prosequi vested in the Attorney-General of the Federation or of a state does not apply to electoral offences.

“Amend the Electoral Act 2006 to establish an Electoral Offences Commission to perform the following functions: enforcement and administration of the provisions of the Electoral Act; investigation of all electoral frauds and related offences. Coordination, enforcement and prosecution of all electoral offences; enforcement of the provisions of the Electoral Act

Date for elections

“Amend Section 26 of the Electoral Act 2006 to take away from INEC the power to fix dates for elections. Also, amend the Constitution to fix dates for elections which should hold at least six months before the date of swearing-in to provide adequate time for concluding all election petitions before swearing in of elected candidates.

“The presidential and gubernatorial elections should take place in the first week of November of the election year; Friday, Saturday and Sunday excluded in deference to the religious sensibilities of Muslims, Seventh-Day Adventists and Christians respectively.

“The elected chief executives should be sworn-in in May of the following year, an interval of six months to allow for the disposal of election petitions arising from the elections.

“National and State Assembly elections should take place in the second week of November and should be held two years after presidential and gubernatorial elections.”

READ ALSO: Adamawa APC Suspends Ward Exco For Suspending Boss SGF Mustapha

Convinced that it had delivered a roadmap to credible elections, the panel concluded thus: “The Committee is convinced that the recommendations contained in this report are necessary and sufficient to improve the quality of our elections. To this extent, the Committee recommends that there should be urgency on the part of the President, the National Assembly, Governors, State Assemblies and others in effecting the constitutional, statutory, administrative and institutional changes required to achieve the desired effect.”

Unfortunately, the report, which was expected to herald a new era in election management, was hardly implemented by the Yar’Adua administration.

Ironically, successive administrations acknowledged the need for electoral reforms, but ignored the findings and recommendations, leading to questions on whether the government is truly serious about credible elections.

The consensus today is that the consequences of ignoring the report undermine the electoral process as witnessed in the conduct of the 2023 polls.
VANGUARD

Politics

JUST-IN: PDP Clears All 33 LGA Chairmanship Seats In Oyo

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The Oyo State Independent Electoral Commission (OYSIEC) has declared all the 33 candidates of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) winners in the local government areas elections conducted across the state on Saturday.

The declaration on Sunday came amid controversy of irregularities as echoed by the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), which alleged irregularities in the voting process.

The APC in the state while the exercise was ongoing on Saturday had described the election as a sham which it noted was capable of causing the Pacesetter state untold disrepute if allowed to stand.

The opposition party then sought the rescheduling of the election for another day when OYSEIC “is ready to conduct a free, fair and credible poll.”

READ ALSO: JUST IN: Oyo LG Polls: Hoodlums Attack Electoral Officials, Snatch Ballot Papers [PHOTO]

Oyo State APC Publicity Secretary, Olawale Sadare, in a statement regretted that “another opportunity to deepen democracy and return power to the people at the grassroots has had to be missed due to the insensitivity and insincerity on the part of the ruling class in the state.

“With what is happening at the moment in most Polling Units across the state, Gov. Seyi Makinde has again disappointed the whole world. He promised the people that their votes would count today but the opposite is the case. The good people of the state desired to participate in an election to elect a new set of council officials but what they are experiencing is nothing but a sham.

“Even if OYSIEC comes out later to declare all the candidates of the APC, we would not rate this election as credible and acceptable as it falls below the minimum global standard of election conduct. The best thing is for the Commission to suspend the exercise and choose another date for a proper conduct rather continue to connive with a few anti-democratic elements in the ruling PDP to perpetrate electoral fraud and desecration of democracy in the land,” the statement read in part.

The Oyo state government however disagreed, insisting that the victory of all PDP candidates in the Saturday’s elections was predictable.

READ ALSO: Ooni Speaks On Yoruba Nation Agitators Invasion Of Oyo Assembly

The state Commissioner for Information, Prince Dotun Oyelade, after the announcement of the results, attributed the victories of the PDP candidates to outstanding performance of Governor Makinde in the last five years.

The Commissioner also attributed the election result to the quality of the candidates which the ruling party presented.

“This is a glowing tribute to the governor and his government as this is the last election under his watch till 2027 when he and the just elected LG chairmen and councillors will end their tenures.”

He lashed out at the opposition for starting to rehearse their complaints barely 30 minutes to the commencement of the elections as early as Saturday morning.

Oyelade charged them to behave like sportsmen and stop mixing fantasy with democracy.

The Commissioner hailed the commitments of the security team, the OYSIEC chairman and his team for daring to make a difference after the challenges of the past two local government elections.

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Ondo 2024: lT Expert Emerges As SDP Candidate

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An Information Technology expert, Dr. Segun Oyebolu, weekend emerged the governorship candidate of the Social Democratic party, in Ondo state.

Oyebolu, will be the party’s flagbearear in the November 16, governorship election in the state.

He emerged during the party’s governorship primary held in Akure, Ondo state capital.

The election, was supervised by the officer of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and security agencies.

Speaking at the end of the exercise, the Chairman of the partys primary committee in the state, Joseph Abu, declared Oyebolu as winner

of the exercise having polled 59 votes of the 60 votes cast by the party’s delegates.

Abu who explained that one of the votes was voided, described the election as free and fair and devoid of any rancour or any trouble.

READ ALSO: Edo Poll: AAC Guber Candidate Unveils ‘Humanity First Manifesto’, As Thousands Of LP Members Defect To Party

He said that “We have a single candidate and all the delegates voted for the candidate.

” I want to assure you that SDP will win the next governorship election in the state come November by the grace of God.

“I want to thank the people of Ondo state for embracing our party and I am assuring them that SDP will deliver dividend of democracy at their doorsteps.

In his acceptance speech, Oyebolu, assured that his government will focus in freeing the state from the vested interest that had contributed to the underdevelopment in the state.

Oyebolu said that “enough is enough, we are taking our state back”.

“This is therefore a notice to Governor Ayedatiwa to start parking his bags and baggages as our dear Ondo State prepares to replace him with SDP.

“We are duly set to uproot the APC from Ondo State Government House. This is therefore your quit notice served in advance.

READ ALSO: Ondo APC Primary; A Disgrace To Democracy – Cleric

“For many of our people yearning for a new day and a new hope – My administration will bring back the good, old days.

“The many destructions wrought on us as a people shall end and in November 2024, SDP shall indeed begin the emancipation of the South West.

” I want to reassure you that the days ahead will witness challenges which collectively we shall overcome as we prepare to return power and comfort to our people”

According to him, SDP is a better alternative to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state.

He said the ruling party in the state had not changed the lives of the people for better but said the SDP was ready to find solution to the problems of Ondo State if voted to power in the November governorship election.

READ ALSO: BREAKING: Aiyedatiwa Sweeps Ondo APC’s Governorship Primary Election [See results…]

He noted the current economic crisis facing the people of the state was as a result of the maladministration and ineffective leadership on the part of the party in power in the state.

“We are here today to signal a completely new path, new way and new mindset. What you may call a shift from the unrealisable transformation programme of the APC.

“Our party seeks new way and better alternative entrenched in integrity of managing people, infrastructure and economy for people’s empowerment and emancipation,” he said.

He expressed assurance that the party would defeat the APC and PDP to win the governorship election, said the party is ready to work for the people of the state to rebuild and reposition the state.

The National Secretary of SDP, Dr. Olu Agunloye, while reacting to the primary exercise said “the issue at stake in Ondo State is about ensuring a breakthrough to take the State from its present moribund state to become a prosperous model state.

“This is by leveraging on its abundant human and natural resources, not about the despicable struggle for the purse strings of the State to perpetuate further underdevelopment because of personal interests and unethical agenda.

“In our great Party, the Social Democratic Party we are focused on efforts to move the State forward to social justice, peace, progress, and prosperity”

 

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Edo Poll: AAC Guber Candidate Unveils ‘Humanity First Manifesto’, As Thousands Of LP Members Defect To Party

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Thousands of Labour Party, LP, members in Edo State on Sunday defected to the African Action Congress (AAC) at the official flag-off of the campaign of the governorship candidate of the party, Dr Udoh Oberaifo.

INFO DAILY reports that Edo State governorship election holds September 21st, 2024.

The defectors drawn from the three senatorial districts of the state, formally defected to the AAC alongside the running mate to Oberaifo, Lord Osunde, who was said to have been a staunch member of the LP and a pioneer Edo Obidient Movement leader.

The running mate who told newsmen that he had defected to the AAC two months ago before the official unveiling, was the organiser of the first Two Millions Obidient Movement Walk in the state in the build up to the 2023 general election.

READ ALSO: Edo Guber: Trouble Looms As Imansuangbon Seeks Disqualification Of Akpata As LP Candidate

Speaking at the event, the gubernatorial candidate, Oberaifo, said he decided to make Edo people first in his agenda if elected, hence christening his manifesto ‘Humanity First’, meaning the people (Edo people) first.

A cross section of party members at the event on Sunday, April 28, 2024.

“By God’s grace, my leadership, if elected, will stand for true leadership; will stand for a new perspective; will stand for vibrancy. My government will stand for innovation, and it will answer all the questions of Edo people especially the youth and the women and Edo people in general.

“Humanity first at this time means Edo people first. The People before politics; the people before power mongering; the people before godfatherism; the people before profits. You must put the people first as a good leader, and you will get it right. That means that when you see people through the eyes of God or the way God sees them, you will definitely get it right. I repeat, humanity first,” he declared.

READ ALSO: Edo Poll: LP Guber Candidate, Akpata Replaces Running Mate

The governorship candidate who said the AAC was an alternative to rescue the state and its people from political, social and economics quagmire it has found itself, lamented that the state had experienced the era of PDP and APC without tangible results.

Speaking on how he intends to develop the state, Oberaifo said being a young businessman, he intends to invest hugely in small businesses in the state, adding that this will boost the state’s IGR and also reduce unemployment.

He said: “We must empower our small businesses. It is the sure way and the easiest way the government can raise IGR. An IGR is what we need to develop our state. it is the only way the government can solve the problem of unemployment.

“When you empower MSMEs, they are better, they create jobs. And when they create jobs, the unemployment rate reduces. The people will have more jobs because if I empower you now, I support you by giving you all you need for you to run your business, one year time, you might employ ten, and five years time, you might employ 20, and the chain continues.”

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