By Jude Atupulazi
A group, Centre for Human Rights & Civic Education, CHRICHED, has called for the reshuffling of Resident Electoral Commissioners of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, after identifying them as the weak link in the election process.
The Executive Director of the group, Comrade Ibrahim M. Zikirullahi,
said that one of the weak links in the logistics chain were the Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) in the states.
In his words, ‘In the build up to the elections, CHRICED had identified the INEC State offices as weak links in the conduct of the elections. We have always known that while the INEC leadership in Abuja may have put in place effective plans, those plans are usually undermined by the state offices.
INEC State offices run by their Resident Electoral Commissioners must be held accountable for the dismal performance of the Commission. In the lead-up to the elections, CHRICED called for a reorganization/reshuffling of the State RECs to ensure that their actions or inactions did not undermine the integrity of the elections.’
The Centre for Human Rights & Civic Education saluted millions of Nigerians who defied the odds to participate in the latest presidential and National Assembly elections. It observed that in many polling units, voters spent sleepless nights, just as they waited on long queues to exercise their franchise.
‘While the Nigerian people remained enthusiastic about exercising their democratic rights through the ballot, the lapses and failures exhibited by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the security agencies undermined the efforts and participation of the electorate. Apart from the late or non-arrival of voting materials, the challenges encountered in uploading polling unit results by poll officials negatively impacted the transparency of the process,’ the group said.
It also noted that with the level of goodwill and support Nigeria received from the international community in the build up to the elections, it was ‘utterly embarrassing that INEC would put up such a dismal showing in terms of its management of the electoral process’.
CHRICED said that while it was common knowledge that INEC did not have control over some of the variables critical to logistics deployment, it was important to note that the Commission had four years to plan for the elections and should have found more effective logistics alternative to its current system, which, it said, had repeatedly failed in previous elections.
‘One of the weak links in the logistics chain are the Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) in the states. In the build up to the elections, CHRICED had identified the INEC State offices as weak links in the conduct of the elections. We have always known that while the INEC leadership in Abuja may have put in place effective plans, those plans are usually undermined by the State offices.
INEC State Offices run by their Resident Electoral Commissioners need must be held accountable for the dismal performance of the Commission. In the lead-up to the elections, CHRICED called for a reorganization/reshuffling of the State RECs to ensure that their actions or inactions do not undermine the integrity of the elections,’ the group said.
Ahead of the governorship and state houses of assembly elections scheduled for March 11, 2023, CHRICED urged the INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, to immediately reshuffle the RECs, particularly in states that experienced the most logistical and procedural lapses during the presidential and national assembly elections.
CHRICED also called on stakeholders in the electoral process to beam the spotlight on respective RECs to ensure they were also accountable for administrative issues which affected the electoral process in their respective states.
In the area of election security, CHRICED called on the police to thoroughly investigate and bring to justice all the criminal elements who were involved in the incidents which marred elections in Edo, Lagos, Rivers and any other state in the country, noting that it was important also that security agencies apprehended not only the thugs, but those who sponsored them to undermine the electoral process and the sanctity of the ballot.
Concerning the Naira redesign policy and fuel scarcity, which resulted in the disenfranchisement of many voters who were unable to afford transportation to the polls, CHRICED urged the government to ease the restrictions.
‘Numerous Nigerians, particularly the poor and vulnerable, continue to endure the harsh effects of the Naira and fuel scarcity. Now is the time for the government to alleviate the suffering of citizens across the nation,’ the group stated.