The Inter-society response to INEC goes thus
INEC Chairman (Prof
Attahiru Jega)’s Letter To Intersociety: Our Position
(Democracy & Civil liberties,
Onitsha Nigeria, 24th April 2015)-The
leadership of International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of
Law is in receipt of a letter addressed to our Board Chairman by the
Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission. The two-page letter,
dated 17th February 2015 and signed by Prof Mohammed J. Kuna (SA to
INEC Chairman) on behalf of Chairman of INEC, Prof Attahiru M. Jega; was in
response to our earlier letter addressed to the Commission, the SGF, the DG of
DSS and the Chief of Defense Staff, dated 10th February 2015, which
contained 19 demands/recommendations to INEC and 9 demands/recommendations to
the Federal Government and its Service Chiefs concerning our
position/recommendations for 2015 polls’ security and administrative conducts.
The INEC’s letter under reference is hereby attached for public and other
electoral stakeholders’ perusal. This is in furtherance of our openness and
public accountability.
One of the key issues raised in our
referenced letter borders on sudden deletion of millions of registered voters
by INEC in the National Register of Voters. Hinging our facts on the state of
the National Register of Voters in the last quarter of 2014, which contained
total registered voters of 70, 383, 427; we became surprised as in how INEC
could wake up suddenly and altered the names of approximately four million
registered voters within two months without detailed reasons and adequate
publicity to that effect. Our later investigation revealed that 3, 796, 767
registered voters or more were deleted within two months across the country
particularly in the North.
The INEC Chairman had in his letter
to Intersociety faulted our position on its handling of the National
Register of Voters; declaring our position/recommendation as fundamentally
flawed based on our inability to avail ourselves of necessary information on
Voters’ Register posted on its website. Our concern was
fundamentally on timing and suddenness of the referenced deletion, which took
place within the last two months of 2014. We saw this as a repetition of the
botched lopsided creation of 30, 427 polling units by INEC in August of 2014. When
compared with official information on the state of the Nigeria’s National
Register of Voters released to Nigerians by the INEC Chairman during his Press
Conference of 10th September 2014, we have every reason to query the
Commission on our suspicion that ethno-religious and political influences were
behind the sudden exercise.
Admitted that we omitted looking at
official information posted on INEC’s website on our visits to its website,
concerning how and reasons why the Commission carried out the exercise; but
INEC’s public information management in Nigeria is fundamentally elitist and
under armchair influences. In the recent findings by the US based National
Republican Institute and the Democratic Institute, INEC was heavily blamed for
inadequate information and its dissemination concerning its various activities.
The major wheel driving the activities of electoral commissions during
electioneering is adequate public information dissemination concerning its
activities. Such information must be designed to reach the target audiences and
the target audiences in general electioneering are not the elites or academia,
but the general or un-attentive public, which include farmers,
artisans, rural dwellers, petty traders and commercial transport operators.
It is not enough for INEC to post information
on its website and go home and air-conditioned; thinking that every Nigerian is
ICT literate and compliant including people living in the country’s rural
areas. If a lot of prominent Nigerians including some public office seekers and
holders can still be classified as “ICT illiterates”, what can INEC tell
Nigerians about tens of millions of others who are still thousands of miles
away from ICT age and application including religious adherents who see it as a
taboo because of its alleged link with western culture? Can INEC
tell Nigerians and other global watchers of events in the country how many
Nigerian citizens that visit their website on daily basis? By the way, how many
Nigerians have access to internet and what is internet density in Nigeria
particularly in the Northwest and the Northeast?
In the Commission’s Analysis
of the National Voters’ Registration Database, released and posted on
its website on 13th January 2015 as per its overall management of
the National Register of Voters leading to the referenced deletion, the
Commission said it introduced four processes for effective
management of the National Register of Voters-Consolidation, AFIS
(automated fingerprint identification system), Post Business Rules and Valid
Register of Voters.
Using the case of Anambra State as
an example, in the 2011 voters’ registration; a total of 2,011, 764 people was
registered (raw and unprocessed figure). Under Consolidation, the
figure came down to 1, 811, 536 RVs; after which it went through AFIS
resulting in 1, 784, 536 RVs. A total of 27, 012
registered voters were identified then as multiple registrants. When the figure
of 1, 784, 536 RVs went through Post Business Rules
possibly in 2014, a total of 55, 306 RVs were removed or deleted.
The Post Business Rules, according to INEC tends to weed out RVs
with incomplete fingerprints by denying them PVCs while AFIS identify
and weed out multiple RVs.
With this, Anambra RVs came
down to 1, 729, 230. During the continuous voters’ registration exercise, a
total of 271, 285 new RVs were captured leading to its further AFIS
and Post Business Rules processes resulting in identification of 34,
786 multiple registrants and Business Rules removal of 5, 113 RVs.
In all, when the Post Business Rules main figure of 1,
729, 230 RVs is added to the Post Business Rules CVR figure
of 235, 943 RVs, the current total RVs for Anambra
State comes to its present 1, 963, 173 RVs.
Finally, while the foregoing
struggled unsatisfactorily to offer reasons as per the referenced deletion, the
issue of indiscriminate registration of under-age voters and issuance of PVCs
to them further compounds and complicates the issues complained of. It is
correct to say that the Northwest and the Northeast Nigeria parade the highest
number of under-age voters in the country till date. This is more so when the four
processes of managing the National Register of Voters only target multiple
registrants, registrants with incomplete fingerprints and INEC’s data
duplicates and fundamentally shield under-age voters particularly
in the Northwest and the Northeast.
The INEC Chairman’s letter to Intersociety
also went dumb by failing to respond to the issue of gross lopsidedness
in the geopolitical PVCs distribution across the country. Its excuse on Mr.
Muhammadu Buhari’s school certificate issue, which the Commission hinges on
ongoing court processes, is not excusable. This is more so when despite several
court processes concerning whether or not to hold polls as earlier fixed, he
defied the court processes and announced a shift in the dates of the referenced
polls.
All in all, we commend the
leadership of INEC for responding promptly to our all important letter under
reference, despite the skeletal nature of the Commission’s letter referenced: INEC/CH/GC/073/1.
This is a clear departure from the attitude of the Nigerian public office
holders who hardly respond to several public interest letters addressed to them
or their offices no matter the timing, substance or otherwise so contained.
Signed:
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Board Chairman
International Society for Civil
Liberties & the Rule of Law
+2348174090052 (office)
Chiugo Onwuatuegwu, Esq., Head,
Democracy & Good Governance Program
Intersociety Replies INEC over 19 demands on re-scheduled 2015 presidential elections
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
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