Intersociety claims the acceptance of the out come
of the Ekiti state election is defining democracy in Nigeria , see how it puts
it :
Redefining Opposition Politics & Restoring Sanctity Of The Ballot Box In Nigeria: A Case Of Ekiti State Governorship Election Of June 2014
(Democracy & Good Governance,
Onitsha Nigeria, 23rd June 2014)-When federalism was introduced in Nigeria in 1954 by the
former British colonial masters, elections including regional were conducted in
1954, 1957 and 1959. Under the pioneer civilian regimes, federal and regional
polls were held between 1963 and 1964. Under the military regimes,
elections were conducted in 1978, 1990/91(diarchy) and 1999.
Under the ongoing
civilian rule, elections have been held in 2003, 2007 and 2011. The second
civilian rule also held elections in 1983. Staggered State governorship
elections and court ordered governorship and legislative repeat elections have
also been held by successive presidential civilian governments in the country.
The last uniformed Local Government elections in Nigeria took place in December
1998.
Since then LGA polls in the country are held according to the prescription
and discretion of respective State Governments and their State Electoral
Commissions. In all these polls, preservation of the sanctity of the ballot box
has remained an object of deep controversy. Till date, poll rigging, premised
on ethno-religious considerations have remained an incurable menace in Nigeria.
While the polls conducted by the
British colonial masters suffered from negative colonial interests, which
downgraded their sanctities; those conducted by pioneer civilian regimes
suffered from ethno-religious influences.
Those held under the military were
held under fears and apprehensions or under guided liberties. Though they were
more secular, but fears and apprehensions under which they were held, robbed
them of sanctity. Mercantilism, thievery (corruption) and ethno-religion
grossly marred those conducted by presidential civilian regimes in the country
from 1983, 2003, 2007 and 2011.
In rating the polls under reference, the 1954
and 1959 colonial polls remains the best, followed by the military polls of
1978 and 1999 and State staggered governorship polls in Anambra, Edo, Ondo and
Ekiti States. In the worst category are the 1983, 2003, 2007 and post 1998
staggered LGA civilian polls. Of all the presidential general polls under
reference, those of 2011 remain the most improved, even though the
ethno-religious zealots in northern parts of the country took law in their
hands leading to post polls’ property destructions and human casualties of up
to 1000 or more. But the fact remains that that was the first time Nigerians in
their large numbers were captured in the voters’ register and allowed to vote
and their votes counted.
On Saturday, June 21st
2014, the 732,106 registered voters in Ekiti State, Southwest Nigeria,
comprising 371, 419 females and 360, 747 males, were asked to go to the State’s
2,195 polling units and 177 electoral wards to choose the next governor of
their beloved State. This is on account of the expiring controversial court
restored electoral mandate of the incumbent governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi of the
ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), who leaves office around October 2014,
having started governing the State in October 2010.
In announcing the poll’s
results on Sunday, June 22nd 2014, the Independent National
Electoral Commission’s chief returning officer and vice chancellor of the
Federal University of Oye-Ekiti, Prof Isaac Asuzu, declared Mr. Peter Fayose of
the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) winner with 203, 090 votes, as
against the incumbent governor’s 120, 433 votes. A total of 348, 656 valid
voters voted in the poll out of the total registered voters of 732, 106. Mr.
Peter Fayose also scored the constitutionally required majority votes in the
entire 16 LGAs in the State.
Other two important staggered
governorship polls in Nigeria had earlier taken place in another Southwest
State of Ondo and Southeast State of Anambra. In that of Ondo State, held on 20th
October 2012, the incumbent governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko of the Labour Party,
scored 260, 199 votes to beat his two main rivals: Barr. Olusola Oke of the
PDP, who got 155,961 votes and Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu, SAN of the APC, who scored
143, 512 votes. In the said poll, out of 1, 638, 950 registered voters, a total
of 624, 659 voted, out of which, 30, 145 votes were invalid and 594, 244 were
valid votes. Governor Mimiko also secured the constitutionally required
majority votes in 13, out of 19 LGAs in the State. He became governor on
account of court restoration of his electoral mandate in early 2009. He was first
sworn in on 24th February 2009.
In the case of Anambra State,
its staggered governorship poll took place on 16th and 30th
November, 2013. At the end, Mr. Willie Obiano of the ruling All Progressives
Grand Alliance (APGA) was declared winner by the INEC’s chief returning officer
and vice chancellor of the University of Calabar, Prof Epoke, with 180, 178
votes. Mr. Tony Nwoye of the PDP came second with 97, 700 votes and Dr. Chris
Ngige of the APC came third with 95, 963 votes. The poll was conducted in 4,608
polling units and 326 electoral wards. Out of the total registered voters of 1,
776, 167, a total of 442, 242 people voted, out of which 16, 988 were declared
invalid votes and 425, 254 were valid votes.
Governor Obiano also secured the
constitutionally required 25% votes in 19 LGAs and won majority votes in 16 out
of the 21 LGAs in the State. Anambra State, courtesy of former governor Peter
Gregory Obi was the first State in Nigeria to earn judicial restoration of its
stolen electoral mandate in March 2006 per Enugu Division of the Court of
Appeal.
Restoration Of Sanctity Of The
Ballot Box: With the successful conduct of the
three staggered State governorship polls under reference, sanctity of the
ballot box is gradually being restored on Nigerian electoral polity.
The
outcome of the Ekiti State governorship poll has, again, shown that elections
are not won on the pages of newspaper or by enormity of media propaganda or
noise-making. It also shows that the era of elitist politics is steadily fading
in Nigeria. Such popular outcomes witnessed in the Ekiti State governorship
poll had earlier taken place in Ondo in October 2012 and Anambra in November
2013.
The great people of Ekiti State like their Ondo and Anambra counterparts
have adamantly refused to be contaminated by the propaganda virus of the
Africa’s noisiest opposition political party in Nigeria. This is the most
striking thing about the giant strides at restoring sanctity of the ballot box
on the country’s electoral polity. When the voice of the majority spoke in Ondo
in October 2012, the Africa’s noisiest opposition political party called it
“armada of electoral rigging”.
When they spoke again in
Anambra in November 2013, they said it was a charade and continuously made
negative reference to it both locally and internationally until few hours into
the Ekiti poll, which it horribly lost out. Now that the same majority voice
has spoken in Ekiti governorship poll of June 2014, Nigerians are waiting to
hear another labeling to be hung on the neck of the popular poll’s outcome.
When they lost in Ondo in October 2012, they relocated to the pages of
newspaper and screens of politically oiled television stations and radios.
When
their propaganda refused to make public relevance, they filed papers in court and
took over the functions of its proceedings on the pages of newspaper and
visual/audio media, yet at the end, their arguments became “orbiter dictum” and
woefully failed the litmus test of “ratio decidendi”. In Anambra, the riggers
became the rigged and Anambra People became the winners. They cried and
ran to the court of first instance for “justice”, but the court in her hallowed
wisdom, sent them packing.
Redefinition Of Opposition Politics
In Nigeria: Nigeria parades one of the worst
and noisiest opposition political parties on African Continent. Opposition
political parties are universally best known as “the best government in
waiting seeking to oust the worst government in power through the ballot box”.
But in Nigeria, it is a clear case of “the worst government in waiting
seeking to oust the worse government in power through political guerrilla
warfare”.
The fundamental aim of every credible opposition political
party is to oust the lowest performed government in power through the ballot
box powered by mass enfranchisement and ballot sanctification. But in Nigeria,
opposition political parties fear ballot box a lot because they do not have
better options of leadership to offer the electorates warranting voting them
into office.
Even where they are in control of State politics, they run deficit
governance and government by propaganda leading to their abysmal performances
during re-election bids. Any opposition political party that hinges its success
on cross-carpeting and decampment is a party of gangsters and empty vessels
with defeatist aim of political noisemaking and merchandise. We call for
redefinition of opposition politics in Nigeria so as to bring it in tandem with
the international best practices.
While we congratulate the great people
of Ekiti State for courageously making their best electoral choice by electing
Mr. Peter Ayodele Fayose and rejecting the outgoing governor, Dr. Kayode
Fayemi, we renew our earlier call on the leaders of Civil Society organizations
in the country, particularly those who said they are working for pro-democracy
and pro-civil rights organizations to change the concept of engaging the
electoral processes. Paying much attention to “poll monitoring” and less
attention to pre-poll advocacy activities is a defeatist and archaic concept.
We understand that much energy is dissipated on poll monitoring on account of
its huge foreign currency inflows, but CSO advocacy activities should be taken
beyond the boundaries of concept of “business enterprise” and rooted in
“service to humanity”. This is what is behind the invention of “NGO” in 1839
with the formation of “Anti Slavery International” as the world’s first NGO.
We also call on those
funding “poll monitoring” advocacy activities of the pro-democracy and pro-civil
rights organizations both at local and international levels to pay more
attention to pre-poll advocacy activities and channel more funds into them.
Pre-poll advocacy activities are more publicly important than mere monitoring
of polls. Issues of roguish voters’ register and mass disenfranchisement,
quality of candidates and their fielding by political parties, poll campaign
violence, internal party democracy or party primaries as well as
candidates/parties’ manifestoes are not issues to be advocated upon on election
day.
They are purely pre-poll advocacy activities, considered the bedrock of
every credible democratic process. Elections’ day situation rooms’ reports or
analyses are less valuable than that under reference.
Signed:
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Board Chair
International Society for Civil
Liberties & the Rule of Law-Intersociety
+2348100755939 (text 24/7, call
9.30am-4.pm, Mon.-Friday, office hours)
www.intersociety-ng.org
Intersociety Says Ekiti Election Outcome Shapes Good Governance And Democracy Of Ballot Box
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Monday, June 23, 2014
Rating:
No comments: