WELCOME TO CRYSTAL RAINBOW’S BLOG: INSIGHTS... HISTORICAL EVENTS... ABADONED AND FORGOTTEN HISTORIES... UNFORGETTABLE INCIDENTS OF THE PAST...
Monday, 10 November 2014
PVC: PDP, APC in war of words
The All
Progressives Congress and the Peoples
Democratic Party engaged in a war of words on
Sunday over hitches in the distribution of the
Permanent Voter Cards by the Independent
National Electoral Commission.
While the APC alleged that INEC had programmed
the exercise to favour the PDP, the ruling party
fired back by accusing it (APC) of having a hidden
agenda.
The APC, in a statement by its National Publicity
Secretary, Lai Mohammed, said that the fact that
most of the states where hitches in the
distribution of the PVCs were pronounced had
the highest number of voters and were under the
control of the APC, pointed to a clear collusion
between INEC and the PDP.
The states are Kano, Edo, Ogun, Imo, Lagos,
Rivers and Nasarawa.
The party also described the development as a
programmed incompetence which could be
traced to INEC’s ICT unit, with the intent of
sabotaging the PVC distribution process in key
states.
It urged the INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega,
to fish out the fifth columnists behind the
sabotage and sanction them appropriately.
The statement partly read, “If INEC is to organise
a free, credible and transparent election next
February, it must quickly return to the drawing
board to fashion out how to ensure that all
Nigerians who are eligible to vote are able to do
so without hindrance, and also purge itself of the
fifth columnists within its ranks who are bent on
sabotaging the elections.
“Having realised it cannot win a free and fair
elections in 2015, the PDP has come up with the
plan to suppress the votes in the APC states which
also harbour the highest number of registered
voters, especially Lagos, Rivers, Kano and Sokoto
states, wondering why the exercise was better
organised in states without a huge number of
votes.”
The APC also alleged that there was a two-
pronged game plan to skew the 2015 general
elections in favour of the PDP.
That the first step, according to the party is to
mess up the collection of the PVCs in states with
the highest number of registered voters so as to
suppress the votes in those states.
The second phase is to delay the voter
registration in the affected states, so that they
will not meet the requirement to participate in
next year’s election, since INEC would not have
finished the voter registration process in those
states.
It also alleged that there was a plot to postpone
the elections in the affected states so that the
PDP-led government could then use the Ekiti
formula that included massive militarisation and
widespread intimidation to prevent free and fair
elections in the states.
APC dismissed INEC’s excuses for the botched
hiccups as lame.
But the PDP, through its National Publicity
Secretary , Chief Olisa Metuh, said while it would
have allowed the INEC to respond to the APC
allegations, it decided to respond because the
opposition party was bent on diverting attention
from “its bad and suspicious activities.”
Metuh, in a telephone interview with one our
correspondents in Abuja, added that while the
APC was making accusations, it might also be
doing some things which were aimed at rigging
the election.
He said, “We are ready for the election. We have
a formidable candidate whom we have endorsed.
“Let the APC bring out its own candidate and face
us. The APC has a hidden agenda and we have all
seen its antics in the past.
“This time around, it won’t work. Whatever evil
the party is planning will not work. It might be the
one colluding with some people to rig but it won’t
work.”
Metuh asked Nigerians to monitor the activities of
the opposition party as the battle for the 2015
general elections rages on.
Before the war of words by the two parties, the
Civil Society Network Against Corruption and a
Lagos lawyer, Jimi Agbaje, had flayed INEC over
what they considered as the shoddy distribution
of the PVCs by the electoral body.
While the CSNAC described INEC’s performance
as abysmal, Agbaje threatened to go to court if
disenfranchised as a result of poor preparation
by INEC.
The CSNAC Chairman, Lanre Suraj, said, “With the
sophisticated nature and population of Lagos
State, the performance of INEC is quite abysmal
in terms of the disappointment in the PVC
distribution.”
Agbaje, who described the PVC distribution as a
flop in Lagos, called for the immediate removal of
Jega.
He said, “It has been terrible. I will go to court if
I’m disenfranchised. I have been there three days
and nobody was there to attend to me. I will
never allow any political shenanigan to deprive
me of my right of franchise.
“This is a deliberate attempt to shortchange
Nigerians. Let me use this opportunity to call on
the Federal Government to remove the INEC
chairman immediately. With the way things are
going, if Jega is not sacked, he is going to wreck
this democracy.”
But the Chief Press Secretary to the INEC
Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, in a statement and
an interview with The PUNCH, in Abuja, on
Sunday, denied the allegations against the
commission.
He also said that the Lagos exercise had been
extended by 24 hours.
Idowu said, “In particular, it is completely false
that INEC has removed the records of 1.4 million
persons from the register of voters compiled in
2011 in Lagos State.
“It is true that at the end of the 2011 general
registration exercise, the commission announced
a figure of 6.1 million registrants in the state.
“But when that data was subjected to the
Automated Fingerprints Identification System
software, 82,892 multiple registrations were
eliminated.
“Also, there was the technical challenge of loss of
data and incomplete data affecting about one
million records – mostly in 1,792 polling units that
were identified and made public before the
present exercise. That was why/how the Post-
Business Rule figure for Lagos State (on the basis
of which PVCs were printed) came down to about
4.6 million registrants.”
According to him, a pre-acknowledge data loss
and incomplete data of some registrants is not a
“conspiracy” issue as has been alleged by some
individuals.
He said, “It is a back-end technical challenge that
is far from sealing the fate of affected persons
and for which INEC has already put in place
measures to ensure redress.
“The commission has made provision for eligible
persons for whom PVCs could not been printed
due to data loss or defective data to come out
from Wednesday, November 12 to Monday,
November 17, 2014 for their data to be
recaptured during the CVR.”
Idowu further explained that in special
consideration for the 1,792 polling units in Lagos
State where the challenge is much pronounced,
the CVR will take place at the polling unit level as
against the registration area level in other parts of
the state.
While reassuring the public of INEC’s unwavering
sincerity of purpose, Idowu said the commission
regretted the inconvenience caused members of
the public by the hitches.
Idowu said, “Contrary to allegations in some
quarters, no duly registered person has been
delisted from the Register of Voters neither will
any be denied his/ her PVC.
“This reassurance is against the backdrop of
temporary challenges that have been experienced
in the third phase of the distribution of PVCs in
some states, which the commission has been
making vigorous efforts to remediate.”
According to him, the distribution of the PVCs
since Friday November 7 in nine states is under
the third phase of the exercise.
He said, “Continuous Voter Registration is
scheduled to hold in the same states from
Wednesday, November 12 to Monday, November
17 2014. Similar exercises have already been
conducted in 24 other states and the Federal
Capital Territory under the first and the second
phases of the programme.
He added that the commission had deferred the
distribution of PVCs in four other states earlier
listed for the third phase because printers were
yet to fully deliver the cards.
This, according to Idowu, is partly the same
reason that the commission rescheduled the
distribution of PVCs in limited areas of Lagos and
Nasarawa states.
He also said the outstanding cards would
however be distributed in good time before the
2015 general elections.
“They are presently being produced and have
been scheduled for distribution under the fourth
phase of the exercise from Friday, November
28th to Sunday, November 30th, 2014”, Idowu
said.
The Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Sarah
Ochekpe, on Sunday also asked INEC to extend
the time for the distribution of the PVCs.
The minister told journalists in Jos that the two
days earmarked for the exercise in Plateau State
was inadequate as some people did not find their
names on the register.
She said, “I wish to say that the distribution of the
permanent voter cards is successful in Plateau
because I am just coming from my village, and I
was able to collect mine and that means people in
the rural areas were also able to get to get theirs.
“Though it was noticed that there are some
hiccups here and there, but I expect that INEC will
take advantage of the registration of voters,
which starts on the 12th to ensure that those who
have attained the age of 18 are registered and
also that those who could not find their names in
the registers are properly captured.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured post
AFRICA: THE TRIBE CALLED “YORUBA” IN NIGERIA
RANDOM FACTS ABOUT YORÚBÀ THAT PUTS NIGERIA ON THE MAP💫 1.The richest estate in Nigeria is found in yorubaland 🤞. RANDOM FACTS ABOUT ...
-
The Kaduna State Government says it is concluding work on the establishment of a Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the massacre in Zaria b...
-
Historical styles dominated 19th-century architecture in the United States. American architecture, like the country itself, was young and wa...
-
An intricate statue, carved out of steatite more than four thousand years ago, Priest-King (as the figure has come to be known) is among...
No comments:
Post a Comment