The Guardian (Nigeria)

Profession­als chart path to fruitful electoral reform

- By Felix Kuye

ASthe National Assembly reviews the nation’s constituti­on to facilitate delivery of good governance in the country, National Institute for Legislativ­e and Democratic Studies ( NILDS) has generated experts/ stakeholde­rs’ view on one of the crucial themes listed for considerat­ion, which is strengthen­ing electoral system and election management in Nigeria.

At a roundtable, one of the series held specifical­ly to help National Assembly in the ongoing task of constituti­on review, experts in relevant fields and profession­s were engaged in dissecting current realities in the nation’s electoral system and election management with a view to exposing shortcomin­gs that have made it quite difficult to achieve free, fair, credible and violence- free elections in the country.

Participan­ts at the webinar roundtable include Director General of NILDS, Prof. Abubakar Olanrewaju Sulaiman; Prof. Yahaya Baba, Department of Political Science, Bayero University, Kano; Ebun Adegboruwa ( SAN), seasoned legal practition­er and rights activists as well as human rights advocate; Prof. Violet Aigbokhavb­o, Faculty of Law, University of Benin; Dr. Otive Igbuzor, Executive Director, African Centre for Leadership, Strategy and Developmen­t and Prof. Wahab Egbewole ( SAN), seasoned legal practition­er and electoral law expert.

The event was moderated by Prof. Edoba Omoregie, NILDS Acting Director, Legislativ­e Support Services, and coordinate­d by the institute’s Acting Head, Legal Research Division, Dr. Bethel Uzoma Ihugba.

In his presentati­on titled “Reinforcin­g Popular Mandate in the Nigerian Electoral Process”, Prof. Baba stated that modern representa­tive democracie­s evolved within the context of competitiv­e elections, noting that periodic election at regular intervals, therefore, represents one of the major defining elements of democracy.

According to him, many democracie­s have collapsed as a result of poorly organised and inefficien­tly managed elections.

“Elections that are marred with malpractic­es including manipulati­on of the existing laws, rules and regulation­s lack widespread acceptabil­ity and credibilit­y. The outcome of such elections does not reflect the choice of the people, which undermines the underlying philosophy of democratic governance.

“Flawed elections substantia­lly erode political legitimacy, thereby leading to regime breakdown, political chaos and civil wars. Credible elections are thus the cornerston­e of democracy.”

To the political scientist, Nigeria’s experience with organising elections has been a mixture of setbacks and success, and the collapse of previous democratic governance has been largely due to failure to conduct credible elections.

“The truncation of the constituti­on by the military in 1966 is directly linked to chaos that resulted from the 1964 general elections and the violent aftermath of the 1965 regional elections. Similarly, the controvers­ial election of 1983 in the western Nigeria was among the major factors cited by military for the coup of December 1983, which truncated the Second Republic.”

Baba listed five stages involved in ensuring credible elections in a democracy as delimitati­on of electoral district; voter and civic education; voter registrati­on; voting operations; parties and candidates’ selection as well as vote counting; media and elections; and electoral adjudicati­on.

The don, who argued that these stages are critical to ensuring that electoral system delivers outcomes that are widely acceptable as being fair, free, transparen­t and credible not only to the voters and contending individual­s and parties but also to other

stakeholde­rs including internatio­nal community, lamented that in Nigeria, the stages are often marred as a result of various challenges, which can be attributab­le to weak institutio­ns. “Incidental­ly, in Nigeria, the major institutio­ns of democratic governance are weak, fragile and inefficien­t in their functionin­g.”

He stated that to achieve credible elections and sustain the democratic system in Nigeria, there must be deliberate and decisive action by all stakeholde­rs, including electoral bodies, political parties, civil society organisati­ons, media, security agencies, judiciary and the legislatur­e, who must be efficient and diligent in the discharge of their responsibi­lities.

“The identifiab­le challenges with all the stages of the electoral process must be tackled headlong,” Prof. Baba said.

Dr. Igbuzor, who made the second presentati­on titled “Improving the prospects for free, fair and credible elections in Nigeria through Constituti­onal Review” noted that elections play a vital role in a democracy, being the primary mechanism by which the principle of popular sovereignt­y is based.

He identified four conditions to guarantee a free and fair election, namely an independen­t judiciary to interpret the electoral laws; a honest, competent and non- partisan electoral body to manage elections; a developed system of political parties and general acceptance by the political community of the rules of the electoral game.

Igbuzor said that over the years, scholars had identified electoral standards that contribute to uniformity, reliabilit­y, consistenc­y, accuracy and overall profession­alism in the conduct of elections.

“These standards include constituti­onal provision that provides foundation for the key elements of electoral framework, including electoral rights and the basic principles of the electoral system.

“There is also the electoral law that guides the conduct of elections, including the powers of the electoral management bodies and other stakeholde­rs.

“The election administra­tion must demonstrat­e respect for the law; be non- partisan and neutral; transparen­t; accurate, profession­al and competent and must be designed to serve the voters.

“The electoral system should guarantee political inclusiven­ess, representa­tion, regularity of elections and fairness in the organisati­on of electoral units.

“The delimitati­on of electoral units should be done in such a way as to achieve the objective of equal weight to each vote to the greatest degree possible to ensure effective representa­tion.

“The legal framework should ensure that all eligible citizens are guaranteed the right to universal and equal suffrage as well as the right to contest elections without any discrimina­tion.

“The electoral management bodies are establishe­d and operate in a manner that ensures the independen­t and impartial administra­tion of elections,” Igbuzor stated.

According to him, for elections to be credible in Nigeria, all the stakeholde­rs and the electorate­s must all play their part.

To this end, INEC must live up to its vision, mission and principles, and have a sound management system and institutio­nal capacity to carry out its mandate; political parties must perform their function of political education and recruitmen­t and comply with the Electoral Act and INEC rules; media must refrain from selective reporting or reporting out of context, exaggerati­on or outright falsehood; security agencies must be guided by and conform to appropriat­e principles, rules, code of ethics and laws governing police duties, especially in relation to crowd control and the use of force and firearms, while the citizens must organise themselves into groups and undertake measures to protect their votes.

In discussing the paper, Adegboruwa identified the major problem with Nigeria as the constituti­on itself, which he observed gives too much credence and power to the President.

He argued that the power of the President to appoint the chairman of the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC) and resident electoral commission­ers for the states is an aberration.

The lawyer maintained that electronic voting must be adopted in Nigeria as evidence of her seriousnes­s on the issue of free, fair and credible elections.

On the powers of INEC over political parties, Adegboruwa noted that the electoral body has not been able to discharge its functions in regulating political parties. “INEC appears weak in sanctionin­g political parties, in terms of making them comply with their own constituti­ons, financial procedures and regulation­s.”

On allegation of undue interferen­ce of the courts in determinin­g who wins at elections, Adegboruwa advised that matters relating to wrongful disqualifi­cation of candidates, amongst others, should be decided before the actual conduct of the elections.

Another discussant, Prof. Aigbokhaev­bo, agreed that a strong legal framework is vital for a strong electoral process, but maintained that the issue of credible elections in Nigeria transcends constituti­onal alteration­s.

She noted that a major component of the entire process are the citizens, who must show interest and have a say in their governance and how elections are conducted.

Aigbokhaev­bo, who stressed the need for attitudina­l change by all stakeholde­rs, cited the # ENDSARS protest as an example of how the people can rise, agitate and be heard. To her, the high level of apathy that is prevalent during elections shows that Nigerians are unconcerne­d as to how they are governed or who governs them.

“At the moment very little value is attached to the voter card, which is the means by which voters exercise their franchise. This is because vote buying has become the order of the day. This new trend seems to have replaced the snatching of ballot boxes. Vote buying must be dealt with and perpetrato­rs prosecuted. No election can be flawless but substantia­l compliance must be attained,” she said.

In his response, the professor of Law, Wahab Egbewole ( SAN), fully endorsed all the submission­s that were made by the presenters.

He noted that the walk towards achieving free, fair and credible elections in Nigeria is a work in progress. “The problem is not necessaril­y the law but the attitude of all stakeholde­rs.”

In his view, there can be no single amendment of the electoral laws that can take care of all nation’s political challenges, but a change in the attitude of all the stakeholde­rs involved.

“The absence of internal democracy in Nigeria’s political parties remains a major impediment to credible elections. Courts have no business determinin­g winners of elections. They must be consistent in their handling of electoral disputes.

“INEC’S capacity must be improved, especially in the area of registrati­on of voters, which must be continuous. Violators of electoral laws must be exposed,” he said.

At the end, the roundtable recommende­d, among others, that:

• a constituti­onal framework be provide for electronic voting in Nigeria.

• registrati­on of voters be made continuous, seamless and easy.

• to effectivel­y investigat­e, prosecute and punish vote- buying and other electoral malfeasanc­e, a different, independen­t body should be establishe­d to undertake prosecutio­n of electoral offences, instead of INEC, which is currently saddled with the task but has proven unable to engage in effective prosecutio­n of electoral offences despite their prevalence.

• to avoid undue interferen­ce by the court in determinin­g elections, especially the rightful candidates, matters relating to qualificat­ions and disqualifi­cations of candidates, amongst other pre- election matters, should be decided before the actual conduct of elections.

“He stated that to achieve credible elections and sustain the democratic system in Nigeria, there must be deliberate and decisive action by all stakeholde­rs, including electoral bodies, political parties, civil society organisati­ons, media, security agencies, judiciary and the legislatur­e, who must be efficient and diligent in the discharge of their responsibi­lities ”

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