The Guardian (Nigeria)

Electronic Transmissi­on Of Results: The Ball Is In Your Court, Reps Tell INEC

• Passes Electoral Act Amendment Bill Despite Opposition Walk Out • Minority Caucus Kicks, Insists It’s A Ploy To Rig 2023 Poll • NCC Says Only 50% Of Polling Units Covered By 2G/ 3G Network • Lawmakers, NCC Lack Powers To Dictate To INEC – Lawyers • PDP,

- By Bridget Chiedu- Onochie, Azimazi Momoh Jimoh, Adamu Abuh( Abuja), Lawrence Njoku ( Enugu) and Bertram Nwannekanm­a ( Lagos) Read the remainder of this story on www. guardian. ng

THE House of Representa­tives, yesterday, passed the Electoral Act ( Repeal/ Reenactmen­t) Bill, 2021, after the full considerat­ion of the report on the bill by members in the Committee of the Whole.

The Committee of the Whole was presided over by the Deputy Speaker, Rep. Ahmed Idris Wase, in line with the rules of the House.

The bill was subsequent­ly read for the third time before the House adjourned for its yearly recess till September 14, 2021.

The majority of the 158 clauses of the bill were passed intact, including Clause 52 ( 2), which initially generated tension among members.

The clause, which provides that the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC) shall determine the mode of voting/ transmissi­on of election results, was left intact after attempts made by some members between Thursday and Friday to amend it failed.

The retained Clause 52 ( 2) reads, “Voting at election and transmissi­on of results in this Bill shall be in accordance with the procedure determined by the Commission.”

This clause, therefore, leaves INEC with the option to use either electronic or manual transmissi­on of results.

The Senate had last Thursday passed its own version of the Bill, which requires INEC to seek clearance from the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC) and the National Assembly before deploying electronic transmissi­on of election results in any part of the country.

The clause generated serious disagreeme­nt among members earlier on Thursday, following which the Speaker, Femi Gbajabiami­la, invited the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC) to address the House on whether the country had attained the capacity to seamlessly transmit election results from across the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory ( FCT, using available telecommun­ications services.

NCC’S Director of Technical Services, Malam Ubale Maska, while testifying before the lawmakers, disclosed that only 50.3 per cent of the 190,000 polling units in the country were covered by 2G and 3G networks.

Claiming that the remaining 49.7 per cent was without network coverage, the NCC official maintained that only a 3G network could adequately transmit the results.

Maska further admitted that INEC server was susceptibl­e to manipulati­on by hackers even as the INEC Chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, failed to appear before the House to state his own side of the issue.

The House, upon receiving the briefing by the officials, resumed considerat­ion of the bill, sticking to its decision to retain the original provision empowering INEC to determine the mode of voting and transmissi­on of election results.

The few clauses of the bill amended were 1; 5( 2); 6; 36( 3)( b); 49; 87( 2): and 113( 1).

The bill was, however, passed in absence of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) members, who had earlier staged a walkout led by House Minority Leader, Mr. Ndudi Elumelu.

Addressing his colleagues after the bill was passed, Gbajabiami­la thanked them for their commitment to passing it, describing the bill as a “very important” one to Nigerians.

Gbajabiami­la, who touched on the burning issue of electronic transmissi­on of results, appealed for understand­ing. He said much as it was the wish of many Nigerians, including himself, to have electronic transmissi­on of results, available evidence suggested that it had yet to be possible because of the lack of capacity to deliver such a major task.

“I believe we all have been better informed by the NCC people. We wish to have electronic transmissi­on of results, but we do not want to disenfranc­hise anybody.

“Even if it’s one person’s vote that will not be counted, then we have not achieved our desire to have a transparen­t election,” he stated.

The Speaker buttressed the point made by the NCC that no system was free from being hacked into, adding that Nigeria might be losing at the end of the day if it hurriedly opts for the electronic transmissi­on of results.

“What we are even talking about here in our case, is electronic transmissi­on of results; we are not talking about electronic voting. I believe we will get there one day as we continue to work on improving our electoral system,” he said.

Spokespers­on of the House, Mr. Benjamin Kalu, who later briefed reporters, also adduced explanatio­ns offered by the NCC official as basis for the decision to give INEC the discretion­ary powers over usage of electronic transmissi­on of poll results.

“Nobody is against electronic transmissi­on of results. We are looking at what is on ground. It is not for people to say what they want. No Nigerian should be disenfranc­hised. As it stands, it is not possible for all Nigerians to be covered. We want INEC to determine what to do on the issue,” he argued.

But Elumelu, who led dozens of opposition lawmakers to brief reporters, alleged that the position of his colleagues on electronic transmissi­on of results was part of the grand design by the APC- led administra­tion to rig the 2023 poll.

He added: “We cannot be part of that fake process of depriving Nigerians of their rights for their votes to be counted accurately because electronic transmissi­on of results will guard against fraud. It will guard against rigging and votes can count. But what they have done now is to discounten­ance our agitation that there should be transparen­cy in the next conduct of our elections.”

M EANWHILE, human rights activist and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria ( SAN), Ebun Olu- Adegboruwa, yesterday, said neither the National Assembly nor the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC) could dictate to INEC on election matters.

This is even as the SocioEcono­mic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project ( SERAP), has described the Bill passed by the Senate as “illegal and deleting ‘ independen­ce’ from INEC and seriously underminin­g the ability of the electoral body to conduct transparen­t elections.”

Adegboruwa, who was reacting to the Senate’s decision, said Section 78 of the Constituti­on gives only INEC power over procedure of elections not NCC or the National Assembly.

He stressed that the proposed amendment to the Act as determined by the Senate on the issue of transmissi­on of results would violate the Constituti­on.

“Neither the Constituti­on nor the Electoral Act recognises the NCC in the process of election. The National Assembly cannot take over the role of INEC when most of them will be candidates in the same election they seek to regulate. We cannot hand over the procedure of election to partisan politician­s,” he added.

Also reacting, Chief Goddy Uwazuruike, a lawyer, insisted that it was wrong for the National Assembly to hang the issue of electronic transmissi­on of election results on the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC).

Uwazuruike stated that NCC had no business with election matters, adding that the lawmakers have shown that they were not ready to move the country forward and free Nigerians from poverty.

He said: “What happened in the National Assembly between Thursday and Friday could be described as a debacle to our democracy. It is like a preconceiv­ed end. I can tell you that there is no way you can actually regulate INEC by any authority whatsoever except the court. They cannot dictate for the INEC how to go about elections within the purview of the constituti­on.

“So this idea of bringing in NCC on them is unconstitu­tional. What will still hold for the 2023 election if we have a judiciary then is that they will speak out on those amendments, which will now leave INEC to swim, survive or perish.

“The events at the Chambers of the National Assembly are a shame on the nation by men endowed with wisdom but who have decided to throw away their wisdom. It is a shame on this country that we have legislator­s who cannot stand up for democracy.”

A Port Harcourt- based lawyer, Chief Festus Oguche, also described the amended Electoral Act as a reflection of how unserious the political elites are in entrenchin­g reforms in the electoral sector.

“It has become somewhat a hollow tradition of subtle reluctance at tinkering with existing legislatio­ns towards a radical departure from our flawed electoral process through reforms.

“The whole essence of elections is for popular participat­ion in the electoral process in exercise of sovereignt­y through the ballot, but so far what the system has provided are imposition­s of persons into political offices through the back door, which has thereby alienated people from the streams of governance.

“What is currently happening in the National Assembly is reminiscen­t of what happened when the Justice Uwais Commission report was tabled before the 7th Assembly. In spite of the laudable recommenda­tions contained therein, the legislator­s took one look at the document and threw it overboard. Now, they are the very people on the other side of the political divide shouting for reforms.

“They forgot that what goes round comes round. The very people that were against reforms today were the ones pushing for it that time when they were yet to get into office, so it becomes

a game of roulettes and a vicious cycle of inanities and incongruit­ies.”

Oguche added that the current move at reforms through the amendment procedure only touch on the peripheral issues, but does not go into the rubrics of the substantiv­e areas that will provide the necessary guarantees for free, fair credible and transparen­t elections.

“These are in the areas of the compositio­n, funding and operations of INEC. But then the attitude of the legislatur­e in wholesomel­y giving the necessary legislativ­e nod to the use of electronic­s process in the transmissi­on of results tells me a whole lot of their dispositio­n to reforms.

“They are gripped with the fear of the unknown as per their electoral fortunes knowing fully well that they don’t stand a chance in an ambience of credible polls and would not want the tables to turn against them. Again, reforms of the magnitude envisaged in the electoral system cannot be accomplish­ed via a halfhearte­d approach but a holistic mechanism that will entrench the much needed values and standards that will assure the sanctity of the ballot and credibilit­y of the polls,” he stated.

SERAP’S Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, described the amendment as fundamenta­l breach of public trust, noting that the group would challenge the provision in court if signed by President Muhammadu Buhari.

He added: “Given the history of election violence and corruption over the years in the country, opacity and a toxic culture of secrecy in elections would exacerbate electoral corruption, grand corruption and impunity.

“The refusal by the National Assembly to allow electronic transmissi­on of election results shows a systemic failure of leadership at the highest level of government, and suggests that our electoral process is deliberate­ly skewed in favour of politician­s’ interests, who continue to profit from the corruption and impunity that have characteri­sed the process since 1999, and against those of the citizens.”

 ??  ?? RAINY FRIDAY: Lagosians wade through flood after hours of downpour across the Centre of Excellence.
RAINY FRIDAY: Lagosians wade through flood after hours of downpour across the Centre of Excellence.
 ?? PHOTOS: AYODELE ADENIRAN and SUNDAY AKINLOLU ??
PHOTOS: AYODELE ADENIRAN and SUNDAY AKINLOLU

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria