The Guardian (Nigeria)

INEC insists on e- transmissi­on of results without recourse to NCC

• CISLAC, commission want stiffer penalties for parties breaching election expenses • YIAGA decries absence of security personnel at voter registrati­on centres

- From Sodiq Omolaoye and Matthew Ogune, Abuja

THE Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC) has said it does not need the approval of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC) to transmit election results electronic­ally.

It argued that the decision by the National Assembly to subject its constituti­onal power to conduct elections to the NCC was absolutely unconstitu­tional.

Recall that during the debate on Section 52( 3) of the Electoral Amendment Act Bill ( which deals with electronic transmissi­on), by lawmakers, they had asked the electoral umpire to seek the approval of the NCC before going on with e- transmissi­on of results.

Speaking at the Commission’s third quarterly meeting with media executives, yesterday, in Abuja, National Commission­er and Chairman, Electoral Operations & Logistics Committee, Prof. Okechukwu Ibeanu, said rather than seeking NCC’S approval, the electoral body has the constituti­onal mandate to impose duties on NCC to achieve the electronic transmissi­on of results.

Ibeanu was responding to a poser from the Editor- inChief of The Guardian, Martins Oloja, on INEC’S constituti­onal power regarding the rules regulating it activities on election matters.

“That is absolutely unconstitu­tional. You cannot ask INEC to seek the approval of another agency of government to transmit result electronic­ally when actually INEC has power to impose duties on NCC to achieve electronic transmissi­on of results.

“I completely agree that in the context of underscori­ng the independen­ce of the Commission, Section 160 of the Constituti­on has done everything it needs to do. What is left is for INEC to use the power it has under the constituti­on to achieve its aim,” Ibeanu said, while quoting relevant sections of the 1999 Constituti­on.

MEANWHILE, Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre ( CISLAC) and INEC have called for the amendment of the Electoral Act to provide stiffer penalties against violators of rules on election expenses.

This was disclosed at a forum on ‘ Strengthen­ing Accountabi­lity Networks Among Civil Societies in Nigeria’, yesterday, in Abuja.

Executive Director, CISLAC and Head, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, Nigeria, Mr. Auwal Rafsanjani, expressed concern over the overbearin­g influence of money in some recent elections. He said checking undue influence of money in politics would prevent subversion of the people’s will.

He said: “The laws are in place and we should regulate how money enters politics. We seem to have so much money in politics that it seems to erode the power of our institutio­ns.

“It is sad that the laws are ignored outright because some people think they are above the law. But we cannot flourish as a democracy, if the rule of law is ignored and there is no set of guidelines to regulate how we behave.”

On his part, INEC’S National Commission­er and Chairman, Informatio­n and Voter Education Committee, Festus Okoye, said sanctions against violators of directives on party finances and election expenses are relatively mild. He said this accounts for the disdain exhibited by parties and candidates towards the law. He said sanctions must include increase in fines and prison terms for leaders of defaulting parties.

THIS came as Youth Initiative for Advocacy, Growth and Advancemen­t ( YIAGA) raised the alarm over poor deployment of security personnel at registrati­on centres.

It made the observatio­n against the backdrop of the ongoing voter registrati­on by INEC in local government areas.

Programme manager, Cynthia Mbamalu, who stated this, yesterday, in Abuja, said YIAGA’S observers also reported the near absence of political parties or their agents during the exercise.

Mbamalu noted that due to security threats in Gusau, Anka, Shinkafi, Zurmi and Bungudu Local Government Areas in Zamfara State, turnout was low. She also regretted that in Anambra and other states in the South East, confusion over the sit- athome order on Mondays impacted the exercise.

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