Tag: Presidential

  • Dangote Refinery: 28 CSOs Vow to Form Situation Room to Monitor Implementation of Tinubu’s Directive

    Dangote Refinery: 28 CSOs Vow to Form Situation Room to Monitor Implementation of Tinubu’s Directive

    By Tony Omelebele

    After a facility tour of the Dangote Refinery in Lagos over the weekend, a group of civil society organisations, CSOs, resolved to set up a situation room to monitor the compliance of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited, NNPCL, to President Bola Tinubu’s directive that the corporation should sell crude to the world’s largest single train refinery in Naira.

    The Crest recalls that the nation had recently woken up to a serious of controversies between the NNPCL and Dangote Refinery, a situation which many Nigerians felt deeply embarrassed the country and sent disturbing signals to foreign investors about the safety of their investments. Cans of worms were freely flipped during the controversies with the Chairman of Dangote Refinery, threatening to sell his controlling shares in the biggest 650bdp world’s largest single train refinery in the world.

    At the height of the verbal war, President Bola Tinubu had to intervene, directing the NNPCL to sell crude to the refinery in Naira, an action widely applauded by Nigerians, who believed that some forces were desperately trying to frustrate the project so they could perpetuate fuel importation.

    Solomon Adodo, leader of the one of the visiting CSOs, Rise Up for A United Nigeria, whose spoke on behalf of the others, marveled at the gargantuan scope of the refinery and wondered why any agency of government would want to side with importers of petroleum products in order to  frustrate the world class facility.

    Adodo revealed that the CSOs have agreed to urge the Federal Government to adopt the Dangote Refinery as a national asset as it would break the vicious cycle of fuel importation and save Nigeria precious foreign exchange.

    “Having gone round to see this world class project,” Adodo continued, “we are at a loss as to why the government could decide to turn against Nigerians in this manner. But we are not too surprised given our past experiences. Those who are profiting from our collective misfortune will not want the Dangote refinery to work.

    “We are ready to defend this facility with everything as civil society organizations. We are not speaking on our behalf but on behalf of all Nigerians and on behalf of our fatherland. It leaves much to be desired how an agency of government with oversight function to guide to grow such a project as this would now be disparaging same project. This is too bad.

    “We have seen for ourselves and we have cleared all doubt as to the completion of this refinery and the readiness to supply all our domestic needs. We will expose them all. Anyone who is not ready to ensure Nigerians have a new lease of life must give way.

    “Going forward, we are going to set up a situation room to monitor the compliance of the NNPCL with the directive of Mr. President that Dangote Refinery would be supplied with Crude in Naira because we know that the enemies of the people would want to adopt another strategy to sabotage the presidential directive.

    “It is a criminal audacity for an agency of government to brazenly disparage a national asset like Dangote Refinery, moreso when government has four refineries and all of them are moribund, how then would you treat a private investor who has committed everything to build a functional refinery much more bigger than all the four owned by government put together.

    “Nigerians are not stupid; we all know what is interplaying here. They told us that after removing fuel subsidy, market forces would force the price down. What a fallacy…. Here we are, the forces have only succeeded in pushing the price up. Now, we have a local refinery that will bail us out, yet they don’t want it to operate.”

    Adodo didn’t stop there. He declared that the CSOs would mount serious advocacy to make government accede to demands of Nigerians by not granting the sale of crude to Dangote Refinery in Naira but also ensuring that Dangote petroleum products are available at petrol stations across the country.

    Welcoming the group, Vice-President, Dangote Industries Limited, Mr. Devakumar Edwin, described Dangote Refinery as a value adding facility as it will stop the exportation of Nigeria’s crude and importation of finished products and wonder why government would be against such a vision for Nigeria.

    He reminded the gathering that many African countries are blessed with so many minerals but are not adding value to their economies because they export the minerals raw and import the finished products at high costs. He insisted that the anomalous situation must be corrected.

    “This is what Dangote refinery seeks to correct,”  we did same in Cement and Sugar sectors where Nigeria was a leading importer of those products and with the coming of Dangote leading the backward integration programme of the government, others came into the sector and together Nigeria now exports cement to other countries.

    “What we want to do in Refinery, we have done it other businesses, Nigeria used to be the biggest importer of Sugar, we came in and changed the narrative. We led the backward integration scheme of the federal government, and we now produce sugar locally for domestic consumption and others have joined us. We did same in Cement by opening up production plant and today Nigeria exports cement to other countries.

    “In a business no one was interested in investing into, Dangote delved into it, determined to ensure Nigeria no longer imports fuel, invested massively and came up with the world’s largest single train refinery. He said he would not take his money to Dubai or Swiss banks as others are doing, he decided to invest at home and now they are saying he wants to create monopoly.

    “We didn’t ask for any favour other than that we want to buy crude to produce, first they said there was no crude, later they said we would have to pay some dollars above the prevailing crude market price. And this is a global market where you can track crude prices anytime. We resorted to buying crude from Brazil and United States. Later they said we should not be announcing the price of the products.

    “Even the US that is the leading proponent of free market economy protects its local industries by imposing huge duty on from foreign imports just to protect local industries. This is a man that Saudi Aramco once approached to come and cite his refinery in Saudi Arabia, promising steady supply of crude. Abu Dahbi also invited him to do same on their soil but he rejected insisting he would build at home, now he did that and a facility that is supposed to add value to Nigeria’s economy is being frustrated.”

    The Dangote Vice-President said the Company would continue to focus on its business strategy which is to add value to Nigeria economy through investments and job creation for the teeming Nigerian masses. According to him, Nigeria can only consume 45% of the capacity of the refinery while the remaining 55% will be exported and bring into the country foreign exchange needed badly.

     

     

  • Atiku Fumes, Says Tinubu Plans to Reward Wike with Ministerial Job for Rigging Presidential Election

    Atiku Fumes, Says Tinubu Plans to Reward Wike with Ministerial Job for Rigging Presidential Election

    Atiku Abubakar, Presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 election has alleged that President Bola Tinubu is planning to reward ex-governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike with a ministerial appointment for ‘rigging the presidential election’ in the state.

    Special Assistant on Public Communication to Atiku in a statement signed on Sunday night, said that presidential election results in states like Rivers showed that the election was far from being credible.

    He said: “It was tragic that Tinubu was planning on rewarding former Governor Nyesom Wike with a ministerial portfolio despite the accusations of rigging levelled against him as well as a pending petition against the former Governor which has attracted nearly 300,000 votes.

    “The Presidential election in Rivers State was clearly rigged as evidenced by what INEC has uploaded on IREV. So far, nearly 300,000 Nigerians have signed a petition on change.org demanding visa bans against Governor Wike.

    “Tinubu is now on the verge of appointing Wike as a minister as a reward for that disgraceful election. What a shame. And this is the character who claimed to have fought for the actualisation of June 12?

    “I call on the United States and the United Kingdom to speed up the process of imposing visa bans on election riggers.

    “They should also reveal the identities of those implicated in election rigging especially staff of INEC and members of the ruling All Progressives Congress.”

  • Presidential Election Petition: Atiku, Obi Lose Round 1 As Court Rejects Live Broadcast of Proceedings

    Presidential Election Petition: Atiku, Obi Lose Round 1 As Court Rejects Live Broadcast of Proceedings

    The Presidential Election Petition Court, (PEPC) on Monday in Abuja, dismissed the application by the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP)  and the Labour Party, for live broadcast of court proceedings.

    In a unanimous decision, the five-member panel held that the order sought by the petitioners lacked merit and was outside the scope of the petition.

    The judges held that televising of proceedings was not provided for in any law.

    They held that the court was created by the constitution and operated under the law by the Court of Appeal.

    “The court was created to hear and determine the petitions before it and can not act as an Avant Garde.

    “The undue pressure of allowing cameras into the courtroom should be avoided as the impact it would have on witnesses could not be predicted.

    “The court is created to find out the truth and should be allowed to do so,” Justice Tsammani said.

  • Buhari’s Bombshell: Overconfidence Cost Atiku, Obi’s Presidential Election

    Buhari’s Bombshell: Overconfidence Cost Atiku, Obi’s Presidential Election

    President Muhammadu Buhari has given reasons why the opposition parties –PDP, LP and others lost the 2023 Presidential election to the  All Progressives Congress (APC).

    According to a statement by his spokesman, Garba Shehu, Buhari spoke at the State House when he received the Progressives Governors’ Forum led by the Chairman, Governor Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi State.

    “They were already telling their foreign backers that they would defeat the APC. Our Party blended confidence with caution, we worked hard and won. Now, their over confidence is creating more problems for the opposition than anyone else. They are finding it hard to convince those who supported them from outside why they are unable to beat us.

    “A combination of over confidence, complacency and bad tactical moves made them lose, plain and clear. This has created more problems in their camp. Why did they fail to remove us?” the President was quoted to have said.

    In response to an issue raised by Bagudu, Buhari said: “An important reason I congratulate Asiwaju on winning is because the opposition got support and false hope from outside and went on to create the impression that they will win, that they will defeat us.”

    “How more wrong could anyone be?” he asked.

    The President charged the Progressive Governors to stick together and openly address issues among themselves.

    “Try and keep solving problems. Be courageous to discuss them openly between yourselves. This is the best way to survive politically in Nigeria,” said the President, urging that “you (Governors) have a program to meet regularly and to discuss issues and how to maintain the Party nationwide.”

    The Governors in attendance in addition to Kebbi were from Plateau, Imo, Kwara, Ekiti, Kaduna, Kogi, Lagos, Cross Rivers , Jigawa, Katsina, Ogun and Nasarawa States.

    The Deputy Governors of Kano, Gombe, Borno and Ebonyi were in attendance, as well as the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha.

  •  Leaked Phone Conversation: LP Confirms Obi Told  Oyedepo Presidential Election Was  Religious War

     Leaked Phone Conversation: LP Confirms Obi Told  Oyedepo Presidential Election Was  Religious War

    The Labour Party (LP) has confirmed the leaked phone conversation between its presidential candidate in the 2023 general elections, Peter Obi and the founder of the Living Faith Church Worldwide, Bishop David Oyedepo, in which Obi described the presidential election as a “religious war.”

    In an audio phone conversation between Obi and Bishop Oyedepo before the February 25 presidential election and now leaked by Peoples Gazette, Oyedepo began his prayer for the former governor of Anambra State by saying, “In Jesus’ name, we are going to get a bright tomorrow,” with Obi replying by saying, “When I hear these prayers, it is very dear to me and like I keep saying, if this thing works, you people will never regret the support.”

    Continuing the conversation, Oyedepo said, “We look forward to God’s intervention,” to which Obi responded by saying, “Thank you, Daddy. I need you to speak to your people in the Southwest and Kwara. The Christians in the Southwest and Kwara.” Bishop Oyedepo said: “Okay.”

    Obi continued by saying: “This is a religious war,” with Oyedepo responding immediately, “I believe you, I believe that. You know, I did a release, ‘Nigeria going forward’ and I’m coming out with the second one today.”

    “You know what I said in the first one, a sick nation like Nigeria requires a strong and healthy personality, and I said that anyone whose source of wealth cannot be verified should not have access to governance, particularly in an economy like Nigeria. I want to assure you that in the name of Jesus, the results shall be favourable,” Oyedepo said.

    Oyedepo further promised to get Christians in Kwara State to vote for Obi while Obi confirmed to the cleric that he was worried over Kogi and Niger states but that he was working on it as he was meeting with Christian communities in those states. Obi also requested that Bishop Oyedepo should send the second statement to him personally.

    The phone conversation has generated mixed reactions with many Nigerians including those from the opposition political parties condemning Obi for engaging in religious and ethnic politics and tagging the 2023 presidential election as a religious war.

    However, the spokesperson for the Labour Party Presidential Campaign Council, Kenneth Okonkwo confirmed that the call is genuine but said it was a private conversation, which he claimed the opposition was trying to use against Obi.

    Okonkwo said: “Our attention has been drawn to the publication of this audio tape of private conversation between @peterobigregory and Bishop Oyedepo. It is not surprising that these political criminals are trying to spin the conversation as if Obi was making a religious statement.

    “First, the context of the conversation was aptly put by Bishop Oyedepo when he said “All Nigerians have equal stake in this nation, nobody has the right to claim that he is dashing something to someone”.

    “His Excellency Peter Obi was simply urging the Bishop to help him push this message of equal stake of all Nigerians in the Nigerian project to his people and the Christendom because the politicians of the other party is carrying on this campaign as if it is a religious war.

    “To drive home this point, he informed him that he visited the traditional ruler of Offa, the Olofa of Offa, who is a Muslim but who advised Obi to get the support of Oyedepo and be assured of his own support. No Politician has ever visited the Olofa of Offa

    “It is clear to everybody that the APC political party that has a Presidential Candidate, Vice Presidential Candidate, Senate President, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, National Chairman of the Party all from one religion at a time the CJN is a Muslim is the Party that has declared religious war on Nigerians and we must all rise up together to fight this unconstitutional act of religious intolerance of other religions by APC.

    “I went around with Obi on the campaign train and never saw him discriminate against any religion. Of course he can’t because his Vice is a Muslim unlike APC. I resigned from APC because of their religious intolerance. Nigerians should disregard any insinuation of religious bigots about this tape.”

  • Nigeria: Beyond the elections, By Reuben Abati

    Nigeria: Beyond the elections, By Reuben Abati

    We have to go back to the Uwais Commission Report! Above all, electoral offenders must be punished. We must re-open the conversation about the need for an Electoral Offences Commission, passed by the Senate in July 2021, blocked by the House of Representatives. But now here we are, with thugs all over the place, from INEC officials to palaces, worship places, to social media, making Nigerian democracy a joke. And how can this country find healing and reconciliation after all the wounds inflicted on all fronts in this electoral season? 

    Nigerians looked forward to their just concluded state elections – gubernatorial and State Houses of Assembly – held on Saturday, 18 March, with fervent hope that their expectations would be met. They had managed to survive the presidential and National Assembly elections of 25 February, which resulted in controversy, protests, and with two of the major parties heading to the Presidential Election Tribunal to challenge the process and the declaration of the candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC),  Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as president-elect. Both local and international observers, with the striking exception of Federal Government spokespersons – Alhaji Lai Mohammed and Mallam Garba Shehu and of course, APC supporters – had dismissed the election as “flawed”, “far short of international standards.” The presidential candidates of the PDP – Atiku Abubakar and the Labour Party – Peter Obi called for the cancellation of the presidential election. 

    In general, questions were raised about the failure of INEC to abide by enabling laws and its own regulations and guidelines, the failure in particular of the Bimodal Voters’ Accreditation System (BVAS), and INEC not keeping to its promise to upload results to its results viewing portal in real time; there were also challenges arising from voter intimidation and logistics, the dominance of ethnicity and religion as deciding factors, vote-buying despite the scarcity of cash at the time due to the Central Bank’s naira redesign policy, violence across many states – Lagos, Rivers, Taraba, Akwa Ibom, Edo, Kogi, Bayelsa, FCT, Enugu, Osun, Ondo and Ogun, and the wanton violation of the law by prominent figures displaying their ballot papers at polling units. In that election, voting had to be rescheduled in 141 polling units in Bayelsa State, where BVAS machines had been carted away or materials did not arrive on time or at all. The general word of advice to INEC is that it should address whatever technical glitches that affected the polls on 25 February, and that the security agencies should improve on their performance. Public expectation was further raised by the fact that INEC approached the Court to reconfigure BVAS in readiness for the next elections and having been granted leave to do so, it subsequently postponed the state elections from 11 March to 18 March, thus gaining more time.   Indeed, INEC and the security agencies after a meeting of the Inter-Agency Consultative Committee on Election Security assured Nigerians that all would be well on 18 March – far more demanding elections covering in 28 states, 1,021 constituencies, and over 930 candidates. 

    Nigerians are incurable optimists, but their enthusiasm was subdued on 18 March, as seen in the emergent reports of voter apathy and low voter turn-out. Young men chose to play football on the streets of Rivers State. In Yenagoa, Bayelsa people went to the markets as if there was no restriction of movement on election day. The observed shortcomings of the 25 February process robbed many of faith that their votes would count. Nevertheless, INEC officials arrived early in most parts of the country. Where voting commenced early, there were no reports of “big men” displaying their ballot papers. INEC also did a better job of uploading results to its portal, even if in other places, voters were told pointedly that there would be no uploading of results and that all results would be taken to the state collation centres. To be fair, the law does not expressly state how INEC should upload election results. However, in terms of the general atmosphere and outcomes, during and after the voting, the 18 March elections were worse. 

    This has been attributed to the fact that the professional political class had seen how the political map of the country was significantly altered after the 25 February elections. Labour Party, a movement that had been revived only a few months earlier in 2022, won 36 seats in the House of Representatives, four seats in the Senate, and practically swept the polls in the South-East. The Labour Party further accomplished the feat of beating the ruling APC in Lagos State, the stronghold of the APC presidential candidate. Strong, established politicians were also defeated, including Senator Philip Aduda, who had been in the Senate for a record four terms; Senators Abubakar Bagudu, Gabriel Suswam, Tanko Al-Makura, Uche Ekwunife, Bala Ibn Na’Allah, Kabiru Gaya, Stella Oduah, Biodun Olujimi, Bashiru Ajibola. And in the House of Representatives – Hon. Ndudi Elumelu, Hon. Nkeruika Onyejeocha. These are political heavyweights but they were defeated. In addition, incumbent governors seeking a trip to the Senate – the usual retirement, idling destination for former Nigerian governors were disappointed: Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi (Enugu); Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia), Ben Ayade (Cross River), Abubakar Bagudu (Kebbi), Samuel Ortom (Benue), Simon Lalong (Plateau), and Darius Ishaku (Taraba). Ahead of the 18 March elections, President Buhari made it clear that there would be no such thing as the annulment of election as happened in 1993. Whoever is aggrieved should go to the courts. Nigerians have mixed feelings about the judiciary. The manner in which those who were declared winners trumpeted the phrase: “let us meet in court” further deepened suspicions.

    The received wisdom in Nigerian politics is that it is better to win by any means possible, collect the Certificate of Return and allow the aggrieved persons to complain and file petitions. By the way, it is not every loser in an election that would seek legal redress: lawyers don’t come cheap during election seasons in Nigeria! It is their own stomach infrastructure moment too. Hence, what we witnessed on 18 March in most parts of the country was war, with dosages of violence, death, pathos, and burlesque.

    Given this scenario, it turned out that politicians went to the 18 March polls with greater desperation. Nobody wanted to leave anything to chance. The received wisdom in Nigerian politics is that it is better to win by any means possible, collect the Certificate of Return and allow the aggrieved persons to complain and file petitions. By the way, it is not every loser in an election that would seek legal redress: lawyers don’t come cheap during election seasons in Nigeria! It is their own stomach infrastructure moment too. Hence, what we witnessed on 18 March in most parts of the country was war, with dosages of violence, death, pathos, and burlesque. Every identifiable bane of Nigerian politics was on full display. Violence – in Imo State, INEC officials were kidnapped, and later rescued; persons were killed in Gboko South LGA, Benue State; also in Ibiono Ibom, Akwa Ibom State; in Lagos, persons were killed, macheted, and journalists from Arise News, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), AIT, and celebrities were brutalised by hoodlums and criminal gangs who took over the streets and threatened to harm anyone who voted for any party other than the ruling party. 

    In Rivers, gunmen invaded Elibrada Community in Emohua local government, and killed three persons; two others were killed in Bori, Khana LGA. In the same Rivers State, the APC Campaign Director, Chisom Lennard, was abducted and later shot dead in Ahoada West LGA. In Ebonyi, the state Chairman of the PDP was beaten to a state of coma. He died from injuries. Two persons were killed in Ethiope West, LGA, Delta State. By the morning of 19 March, the media was reporting over 30 deaths. To win an election, those seeking leadership positions were ready to kill the same people they promised to serve! INEC and its officials and equipment were equally a special target: In Taraba, Lagos, Rivers, Kebbi, Benue, and Delta, BVAS machines were snatched, ballot boxes were either stolen and carted way or set ablaze as in the Ojo LGA of Lagos State. It must be added though that INEC officials have been accused of malpractices. In Owerri North LGA of Imo State and in parts of the North, INEC officials were caught helping to thumb-print ballot papers in favour of political parties of their choice. The reign of impunity has since continued. On Sunday evening, thugs invaded the LGA Collation Centre in Obingwa, Abia State. There was so much tension in Kano State, the state government had to declare a curfew yesterday. The people defied it. In Delta State, the collation of results was delayed because INEC officials had been held hostage in Ughelli North, allegedly on the orders of a powerful gubernatorial candidate. After the announcement of the gubernatorial result in Nasarawa State yesterday, people took to the streets in protest. Both the PDP and APGA in that state believe that the results were manipulated in favour of the APC. 

    Vote buying/voter inducement: It has been reported that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) by 18 March had arrested more than 65 suspects involved in vote buying. The sad news is that in some of the states, cash was given out in the open, with policemen in attendance, looking the other way. The performance of the security agencies varied. The police were happy to be on duty. In fact, in some states, it was reported that they helped hoodlums to snatch ballot boxes. The Supreme Court had ruled that old redesigned notes should remain legal tender, and before 18 March, the CBN had formally directed all deposit money banks to comply. Unlike 25 February, there was money to go round on election day, 18 March. Poverty became a stronger weapon in the hands of politicians.

    Voter suppression: this was also a big problem, what rankles was the brazenness and the variety of it. The most obvious was the deployment of criminal gangs in various parts of the country, especially Lagos, Rivers, and Delta. In Delta, there is a video of Mr Fred Ajudua telling voters in Ibuzo: “If you are not voting PDP, stay in your house”. It was worse in Lagos where ahead of the election, traditional rulers in the state announced a traditional Oro festival, telling women and non-indigenes to stay indoors at certain hours. When public outcry made that impossible, thugs and touts were deployed to the streets to tell the people how to vote or face the consequences. On election day, the same thugs took charge. Polling units were relocated either to the main road where thugs could have easy access, or to traditional palaces. One traditional ruler locked the gates to his estate. In areas that had been identified as strongholds of the Labour Party on 25 February, Igbos were prevented from voting. It was said that Lagos is for the indigenes, and that Igbo tenants and settlers should not think of dictating who becomes governor in Lagos. It was absurd and crude. Yet, this election strategy has been defended by otherwise educated and intelligent people. My friend and brother, Femi Fani-Kayode has written a piece in which he says Lagos belongs to Yoruba people and Igbos should return to their own land. He even says Gbadebo Rhodes Vivour (Labour Party), a Yoruba, cannot be governor in Yorubaland because his mother is Igbo. Coming from FFK, who defended Nnamdi Kanu, and who has four smart, good-looking sons from an Igbo woman, I can only say that I am flabbergasted. This is what politics does to us? Bayo Onanuga, co-founder and managing director of TheNews, former MD of NAN and a seasoned journalist, is an Ijebu-Ode man but working for APC. He has been arguing that he has no apologies for saying that Igbos should not interfere in Lagos politics. A settler in Lagos telling another settler to mind his business in Lagos? 

    I have tried, thus far, to document the highlights of 18 March for record purposes. But what next for Nigeria? I argued in this same space last week, that despite the avalanche of litigations that would arise, not much would change. Chidi Odinkalu says the next round of voting is by the judiciary. It is unfortunate that it is the judiciary that would determine a matter that should be the actual prerogative of the electorate. But given the nature of our elections jurisprudence, the judiciary cannot cure all the ills that we have seen.

    But the part of the elections of 18 March that I found even more curious was the spiritual side of it. In Lagos, spirituality and occultism were thrown into the mix. How widespread this was may not be easy to establish but at least we can quote a few examples. In Lagos, there is a video in circulation showing some Lagos Chiefs at a shrine called “Oju Alale”, literally the shrine for the worship of the founders of the community, raining curses on Igbos in Lagos and praying for the incumbent governor’s victory in the election. On election day, some cultists dressed in complete secret society habiliments were seen in Ikeja shouting “Agan o, Agan o” and warning non-indigenes not to vote foolishly. In Oyo State, members of a syncretic church were also shown raining incantations on a small ram and praying that Senator Teslim Folarin must win the Oyo State gubernatorial election. Folarin did not win. I believe the remains of that ram ended up in the bellies of the pastors. Only God knows how many animals lost their lives at ritual conclaves because Nigeria held an election in 2023. 

    I have tried, thus far, to document the highlights of 18 March for record purposes. But what next for Nigeria? I argued in this same space last week, that despite the avalanche of litigations that would arise, not much would change. Chidi Odinkalu says the next round of voting is by the judiciary. It is unfortunate that it is the judiciary that would determine a matter that should be the actual prerogative of the electorate. But given the nature of our elections jurisprudence, the judiciary cannot cure all the ills that we have seen. Apparently, Nigerians have not learnt any lessons from the errors of the past. In 2007, President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua publicly confessed that the 2007 process that brought him into power was flawed. He pledged to correct the situation. His successor, President Goodluck Jonathan kept that promise in 2011, and again in 2015. Between then and now, all the gains have been erased, and we seem to have returned to the pre-1999 era.  What is the way forward? One, the task of electoral reform is not yet over. It has just started. The emergence of the Electoral Act 2022 generated a lot of excitement but these elections have exposed many loopholes in it. It has to be reviewed. 

    Two, we are far from where we should be with regard to technology. BVAS, IREV sounded like nice phrases, but they triggered more problems. Is Nigeria ready for technology or are we just gambling? Three, the independence of the electoral body must be addressed. INEC’s integrity is a major issue today. Rotimi Amaechi, former governor, and former minister of Transportation has blown the whistle that the INEC Chair, Professor Yakubu Mahmood was nominated by someone close to the president-elect and that he once worked with Governor Wike at the federal level. Wike probably knew this all along, but he is now speaking up because it is convenient for him to condemn the same government he served. What we can take from his protest is that going forward, INEC Chair, Commissioners, and Returning Officers should never be appointees or nominees of the ruling government and party. We have to go back to the Uwais Commission Report! Above all, electoral offenders must be punished. We must re-open the conversation about the need for an Electoral Offences Commission, passed by the Senate in July 2021, blocked by the House of Representatives. But now here we are, with thugs all over the place, from INEC officials to palaces, worship places, to social media, making Nigerian democracy a joke. And how can this country find healing and reconciliation after all the wounds inflicted on all fronts in this electoral season? 

    • Reuben Abati is an anchor at Arise Television, and  former presidential spokesperson.

  • Peter Obi Laments, Says 2023 Presidential Election Worst in Nigeria’s History

    Peter Obi Laments, Says 2023 Presidential Election Worst in Nigeria’s History

    The presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) Peter Obi has lamented over the 2023 presidential election insisting it is the worst in Nigeria’s history and a setback to the democratic process.

    Obi made the comment when he was featured on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily on Thursday, saying despite the humungous amount budgeted for the election, the exercise did not meet people’s  expectations.

    Obi said: “We have seen probably what I consider the worst election in our recent history because of the Electoral law [Act] of 2022 which gave so much hope and the huge expenditure we put into technology.

    “Do you know what it means to spend over $1bn? So, there was so much that was promised and then we went back to what it used to be. For me, that is very devastating.”

    Obi, who berated the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over its failure to transmit results of the presidential election in real-time via its portal, said the conduct of the 2023 exercise has downgraded the country.

    He added: “Everybody paid so much emphasis on the law and the technology. You promise so much and don’t even meet the minimum.Whenever there is an election announced globally, what it does is that it uplifts the ratings of that society.”

    He says the conduct of the presidential election has further dampened the morale of youths who had so much hope in the process.

    Obi, however, expresses optimism that he would get justice in the court as he challenges the victory of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the All progressives Congress, APC saying: “I  am not hurt or saddened personally but I am for my country and the future it portends for the young ones and the future generation because we can’t go on this way.

    “We must build and bequeath them a better future.”

  • BVAS Reconfiguration Ready Tuesday As INEC Confirms 170,000 Presidential Results Uploaded on IReV

    BVAS Reconfiguration Ready Tuesday As INEC Confirms 170,000 Presidential Results Uploaded on IReV

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has revealed that over 170,000 polling unit results from the presidential and National Assembly elections on February 25 had been uploaded to its Result Viewing Portal (IReV).

    The electoral body added that the reconfiguration of the Bimodal Voter Registration Systems (BVAS) would be completed by Tuesday in time for the March 18 gubernatorial and state assembly elections.

    This was announced by the Commission’s National Commissioner, Festus Okoye saying: “As at the last time, over 170,000 of those results have been uploaded.

    “As you are aware, we are reconfiguring the BVAS for purposes of the governorship and state assembly elections, and any BVAS that was used for the presidential and National Assembly elections that do not push to the accreditation backend, the data relating to the conduct of the presidential and National Assembly elections will not be reconfigured.

    “In fact, the BVAS will not allow itself to be reconfigured or reset if the entire data is not pushed to the accreditation backend.

    “I’m sure that by Tuesday when we hope to complete the resettling of the BVAS for the purposes of the governorship and state assembly elections, the results in all the places where elections were conducted would have been pushed to the accreditation backend.”

    Every Nigerian, according to Okoye, has the constitutional and legal right to protest.

    However, he stated that no political party would be permitted to examine the BVAS’s brain or voter biometrics.

    He stated that INEC was the regulator of political parties and that the commission would not abdicate its primary responsibility to dissatisfied  political parties.

    He stated that the court decision allowing voters to vote using temporary voter cards did not apply to all Nigerians, but only to those who went to court.

    In addition, the INEC commissioner blamed political parties for making polling units “inaccessible” to voters, resulting in low turnout at the last election.

    He stated that INEC learned “valuable lessons” from the presidential and National Assembly elections that would be applied to the governorship and state assembly elections.

    He stated that serious efforts are being made to resolve issues with the IReV portal ahead of the March 18 polls, and that the commission’s ICT department is aware of what to do if there are issues with the uploading of polling unit results on the IReV portal during the March 18 polls.

    He said political parties deployed more polling unit agents than the number of officials deployed by the Commission and so they monitored their results per polling units.

    The INEC commissioner continued: “The Electoral Act 2022 makes it clear that every registered political party in conjunction with their candidates have the right to send agents to every polling units in Nigeria. The PDP as a political party deployed a total of 176,588 polling agents. The Labour Party deployed a total of 134,874 polling agents. The NNPP deployed a total of 176,200 while the APC deployed a total of 176,223.

    “The commission deployed to 176,666 polling units. So, the political parties deployed more agents to the polling units than the number of polling units that opened. What that means is that each political party got a copy of Form EC 8 which is the polling unit result sheet which is the result sheet that is uploaded into the IReV portal.”

    The IReV and BVAS are new technologies introduced by the electoral body for voting accreditation and electronic transmission in this year’s elections.

    During the presidential and National Assembly elections, opposition parties were outraged that INEC officials at polling units were unable to electronically upload election results to the IReV, as required by Section 60 of the Electoral Act 2022. The parties fought against the manual collation of results and the announcement of poll winners.

    The electoral body promised to fix the problems, but opposition parties have gone to court to challenge the victory of All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate Bola Tinubu, who was declared Nigeria’s President-Elect by the electoral umpire.

    A Court of Appeal in Nigeria’s political capital, Abuja, granted INEC permission to reconfigure the BVAS for the governorship and state assembly elections last week.

    The Labour Party (LP) and its presidential candidate, Peter Obi, had requested a court order prohibiting INEC from tampering with the information in the BVAS machines until the necessary inspection is carried out and certified true copies (CTC) are issued.

  • Buhari Congratulates Winner of Presidential Election, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

    Buhari Congratulates Winner of Presidential Election, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

    President Muhammadu Buhari heartily congratulates the winner of the (2023) Presidential Election, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Reacting to the results just announced, President Buhari said: “I congratulate His Excellency Bola Ahmed Tinubu on his victory. Elected by the people, he is the best person for the job. I shall now work with him and his team to ensure an orderly handover of power.

    “The election was Africa’s largest democratic exercise. In a region that has undergone backsliding and military coups in recent years, this election demonstrates democracy’s continued relevance and capability to deliver for the people it serves.

    “Within Nigeria, the results reveal democracy’s ripening in our country. Never has the electoral map shifted so drastically in one cycle. In the presidential elections, states in all regions across the nation changed colour. Some amongst you may have noticed my home state amongst them. The winning candidate did not carry his own home state either. That happens during a competitive election. Votes and those that cast them cannot be taken for granted. Each must be earned. Competition is good for our democracy. There is no doubt the people’s decision has been rendered in the results we look at today.

    “That is not to say the exercise was without fault. For instance, there were technical problems with electronic transmission of the results. Of course, there will be areas that need work to bring further transparency and credibility to the voting procedure. However, none of the issues registered represent a challenge to the freeness and fairness of the elections.

    “I know some politicians and candidates may not agree with this view. That too is fine. If any candidate believes they can prove the fraud they claim is committed against them, then bring forward the evidence. If they cannot, then we must conclude that the election was indeed the people’s will – no matter how hard that may be for the losers to accept. If they feel the need to challenge, please take it to the courts, not to the streets.

    “However, to do the latter means they are not doing it in the interest of the people, but rather to inflame, to put people in harm’s way and all for personal, selfish gains.

    “After a degree of polarization that necessarily accompanies any election, it is now time to come together and act responsibly. I call on all candidates to remember the peace pledge they signed just days before the election. Do not undermine the credibility of INEC. Let us now move forward as one. The people have spoken.”

     

  • Tinubu Clears Jigawa Presidential Poll

    Tinubu Clears Jigawa Presidential Poll

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has announced the All Progressive Congress (APC) presidential candidate Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu scored highest votes in the last Saturday’s presidential and National Assembly elections in Jigawa State.

    Announcing the result of the presidential election, the collation officer, Professor Arma Ya’u Hamisu Bichi of Federal University Dutsin Ma said the exercise was peaceful.

    Bichi said: “APC- 421,390, LP- 1,889, NNPP- 98,234 and PDP- 386,587 votes”.

    The ruling APC won two senatorial seats, eight House of Representatives seats while the opposition PDP won one senator, two Representatives seats and NNPP won one House of Reps seat.

    Alhaji Mustapha Khabib of PDP won in JIgawa south west with 153,73 votes.

    The APC candidate Alhaji Babangida Husaini won the JIgawa northwest senatorial seat with 187,049 votes and Ambassador Abdulhamid Ahmed Malammadori won JIgawa northeast senatorial seat with 136,977 votes.

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