Inside Nigeria
Using Server for 2019 Election Would Have Been Illegal, INEC Insists
The Server controversy between the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, and the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, continues as the electoral body insists that no server was deployed for the 2019 general election in Nigeria saying doing so would have rendered the entire exercise illegal.
Solomon Soyebi, Osun State, INEC National Commissioner, explained that the issue of the server was dropped while adding that the commission only experimented the use of a server in the Anambra, Sokoto and Osun elections.
Soyebi said: “First, our budget came out very late. There was also (an) issue (with) the Electoral Act. For these and some other reasons, the commission did not adopt that option; 2019 elections were conducted according to the law.
“We used the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, we used the Electoral Act and our guidelines for 2019 elections. If you look at the three instruments carefully, the issue of the server was not highlighted.”
The Independent National Electoral Commission said it only experimented the electronic transmission of results through the use of a server and it was not deployed in the 2019 general elections.
The commission insists it did not make use of a server in 2019 despite budgeting and receiving N2.27 billion budgeted for server-related procurement items.
“We piloted the use of transmission of election results electronically in Sokoto, in Anambra, even in Osun,” Soyebi said. “What happened was that we were trying to pilot to see the desirability of such technology in our electoral process.
“Once in a while, you will see an experiment going on but we have to pilot it before we will deploy wholesale for election. We did not use it because of circumstances beyond the control of the Commission,” Soyebi said.