INEC can’t guarantee conclusive elections in 2019 –Chairman
Gbenro Adeoye and Tunde Ajaja
The Chairman of the Independent National
Electoral Commission, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, says given the challenges
and malpractices that have marred elections both in the past and in
recent times in the country, the commission cannot guarantee that the
general elections in 2019 will be conclusive.
He said any attempt to give such
assurance at this time would be second-guessing the outcome of the
election, noting that it had become inevitable for the commission to
declare some elections inconclusive.
The INEC boss, who spoke when he led
some staff of the commission, including a national commissioner, Mr.
Solomon Soyebi, on a visit to PUNCH Place, the corporate headquarters of
PUNCH Nigeria Limited in Magboro, Ogun State, on Friday, stated that if
everyone, including the staff of the commission, the voters,
politicians and other stakeholders, play by the rules, there would be no
inconclusive election.
He said, “We can’t second-guess to say
this is the outcome of an election before it happens, unless we are not
conducting elections. We hope it won’t lead to that, but if it happens,
the constitution has a way out of it.
“There is no way the commission will
declare any election conclusive where the threshold is not met. We can
only declare an election conclusive when we are satisfied with the law
and electoral act because all elections are governed by constitutional
provisions, provisions of the electoral act and our guidelines. This is
the challenge that we face, but we must express it because we (INEC)
will not compromise.
“The constitution of this country
provides condition for making return in an election. If that threshold
is not met, can INEC make a declaration? We can’t, under the law, and if
you do so the court will nullify the election and then we incur costs
to do the election again.
“As to what will happen in 2019, only
God knows, but we will abide by the provisions of the constitution, the
electoral law and our guidelines in making declarations. We can only
hope for the best.”
The INEC chairman, who spoke extensively
while responding to questions on the inconclusive elections conducted
by the commission, explained that majority of the 137 elections
conducted by the commission in the past eight months were conclusive,
dismissing insinuations that the commission had been organising
inconclusive elections.
He explained that people had been used
to conclusive elections on first ballot, pointing out that the political
terrain has changed completely. He added that most of the elections
were a product of the 2015 general elections and that there were no less
than 680 court cases emanating from the 2015 general elections.
“It is not strange. More than any
commission in the history of this country, we have conducted more
elections outside the context of general elections. People often forget
that we had inconclusive elections in the past.
“The first inconclusive election in
Nigeria was in 1979, and that was the election that brought Shagari into
power. We have forgotten about the mathematics of what two-third of 19
was, whether it was 12 or not. Eventually, the matter wasn’t resolved by
the commission. People like Richard Akinjide went to court, and
eventually the court decided the winner in 1979.
“In recent times, we have had series of
inconclusive elections. The governorship election in Bauchi State was
inconclusive because of post-election violence and INEC concluded the
election after two weeks. The same thing happened in Imo; the first
election that brought in Rochas Okorocha was inconclusive, until two
weeks after. In 2015, Taraba, Abia and Imo were inconclusive and there
were other constituency elections where elections were inconclusive.
“The most difficult election for the
commission to conduct are off-season elections, because the attention of
everybody focuses on a particular constituency and the political actors
and gladiators and their antics have time to mobilise nationwide to
descend on a particular constituency, which made the conclusion of such
elections very difficult.
“What I want Nigerians to understand is
that our democracy is maturing. If it matures, it cannot be the way we
used to do things before. The mindset would have to change. Days were
long gone when politicians do everything they can to be declared
winners, knowing that the case would end up in court.
“So, let’s hope for the best, but it is
everybody’s responsibility to make this democracy work. Citizens can
protect their mandate. If we play by the rules and we are patient, I’m
sure we will minimise all these issues leading to inconclusiveness.”
However, the INEC boss said apart from
power play by political gladiators, emergence of strong political
parties had made the elections more competitive. “When we had one
dominant political party and other smaller parties, elections were
always conclusive, but now, by evolution, not by imposition, we have two
strong political parties, fielding strong candidates, making the
elections extremely competitive,” he added.
When asked if he was being teleguided by
the executive as rumoured in some quarters, he said there was no such
thing, noting that both the opposition and the ruling parties had
accused him of being teleguided by the executive anytime their party
didn’t win an election.
“I have made a commitment to this
country that the day I think I cannot perform this job in good
conscience, I would leave, afterall I have a job to go back to;
teaching. So, it’s not true that we are being teleguided,” he said.
Yakubu equally lamented that the nation
had not been penalising electoral offenders, saying it was painful that
over 1,000 persons died as a result of post-election violence in Kaduna
in 2011 and nobody was arrested or prosecuted.
He added that it was also regrettable
that the recommendations of the Mohammed Uwais-led committee and the
Ahmed Lemu-led committee had not been implemented, saying time had come
for the government to set up an electoral offences commission and
tribunal, to which all violators of electoral acts would be subjected,
including staff of the commission.
He said, “Under the electoral act, INEC
is supposed to penalise electoral offenders and what are the steps:
first, we have to make arrest, but INEC has no police, so we can’t
arrest. Secondly, we have to investigate to be able to have evidence
that can be tendered in court during prosecution, but we have no power
to investigate, and for me, most extraordinarily, that means INEC is
supposed to prosecute its own staff. How can INEC prosecute itself?
Meanwhile, when asked what the
commission had done in punishing some of its staff found guilty of
electoral offences, the INEC chairman said over a hundred of its staff,
both serving and retired had been invited by the EFCC in connection with
the allegation of financial misappropriation levelled against the
former Minister of Petroleum, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Maduekwe.
The EFCC had alleged that some key staff
of INEC benefitted from the $26m allegedly shared by the former
Minister in the run-up to the 2015 general elections.
Yakubu said, “The first one when I came
in was the revelation coming out of what you people in the media call
DiezaniGate. So far, over a hundred staff of INEC had been invited. At a
point, we toiled with the idea of speaking to the EFCC to see the
weight of evidence they have so that we can take administrative action
against our own staff, but they are innocent until they are proven
guilty. They have to be charged to court, but we have taken notice and
we have a complete list.
“If you hear a certain number this week,
the following week, it would have increased, arising from the
interrogation of more staff, so we have not got to the end of it, and
it’s not good for the commission to take decision in pieces, but
eventually, some of them who are culpable will be charged to court.”
He, however, assured that the commission
would continue to deepen the use of technology, learn from what
happened, make the smart card reader better and add new initiatives. “We
are committed to ensure that every ballot counts and is accounted for,”
he said.
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