MEDIATRACNET
The exclusion of electronic transmission of election results from the final version of the Electoral Act amendment Bill expected to be passed into law by the National Assembly this month is not in the collective interest of all Nigerians, the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), declared on Monday.
The Council’s National Publicity Secretary, Agbo Major, said in Abuja, IPAC sees such an omission as “a coup” against Nigerians who desired and deserved credible elections.
Major said that it would also turn the recent stakeholder meetings and public hearings on the matter by federal legislators as a mere jamboree.
The council spokesman said the action by the lawmakers was unacceptable and repugnant to free and fair polls that has impeded the nation’s democratic process.
IPAC, which is the umbrella body of the 18 registered political parties, said as a critical stakeholder, its memoranda on the Electoral Act and Constitution amendments demanding an electronic voting system and transmission of results were to ensure free, fair, credible, transparent, generally accepted, inclusive and peaceful elections in Nigeria.
“This was the consensus of all stakeholders at various meetings and public hearings. It is unfair and unjust for the leadership of the National Assembly to thwart and sabotage the will, desire and expectations of Nigerians for credible elections that meet international standards.
“More importantly, political parties are deregistered for failure to win a legislative seat among others. It will be an uphill task for political parties, not in government, to win elections if the process is grossly flawed.
“Election is the beauty of democracy as sovereignty resides with the people. The mandate of the electorate in a free and fair election must, therefore, be respected.
“To do otherwise, is an invitation to anarchy that characterized most elections in Nigeria since independence in 1960,’’ Major said.
The IPAC spokesman urged the National Assembly to rise to the occasion and defend the nation’s frail democracy by expunging the obnoxious Section 50 (2) of the proposed electoral bill and immediately passing it.
The section states: “Voting at election under this Bill shall be in accordance with the procedures determined by the Commission, which may include electronic voting provided that the Commission shall not transmit results of the elections by electronic means.”
IPAC said that the provision makes mockery of the entire electoral amendment and scuttled the hopes of patriotic Nigerians of having key reforms of the electoral process.
The clause, the group said, does not mean well for Nigerians and undercut the gains made by INEC in the last Edo and Ondo gubernatorial elections and which the Commission also planned to adopt for the November 6 Anambra governorship election.
“IPAC demands the immediate expunging of the clause to save Nigeria’s democracy and the credibility of the nation’s elections.
The purpose of electronic voting and transmission of results is to guarantee the sanctity of the ballot box. Thus, curbing rigging and flagrant manipulation of electoral outcomes as results are often mischievously doctored and falsified at collation centres,” Major said. (NAN)