We, the leaderships of International
Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law (Intersociety), the National
Secretariat of the Civil Liberties Organization, Center for Human Rights &
Peace Advocacy, Human Rights Club of the LRRDC, Anambra State Branch, Society
Watch (a membership project of Intersociety-Nigeria), the Anambra State Branch
of the Civil Liberties Organization, Global Rights & Development
International and Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA),known
as Southeast Group 8 Rights Coalition, have resolved to
speak on the underlined subject matter with a view to guiding the Anambra
electorates and other Nigerians and putting the records straight.
Final
Release Of Voters’ Register:
It is recalled that we
had on 15th day of October, 2013, addressed a joint letter to
the Resident Electoral Commissioner for Anambra State on its planned release of
the final list of registered voters who will vote in the November 16, 2013
governorship election in the State; and need for the Electoral Residency to
address before the release, a number of demographic anomalies complained of. On
16th of October, 2013, the Anambra Electoral Residency of INEC
made public through the 23 participating political parties, the voters’ list as
scheduled. The exercise was carried out through a press briefing in which the
political parties were given soft copies of the revised and updated registered
voters.
According to Section 20
of the Nigeria’s Electoral Act of 2010, the final list of registered voters is
composed of the main voters’ register and supplementary voters’ list, which
includes transferred voters’ list (for those who relocated from their previous
polling areas). The Section directs the exercise to be carried 30 days before
the date of an election. Section 34 of the Act also directs INEC to release or
publish same day through online and offline full names and addresses of all
candidates standing nominated. Anambra State is the 10th most
populated State in Nigeria with the 2006 census of 4.18million people (the
current population is estimated to be up to 6million). The State measures about
4, 416 square kilometers of landmass with 21 LGAs, 326 electoral wards and
4,608 polling units.
Where
Anambra Electoral Residency Of INEC Failed:
Though, the Anambra
Electoral Residency of INEC released the list as legally required, but the
anomalies complained of, and sought to be addressed, have remained unaddressed.
From the Electoral Residency’s accounts as released, the total number of registered
voters in Anambra State tentatively rose to 2, 011, 746 in 2011 and decreased
to 1, 711, 061 voters in July 2013. It increased again to 1, 784, 536 voters in
October 2013. This simply means that only 73, 475 new voters were captured
during the continuous voters’ registration and revalidation exercise that took
place between 19th and 25th of August, 2013.
The Electoral Residency further said that the 18-35 registered voting age
bracket constitutes 52%; 36-59 25%; 51-69 18%; and 70 years and above 5%. According
to the Commission, the total number of female registered voters in Anambra
State is 900,701 or 52%, while the number of male registered voters is 883,000
or 49%. Ogbaru LGA has the highest voting population of 139, 000 registered
voters. The number of double registrants in the Anambra Voters’ Register was
put at 93, 354. In all, the total numbers of registered voters who will vote in
the November 16, 2013 governorship poll is 1, 784, 536 (one million, seven
hundred & eighty four thousand, five hundred & thirty six).
Other than the
foregoing, the Anambra Electoral Residency of INEC did not disclose whether the
53 missing polling units in nine LGAs of Awka South (34), Ayamelum (1), Anambra
East (2), Ihiala (2), Idemmili North (1), Nnewi South (4), Nnewi North (5),
etc, have been found and restored or not and the fate of the affected
registered voters in the areas. The public did not know whether the 93, 354
double registrants have been deleted from the voters’ register. The number of
dead and fictitious voters that were possibly deleted was not disclosed, so
also the number of voters registered during the continuous registration and
revalidation exercise and number transferred into the Transferred
Voters’ List.
No information was given
with respect to the alleged discovery of illegal polling centers in Ogbaru,
Onitsha North and Oyi LGAs as well as those malicious citizens imported by
criminal politicians from neighboring States during the continuous voters’
registration and revalidation exercise. Whether the “evil forest and shrine”
bound polling units still exist or not was not disclosed. Information about
issuance or otherwise of a certified true copy of voters’ register to the
ANSIEC for the purpose of conducting the December 14, 2013 LGA poll was also not
made available.
Why
Obiano Is Electoral Law Compliant:
Our in-depth
investigation into an allegation that the governorship candidate of the All
Progressives Grand Alliance, Mr. William Obiano was involved in double
registration as a registered voter in Nigeria clearly shows that he acted
within the law. While double registration as a voter in Nigeria contravenes
Section 12 (2) of the Electoral Act of 2010 with a fine on conviction of N100,
000 or one year imprisonment or both, unlawful possession of voters’ card,
buying or offers to buy same or selling of it is a contravention of Section 23
of the Act and attracts on conviction two years imprisonment or a fine of N500,
000 or both. The exceptions to Section 12 (2) of the Act are clearly provided
in Section 13 (1) (2) (3) & (4) of the said Electoral Act (of 2010). These
exceptions can be clearly understood in the context of “Citizen’s
Voters’ Card/Data Transfer”.
Section 13 (1) of the
Electoral Act of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 2010, states: “Any person
who before an election is resident in another polling constituency other than
the one in which he was registered may apply to the Resident Electoral
Commissioner of the State where he is currently residing for his name to be
entered on the Transferred Voters’ List of the constituency”. Section 13
(2): “An application under subsection 1 shall be accompanied by the
applicant’s voters’ card and shall be made not less than 30 days before the
date of an election in the constituency where the applicant is now resident”. Section
13 (3): “The REC to whom an application is made under this provision
shall cause to be entered the applicant’s name in the Transferred Voters’ List
if he is satisfied that the applicant is a resident in a polling center in the
constituency and is registered in another constituency (former)”.
Section 13 (4): “ Whenever
an Electoral Officer (EO) on the direction of REC enters the name of any person
(applicant) on the Transferred Voters’ List for his constituency, he shall: (a)
assign that person to a polling unit area in his constituency and indicate in
the list the polling unit to which that person (applicant) is assigned; (b)
issue the person with a new voters’ card and retrieve his voters’ card
(former); and (c) send a copy of the entry to the Electoral Officer of the
constituency where the person whose name has been so entered was originally
registered and upon receipt of his entry, that Electoral Officer shall delete
the name(data) from his voters’ list”.
The allegation as made
is totally false and lacks fundamental ingredients of truism. While it is
necessary to put those aspiring to occupy public leadership positions through
elective or appointive processes on their toes so as to ensure the emergence of
people with upright and charismatic characters, such activities must be rested
in the universally acceptable processes especially in matters of journalistic
investigation and reporting. Such must be devoid of political witch-hunting,
ill conception and motivation. Nigerian journalists, who are part of the mass
media recognized by Sections 22 and 39 of the Constitution of Nigeria 1999, as
amended in 2011 must not endanger the sanctities of the two hallowed
provisions. They must also stay away from “konja journalism”.
The sighting of “double
registration or data” of a citizen on the INEC’s physical or soft data
warehouse without an investigation to ascertain the circumstances of its double
entry and existence, amounts to “trial by ordeal”, which has no
place in Nigeria’s justice and human rights system. For instance, in 2009,
prior to the 2010 governorship poll in Anambra State, the leadership of Intersociety in
Nigeria, went to Dr. Chris Ngige’s campaign office in Awka and found that the
data including picture of late Chief Gani Fawihinmi, SAN, who voted in Lagos in
previous elections such as 2007 polls, was included in the list of registered
voters in an Ekwulummili Ward in Nnewi South LGA of Anambra State. Further
investigation showed that INEC was solely responsible for such anomaly.
In Mr. Willy Obiano’s
case, for him to vote in the November 16 important
governorship election in which he is a contestant, he must bear a voters’ card
issued him in Anambra State and not that of Lagos State, which is not a party
to Anambra governorship poll. His lawyers put INEC on notice on his behalf and
exhausted all the processes attached as contained in Section 13 of the 2010
Electoral Act. The job of deleting his previous data in Lagos lies between the
two concerned Electoral Officers in Anambra and Lagos States. The EO in Anambra
State ought to transmit the information to his Lagos counterpart to facilitate
the former’s deletion. The allegation of payment or offer of a bribe of N500m
to an Anambra INEC official so as to delete Mr. Obiano’s data is an act of
impossibility and a clear case of further injurious falsehood. This is because
deleting such data from Anambra angle means that Mr. Obiano has incapacitated
himself and cannot vote in the said election he is a contestant.
Our
Calls:
We reiterate our call on
the Anambra State Electoral Residency of INEC headed by Professor Chukwuemeka
Onukogu to offer satisfactory explanations to the People of Anambra State and
Southeast Nigeria with respect to anomalies complained above. The Electoral
Residency is also called upon to be alive to its administrative duties at all
times permitted by law. Capturing only 73, 475 voters in the continuous voters’
registration exercise out of teeming eligible but unregistered voters in
Anambra State is an example of administrative incompetence. Mr. Willy Obiano’s
“double registration” allegation, though false and empty, is also
part of it, so also the case of “missing 53 polling units”. Politicians
including those controlled by “the Center of Excellence” are
advised to stay away from “konja politics”and learn a lesson from the
2012 Ondo “electoral humiliation”. Issue-based politics wins hearts, while
mechanical or “konja” politics poisons minds. Journalists
in Nigeria must also be alive to their journalistic duties at all times. This
includes searching for and arming themselves at all times with relevant
materials such as copies of the Electoral Act of 2010, which can be sourced
both online and offline. Those who reported the unfounded allegation of Mr.
Obiano’s double registration are “electoral illiterates”.
For: Southeast
Group 8 Rights Coalition:
1. Emeka Umeagbalasi: International
Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law
2. Ibuchukwu Ezike: Executive
Director, Civil Liberties Organization, Nigeria
3. Rufus Duru: Global Rights &
Development International
4. Justus Uche Ijeoma: Society Watch (a
membership project of Intersociety-Nigeria)
5.Emma Onwubiko: Human Rights Writers
Association of Nigeria
6. Aloysius Emeka Attah: Civil Liberties
Organization, Anambra State Branch
7. Peter Onyegiri: Center for Human
Rights & Peace Advocacy
8. Samuel Njoku: Human Rights Club of
LRRDC, Anambra State Branch
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please restrict your comment to the subject matter.