The Guardian (Nigeria)

INEC may not make NIN compulsor y for voter registrati­on

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INational Electoral Commission ( INEC) might have rejected the proposed use of the National Identifica­tion Number ( NIN) as a requiremen­t for voter registrati­on.

Minister of Communicat­ions and Digital Economy, Isa Pantami, had last month, while citing Section 27 of the National Identity Management Commission Act of 2007, said NIN was compulsory for transactio­ns such as bank account opening, payment of taxes and voter registrati­on.

INEC had fixed the first quarter of this year for resumption of Continuous Voter Registrati­on ( CVR) exercise. But speaking at a validation workshop for INEC voter education manual in Lokoja, Kogi State, yesterday, the commission’s spokesman, Festus Okoye, said the electoral body would not “impose or accept imposition of extraneous registrati­on requiremen­ts not in tandem with the constituti­on and the law.”

Okoye, in his speech which was made available to journalist­s in Abuja, insisted that for registrati­on of voters, the electoral body would, as always, be guided by the law and the constituti­on.

Although, the INEC national commission­er did not give details of the “extraneous registrati­on requiremen­ts”, it was learnt that the commission was opposed to the use of NIN in respect to voter registrati­on.

The commission’s position was said to be premised on the fact that both the Electoral Act and 1999 Constituti­on do not state NIN as a prerequisi­te for registrati­on of voters.

On creation of additional polling units, Okoye hinted that the commission would soon release guidelines for movement of voting points to decongest the existing ones.

According to him, the electoral body would resume the continuous voter’s registrati­on exercise as soon as the expansion of access to polling units is completed. He noted that based on the new arrangemen­t, new and some old registrant­s would have new, accessible and closer polling units, adding that all polling units would have a lower threshold of 750 voters and an upper threshold of 1000.

“It is pertinent to explain here that no voting point will be moved from one local government to another. It is also important to underscore the fact that the expansion of polling units will not confer any advantage on any state other than decongesti­ng existing polling units, degrading overcrowdi­ng, aiding increase of voter turnout and improving the quality of legal services rendered by the commission. The primary objective of this is to make voting experience more pleasant and less tedious for Nigerians”, he stated.

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