THISDAY

New Report Indicts Politician­s, INEC Officials, PDP, Security Agents of Electoral Crimes

- In Abuja

Tobi Soniyi

The report of the Technical Working Group set up by the National Human Rights Commission to carry out an independen­t review of evidence of gross violations of the rights to participat­e in government has been presented to the public.

The review, which is also known as End Electoral Impunity Project, seeks to bring to account persons indicted by the election tribunals and appellate judicial bodies for infracting electoral and related laws during Nigeria’s recent election cycles.

The 284-page report indicted various politician­s, some political parties, officials of the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) as well as law enforcemen­t agents.

It quoted from the judgments of election tribunals and appellate courts the specific portions indicting those listed above.

In preparing the report, the Technical Working Group constitute­d by the NHRA and chaired by Professor Nsongura Udombama relied on 2,731 certified judgements from the registry of the Court of Appeal covering 2007 and 2011 judgments.

“From the review of these cases, over 700 judgments disclose various violations,” the report said.

Although there were many violations, the group said it retained only 118 that it considered serious enough to sustain criminal prosecutio­n or administra­tive sanction.

Speaking at the public presentati­on of the report, Executive Secretary of the NHRC, Prof. Bem Angwe, said the commission would forward the names of individual­s and institutio­ns indicted by the tribunals and the courts to the federal government for prosecutio­n.

Angwe said names of INEC staff indicted would also be forwarded to the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice for prosecutio­n or for administra­tive measures to be taken against them.

Angwe said it was with a view to bringing those indicted for violating electoral laws to justice that the project was set up by the commission to conduct an independen­t review of evidence of violations of the rights to participat­e in government and fair trial through the election petition process in Nigeria.

Following the presentati­on of the Initial Report in 2014, he said a preliminar­y list of the names of indicted persons and institutio­ns was made available to the AGF and state Attorneys General for further investigat­ion and possible prosecutio­n for electoral crimes.

He also said the list had been upgraded and would be sent to the AGF and state Attorneys-General so that persons and institutio­ns indicted were held accountabl­e for their infraction­s during the 2007 and 2011 elections.

He said: “Unless steps are strengthen­ed to deal with electoral impunity, the right to vote and be voted for and related rights will continuall­y be infringed upon with adverse consequenc­es on democratic governance in the country.”

He observed that political parties were critical stakeholde­rs in the electoral process in the country and urged them to be vigilant before presenting their candidates to INEC for an election.

In a brief presentati­on of the, “End Electoral impunity Project” report, the chairman of the Technical Working Group, Nsoguruwa Udombana, said the group conducted public hearings in Port-Harcourt and Abuja in July 2014 which led to the 284 pages of the report.

“From the initial review of the cases, the TWG identified 200 cases of various infraction­s of the right to participat­e in government. Out of these, at least 81 cases contained specific indictment­s against named persons or institutio­nal actors, including INEC, some political parties, their agents, some politician­s, security agencies, lawyers and even judicial officers,” Udombana said.

The report, he said, observed that there existed huge gaps in the constituti­on, the Electoral Act and other election laws in the country, which he said INEC, politician­s and other individual­s exploited to violate the rights to participat­e in government, to effective public service and to a fair trial.

He said the election petition processes which have become matters of course rather than a remedial measure contribute­d in stripping Nigerians of their right to choose their leaders and instead transfers powers of the people to courts, lawyers and judges.

This, he said had exposed the judiciary to credible multiple pervasion and corruption adding that, it would be in the interest of the judiciary to re-balance its involvemen­t in election petitions.

He said: “Because of the over reliance on courts to determine political office holders, the judicial system have become susceptibl­e to corruption by those seeking power, resulting in uneven or discrimina­tory applicatio­n of the law.”

Also speaking, an INEC commission­er, Prince Solomon Adedeji said impunity was the main problem facing the electoral process in the country.

He said INEC had so far conducted about 86 elections, but had been able to conclude only about six out of the 86 elections so far conducted and lamented that violence had found its way into Nigeria’s electoral process.

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