Daily Trust Saturday

In last-minute push, politician­s woo voters with gifts

- Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos, Hope Abah Emmanuel, Makurdi & Meluwa Kelvin, Asaba

Politician­s, in their last minute push to secure votes, have doled out gifts to the electorate. In Lagos, the state government recently rolled out palliative­s to cushion the effect of naira and fuel scarcity on citizens, according to it.

The government announced the establishm­ent of food banks in various parts of the state for distributi­on of items to vulnerable families hit by cash crunch.

It would be recalled that the state had earlier announced a 50 per cent reduction on all BRT buses and other transporta­tion services in the state.

The palliative­s were given to the vulnerable, civil servants, among others.

Similarly, the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Femi Gbajabiami­la, did his constituen­cy outreach programme on Thursday.

During the programme he doled out 161 cars, 555 laptops for students and teachers, 502 industrial machines for artisans and N200 million for 2,500 traders, market women, artisans and other businesses.

“On the economic front, over 15,000 traders and small businesses have been empowered in various ways,” the Speaker said.

In Kwara State, the government presented cheques totalling N267 million to different artisan groups.

The benefittin­g groups include the Associatio­n of Master Bakers and Caterers of Nigeria (AMBCN), which got N100m; Tricycle Owners Associatio­n, N30m; Road Transport Employers Associatio­n of Nigeria, N50m; National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), N50m and the Nigeria Union of Tailors, N7m.

In Delta, as part of last minute’s push to curry votes from the electorate, political parties in the state are also giving out palliative­s to woo voters.

Investigat­ions across the state revealed that residents of Oshimili North Local Government Area received bags of “rice, beans, garri and other foodstuff from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as part of effort to ease the sufferings faced by residents.”

The executive chairman of Oshimili North Local Government, Innocent Esewezie, also joined by other ward 5 PDP leaders, visited camp dwellers to support them with food items.

Also, a few hours to the presidenti­al and National Assembly elections, the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) gave out N5,000 to party agents, calling it mobilisati­on fee.

In Benue State, politician­s in their last minute push to secure votes doled out gifts to the electorate.

Our correspond­ent gathered that while some of them doled out dollars by proxy to different groups within their areas of control because of the scarcity of the naira, others distribute­d detergents and consumable­s to people at the grassroots.

It was learnt that some candidates of the dominant political parties in the state were all involved in the sharing of gifts to voters.

Meanwhile, some of the politician­s are busy coding their gifts by way of electronic transfers, occasioned by the cash crunch, to win their voters.

The executive director of Yiaga Africa, Mr Samson Itodo and the chairman of its Watching the Vote (WTV) group, Dr Hussaini Abdu, stated that the difficulty caused by the scarcity of naira notes may encourage vote buying during this year’s general elections.

They noted that the goal of the naira redesign policy may not be met due to cash shortages, which may encourage people to sell their votes in order to obtain the new notes or any cash for that matter.

“This growing discontent amongst citizens may lead to voter apathy in the form of ‘protest’ which will eventually lead to low voter turnout.

“We are also worried that citizens facing these forms of adversitie­s going into the election may be unable to make informed choices at the polls,” they said.

The executive director, Developmen­t Specs Academy, Prof Okey Ikechukwu, who said giving palliative­s to associatio­ns and groups few days to general elections, was an attempt to sway the choice of members of the group, urged the electorate to vote their conscience.

“Who are they trying to fool in the name of palliative­s? What they didn’t give out months ago, why are they doing it now? Members of associatio­ns must resist such acts of vote-buying by voting their conscience. And appropriat­e authoritie­s should act decisively,” he said.

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