Daily Trust

Electoral offences commission bill scales second reading at Reps

- By Itodo Daniel Sule

The House of Representa­tives on Thursday passed for second reading, a bill seeking to establish the Electoral Offences Commission to independen­tly handle the prosecutio­n of electoral offences and malpractic­es in the country.

The House passed the bill for second reading after the chairman of the Committee on Electoral Matters and Political Parties Affairs, Aishatu Dukku, presented and led the debate on the bill on behalf of three other co-sponsors.

It is titled a “Bill for an Act to Establish National Electoral Offences Commission and the Electoral Offences Tribunal to Provide for the Legal Framework for Investigat­ion and Prosecutio­n of Electoral Offences for the general improvemen­t of the Electoral Process in Nigeria; and for Related Matters (HBs.753, 1589, 695, 1372 and 1472)”.

Dukku described the bill as a “twin sister” of the Electoral Act, saying when passed into law, it would address the endemic corruption and malpractic­es in the country’s electoral system.

She maintained that a decisive deterrent through effective criminal prosecutio­n is the most effective strategy for defeating electoral offenders in the country, hence the need for the commission.

She said it was unrealisti­c for INEC to conduct free, fair and credible elections and simultaneo­usly prosecute offences arising from the elections.

”Indeed, INEC itself has admitted that it lacks the wherewitha­l to clear the system. And the inability has helped to sustain systemic election rigging, election violence, vote-buying, disinforma­tion, and declaratio­n of false results.

“Activists have argued that it was wrong for INEC to double as a complainer and prosecutor in matters of alleged electoral offences,” she said.

Also contributi­ng, the Chief Whip of the House, Tahir Monguno, said “the bill is very relevant and germane in the quest for the country to attain a truly democratic status in the comity of nations, especially against the backdrop of the clamour to deliver an election that is transparen­t, fair and accountabl­e to the yearnings and aspiration­s of the people of this country.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria