Federal Goverenmnet floods states with soldiers, police, other security agencies to avoid mayhem as IG redeploys DIGs, CPs
Saturday’s presidential
and National Assembly elections preparations heightened across
the states and
the Federal Capital Territory on Thursday with more sensitive and non-sensitive
electoral materials sent to Local Government Areas by state offices of the
Independent National Electoral Commission.
Journalists and security
agencies as well as other groups were also ready for the polls . Security
agencies deployed their men and officers to the streets and areas considered as
flashpoints.
FCT
In Abuja where
the Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, announced the
redeployment of six Deputy Inspectors-General of Police and six Commissioners
of Police, journalists and election observers besieged INEC headquarters to
collect their accreditation materials.
Some of the
journalists whose accreditation kits were not ready as of Thursday
evening, expressed fears that the development could affect their activities
tomorrow.
The INEC
management is expected to address a joint press conference with the authorities
of the National Youths Service Corps on Friday (today).
Security was
beefed up at the commission’s headquarters with military personnel,
complementing the regular and the riot policemen on guard on the premises.
Also, security
personnel, including soldiers, were seen on patrol and at checkpoints along the
Nyanya- Jikwoyi Road, the Airport Road and Galadimawa.
Policemen
maintained their regular patrol of the Kubwa-Zuba Expressway and strategic
parts of the territory.
There was no part
of the city with no policemen or soldiers, who were heavily armed.
Heavy traffic was
noticeable in areas where soldiers set up checkpoints and searched
vehicles with many passengers.
The plight of
commuters was worsened by the fuel scarcity, which had persisted in the FCT for
two weeks.
Many vehicles
queued at filling stations while commuters, particularly those plying the
Nyanya area struggled to board taxis.
The Force Public
Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, described the deployment of policemen and
soldiers as routine and part of the build-up to the elections.
He called on
Nigerians to be law-abiding during the elections, adding that “voters should
exercise their civic right and go home and rest.”
Ojukwu pledged
that the police would be professional and impartial in the
discharge of their duty to ensure that the elections were credible,
free and fair.
He said, “The
deployment is routine; it is part of the build-up to the elections; we are
working to ensure that the elections are hitch-free, fair and credible. We
therefore implore Nigerians to support the police to achieve their mandate.
Voters should vote and after voting, they should go home and rest.”
Ojukwu also said
in a statement on Thursday that Abba redeployed six DIGs and five
AIGs to coordinate the polls in the six zones of the country.
The affected DIGs
are Dan’Azumi Doma South-East; Mamman Tsafe,
South-South; Hashimu Argungu, South-West; Christopher Katso,
North-West; Hilary Opara, North-East and Adeola Adeniji, North-Central.
The AIGs are
Kalafite Adeyemi, who will serve as assistant coordinator, South-West; Bala
Nasarawa, North-Central; Adisa Bolanta, North-West;
Usman Gwary, Federal Operations , Abuja; and Mark Idakwo, AIG Zone
9 Umuahia.
The IG also
ordered the redeployment of six CP s to various commands for the period of the
elections.
Those affected are
Hosea Karma, Rivers State Command; Adamu Mohammed, Anambra; Dan Bature, Enugu;
Usman Abdullahi, Katsina; Jimoh Ozi-Obeh, Benue and Hyacinth Dagala – CP
Department of Operations,FHQ in Abuja.
Abba directed all
officers to exhibit the highest level of personal and professional conduct in
the discharge of their duties.
36,204
security agents deployed in Lagos
The Lagos State
Police Command said on Thursday that 36,204 security agents would be involved
in the elections.
The CP, Kayode
Aderanti, told journalists at a news conference in Lagos that the
number comprised men of the NPF, the Nigerian Army, the Nigeria Security and
Civil Defence Corps, the Department of State Services , the Nigeria Immigration
Service and others.
Aderanti added
that 500 patrol vehicles, 100 buses, 100 motorcycles, seven trucks, three Black
Maria trucks, one luxury bus, three Armoured Personnel Carriers, one in each
senatorial zone would also be deployed in the state.
According to him,
five gunboats will man the waters while two helicopters will be used for aerial
surveillance and patrol.
The Lagos CP said
movement would be restricted from 6am to 6pm. But the IG had on Monday said
that there would be restriction of movement from 5am to 5pm.
Aderanti
stated, “Parents are warned to speak to their kids and wards not to be used to
perpetrate violence. We’re ready to arrest such persons. 6am to 6pm is the
restriction time for movement. There’ll be total lock down. Try and complete
your movement before 6am. We however reassure those who are essential workers,
that their security would be guaranteed.”
The state
REC, Akin Orebiyi, also told journalists that speed and commercial
boats as well as canoes were ready to take voting materials to the
riverine parts of the state.
The Commander, 9
Brigade, Brig.Gen. A.M. Sabo, while reacting to a question on whether the army
was not flouting a court order by deploying its men in states, said
since the army was specifically called for a national assignment,
it had no choice but to comply.
Bayelsa
In Bayelsa State,
Governor Seriake Dickson declared Friday (today) a work-free day for people who
registered in their communities to travel.
Dickson, in a
statement by his media aide, Daniel Iworiso-Markson,
appealed to the people to turn out en masse to cast their votes for their
preferred candidates.
He stated that his
government had constituted a special committee to ensure compliance by all
offices in the state except financial institutions.
The
REC, Baritor Kpagi, said that INEC was ready for
the polls as it had received all necessary materials.
“All I can tell
you is that we are prepared for the election come Saturday; we have received
the materials required for the election on Saturday. That is all I can say for
now, ” he told journalists in Yenagoa.
Our
correspondents, who visited Otuoke, the home town of President Goodluck
Jonathan saw soldiers and other security operatives at strategic
places awaiting the arrival of Jonathan on Friday (today).
Activities have
picked up in the few hotels in the sleepy community as some of them were almost
fully booked.
Benue
The REC in Benue
State, Istifanus Dafwang, told The PUNCH in Makurdi that the
distribution of electoral materials, including ballot papers, to the 23 Local
Government Areas of the state started on Wednesday night and continued on
Thursday (yesterday).
Dafwang added that
the commission had achieved 84 per cent PVC collection in the
state.
He said he did not
envisage violence because INEC and security agencies had worked to
ensure that the polls were peacefully conducted.
“We have
Inter-Agency Committee on Election Security, where all the heads of the
security agencies are present. The situation is under control”, Dafwang said.
Our correspondent
in the state noticed armed policemen guarding the INEC
office ostensibly to protect electoral materials and ward off
potential troublemakers.
The men of
the Police Anti-Bomb Squad used metal detectors to search visitors
, observers and members of staff of the electoral body.
Niger
The
Niger State Police command and INEC said they were fully prepared for the
elections.
The
REC, Nasir Ayilara, said that the training of all personnel for the
elections had been concluded while the distribution of sensitive
electoral materials to LGAs had commenced.
He
added that as of March 24, about 85.6 per cent of the PVCs had been
distributed.
Ayilara said,
“Logistic arrangement is very adequate and we are hoping that everything will
go smoothly as we have arranged it because all the necessary things that are within
our power have been put in place.”
He explained that
electoral materials would be further distributed to camps set up within the
LGAs on Friday from where they would be moved to polling units for the
elections.
Also,
the Public Relations Officer of the state Police
Command, Ibrahim Gambari, said the police had taken
proactive measures to ensure peace during and after the polls.
He explained that
not only had the police deployed personnel across the state,they had identified
trouble spots and positioned their men to secure them .
Gambari said, “The
Niger State Police Command is totally set for the elections with a view to
having a very peaceful atmosphere before, during and after the elections.
“Part of the
measures we have put in place is to train both our officers and men, mentally
and physically for the conduct of police officers for electoral duty.”
Meanwhile,
residents of the state crowded Automated Teller Machines in banks belying their
concern about a possible outbreak of violence.
A park in the
heart of Minna witnessed a flurry of activities as people scrambled for
vehicles to leave while many also arrived Minna from Abuja and other places.
Cross
River
In Cross River
State, INEC announced that it had attained 86.2 per cent distribution
of PVCs in the state.
The
REC, Sylvester Ezeani, who welcomed accredited election
observers on Thursday, said, “By March 21, the PVCs
collected were over 82 per cent, but I have just received news that the
collection in the state as of today, stands at 86.2 per cent.”
On the level of
preparedness of the commission for the elections, Ezeani said non-sensitive
materials were sent to the LGAs before the February 14 elections
were shifted.
He stated that
what the commission was currently doing was to send more materials
as they arrive from the INEC headquarters.
He said, “We in
the commission are well prepared for Saturday’s elections.
Yesterday(Wednesday), we took delivery of sensitive materials – the ballot
papers, result sheets and everything coming to the office.
“As I speak to
you, most of them have been sorted out and ready to be conveyed to the various
LGAs. By Friday afternoon most of the sensitive and non-sensitive materials
will be taken to the rack centres.”
On the preparation
for reaching remote and riverine areas, he said there were enough boats going
to Bakassi, Boki, Akampa, Ibeno and Obanleko.
Security
operatives mounted roadblocks on major
roads in Calabar metropolis.
Our
correspondents, who went round the city on Thursday, observed that
most shops at the motor spare parts markets were closed as many traders,
especially those from the South-East, were said to have
travelled home to cast their votes.
A’Ibom
INEC
has also started the distribution of sensitive materials
to the 31 LGAs in the state.
The state REC,
Austin Okojie, revealed this to newsmen while briefing them on the commission’s
preparedness for the polls.
According to him,
non-sensitive materials had already been distributed to all the councils in the
state.
He stated that out
of the 1,692,662 PVCs sent to the state, the commission had distributed
1,599,769, representing 95 per cent rate of distribution.
“We have taken
delivery of 4188 card readers meant for accreditation of voters on Saturday
polls, 3650 will be distributed to all the polling units in the state while the
remaining 538 are backups in case of breakdown,” Okojie said.
He added that the
commission had trained 15,452 ad hoc staff to be used on Saturday
and April 11.
INEC, according to
him, has boats to conveying people to riverine areas to enable them to
participate in the elections.
Abia
The sensitive
electoral materials were on Wednesday delivered to INEC from the Umuahia branch
of the Central Bank where they had been deposited.
The REC, Prof.
Selina Oko, who supervised the distribution, said INEC in the state
was determined to conduct credible polls.
She explained that
the materials, including ballot papers and result
sheets, would be taken to the various councils under heavy security.
The Head, Voter
Education and Publicity in charge of the state, Edwin Enabor ,
explained that the reason the commission decided to move both the sensitive and
non- sensitive materials two days ahead of the elections was to avoid
their late arrival as witnessed in some places in past
elections.
He said that the
sensitive materials were customised such that each polling unit has its
peculiar materials.
This, he
explained, was to make rigging impossible.
He advised voters
to comport themselves well at the polling booths and to stay 300 metres away
from polling units after casting their votes.
Federal Goverenmnet floods states with soldiers, police, other security agencies to avoid mayhem as IG redeploys DIGs, CPs
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Friday, March 27, 2015
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