While speaking at the national colloquium organised by the Independent
Service Delivery Monitoring Group on Tuesday in Abuja, INEC's Chairman
announced the suspension of 205 staff.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has suspended 205
staff over various unwholesome roles in the 2015 general elections.
INEC’s Chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, disclosed this in his keynote address at
national colloquium organised by the Independent Service Delivery Monitoring
Group (ISDMG) on Tuesday in Abuja.
He said that the interdiction, recommended by INEC’s Appointments, Promotion
and Discipline Committee (APDC), was the highest so far.
Mr. Mahmud said that constructive criticisms from the public had helped the
commission to get better in delivering its mandate vis-a-vis conducting
credible elections.
He said that commission’s electoral officers were already in the field working
towards the success of the 2019 elections.
“We have to put the right people in
place as electoral officers and assistant electoral officers for the 2019
general elections.
“The credibility of an election
depends on the credibility of the election manager; the credulity of the
election manger depends on the credibility of the staff.
“The APDC recommended the interdiction
of 205 staff found culpable in various roles they played arising from the 2015
general elections—this is the highest number of interdictions since the history
of the commission.
“We have within the some of the most
patriotic staff in the country; but anybody found wanting will be dealt with
accordingly.’’
He said that the introduction of the Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) had
increased voter registration.
The INEC boss listed the top states in CVR as Rivers, Anambra, Borno, Delta,
Lagos, Cross-River, Osun, Enugu, Kano and Plateau.
Mr Mahmud said the commission had conducted elections in 179 constituencies so
far, adding that of only five had been challenged in court which attested to the
credibility of the elections.
He said that at present, INEC had received over 100 additional applications for
new political parties, while nine had met the criteria.
“We may end up having up to 80
political parties for the 2019 general elections,’’ he said.
The INEC chairman gave an assurance that the 2019 elections would be better
than that of 2015.
Earlier in his speech, Chima Amadi, the Executive Director, ISDMG, said that
INEC had been the most responsive of all government agencies involved in the
election value chain.
He said that INEC had been taking advice and constructive criticisms and
adjusting its activities to reflect same while such could not be said about
others within the chain.
“The security agencies continue to
behave true to type and are even getting worse, while political gladiators horn
their manipulative stock-in-trade.
“However, we are resolved to take them
to task with the same resilience that we used in getting INEC to act properly.
“For the 2019 elections, the ISDMG
will be deploying cutting edge technology to the field to ensure that history
is properly documented,’’ he said.
The highlight of the event was the unveiling of a book/report titled: “INEC
Beyond 2015, Overview, Challenges and Prospects.’’
The report was written by Mr Amadi, Faith Nwadishi, MacDonald Ekemezie, Abdul
Mahmud, James Ugochukwu and Atambi Ade.
(NAN)
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