The Independent
National Electoral Commission’s Electoral Institute in Abuja has been gutted by
fire.
The fire which
began at about 11pm on Saturday destroyed bags, envelopes, election forms and
electrical control panel/ switch in the institute’s warehouse
before it was contained at 2am on Sunday.
Before INEC spoke
on the incident, there was apprehension, especially in Abuja on
Sunday that some sensitive materials for the March 28 and April 11 general
elections might have been affected by the inferno.
INEC described the
items damaged by the fire as “non-sensitive and old materials” used for the
2011 elections.
The result of the
2011 presidential poll was announced within the compound of the institute,
which is located along the Airport Road, Abuja.
The electoral body
also ruled out political sabotage and assured Nigerians that the incident would
not in any way affect the conduct of the forthcoming elections.
INEC Director of
Security, Mr. Shettima Ngilladar, who conducted journalists around the affected
area, said there was a power surge which caused the electrical panel/ switch to
go up in flames.
He explained that
no materials for the general elections were in the warehouse as of
the time of the fire as they had been moved to all the states of the
federation.
Ngilladar said,
“These are non-sensitive materials that have been banned in the warehouse. You
will see it yourself. It is not hidden.
“It is something
clear, these banned non-sensitive materials have nothing to do with the
elections.
“They are old
materials in store that have not been evacuated. These are old stock of
non-sensitive materials, like bags, envelopes, election forms which were used
in the 2011 elections. “They won’t be used for the 2015 elections. Everything
here is non-sensitive.”
Disclosing
that security agencies had already started investigating the
incident, the commisson’s security director, said he could not state the
financial loss recorded by INEC.
He said, “I cannot
quantify the financial loss now because they are envelopes, bags and used forms
for elections. So, it is not something I can say how much now.”
On the likelihood
of political sabotage, he said, “Whether it is too long or too early, there is
no political motive about it. It was was caused by power surge.”
INEC’s Deputy
Director, Electoral Logistics, Ken Ukeagu, also said sensitive
materials required for general elections had been moved to the states.
He added, “Whatever
we have here are old stocks of the materials. You know the normal process of
disposing materials take a little while. But these materials here are not
useful for 2015 elections. Even if these were materials that would
have been used, there is no way it would affect the elections.
“All materials
required for the election have been moved to the state, there is no way
anything happening here will affect the elections.”
INEC Commissioner
in Charge of Electoral Logistics, Mohammed Hammanga, who was also
at the institute to inspect the damage, expressed happiness that the materials
affected were old stock.
“We thank God it
has not gone beyond this. We are happy that it has not destroyed the materials
that will be used in the election,” he stated.
Like Ngilladar and
Ukeagu, the Chief Press Secretary to the chairman of the
commission, Kayode Idowu, said the damaged items would not affect
the general elections.
How Fire nearly stopped INEC from conducting 2015 Presidential polls next Saturday
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Monday, March 16, 2015
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