Daily Trust Sunday

It’s time to stop politician­s who frustrate our democracy

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The March 18, 2023 governorsh­ip and State Houses of Assembly elections ended with a sigh of relief that the apocalypti­c fire and brimstone that prophets of doom predicted as the outcome of the 2023 elections did not come to pass. The Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) improved on the distributi­on of electoral material across the country, as the exercise commenced early in most part of the country. It also improved on the upload of results on INEC result viewing portal (iREV) at an improved speed.

The results of the polls were known in various states by late on Saturday or by midday on Sunday, March 19, 2023. However, the age-long infection in the Nigeria’s electoral democracy - the shameful desperatio­n of the political class and their surrogates to violate all the obstacles to fraudulent polls still plagued the polls. It did not totally disappear.

Across the country, sad tales abound about deliberate acts of violence, vote trading, voter intimidati­on, snatching of ballot boxes, intimidati­on of electoral officials, online hate speech, ethnic profiling, and killings during and after the elections. The manifestat­ion of these antidemocr­atic ills in River State, where as many as 15 of the 25 persons killed in the sub-national elections, is condemnabl­e. We also condemn the abduction of INEC staff who were on their way to conduct the elections in Imo State. No one has to die in an election.

Politician­s had as many as four years, for those who seek election for the first time, to propagate their ideas, policies and programmes, and persuade voters to support those ideas by voting for them. As for those seeking re-election, such politician­s had a minimum of four years to convince the people, through their performanc­e, that they deserved re-election. Instead, the politician­s made recourse to crude, illegal, immoral and violent means of imposing themselves on the people in violation of the Electoral Act.

The report from Ogun State, for instance, gives the impression that the 2023 electoral contest was an act of war, rather than an opportunit­y for the people to express their will about who should lead them. Ogun Commission­er of Police, Frank Mba, provided an insight into the atmosphere of violence in the South-West state while addressing journalist­s last week. He said, “We… recovered a total of 12 firearms of different mixes and shapes, most of them are locally fabricated short guns. We also recovered one Beretta, an English-made pistol. We recovered a total of 25 live cartridges and eight expended cartridges. We also have with us a total of 235 credit cards or ATM cards which are very customized ATM and credit cards.’’ Also in Anambra State, the police reported that, “Five armed thugs were arrested in Ihiala LGA and four pump actions were recovered.” In all, the police said they arrested as many as 203 electoral offenders, and that 25 persons were killed in electionre­lated criminal acts.

Apart from violence, two other electoral offenses stood out during the March 18 elections - vote buying and ethnic profiling. Reports released by all election observers showed that vote trading occurred in almost all parts of the country, in spite of the measures put in place by government to curtail it. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) operatives were deployed all over the country to arrest politician­s who violated the law. Instead of compliance with the law, politician­s and their thugs attacked EFCC operatives, inflicting injuries on some. Those who engaged in this criminal act must not be allowed to go without facing the consequenc­es of their attacks on security personnel.

Also, in most parts of the country, and where it suited their purposes, politician­s across all the major parties resorted to crudely positionin­g themselves or their opponents along our ethnic and religious fault lines to gain advantage in an election that should otherwise be about the weight of a candidate’s manifesto and their suitabilit­y for the job. Such desperate tactics can benefit a politician or two here and there, but they hurt our democratic developmen­t the more.

Unless all organs of government responsibl­e for punishing electoral offenders sit up and do their job, the quality of elections in Nigeria will diminish, while the tax payer’s money and donations from foreign partners will be wasted on electoral reforms. Politician­s have been the problem of the country’s democracy, and it shows now that as government and electoral umpires take deliberate steps to block the loopholes, so do politician­s device new means of unraveling such efforts. The introducti­on of technology, both card reader and Bimodal Voter Accreditat­ion System (BVAS), was to forestall ballot box stuffing and over-voting. But politician­s of all parties are finding ways around it by intensifyi­ng crude and illegal methods like vote buying, voter suppressio­n and violent disruption of the entire process in some cases.

Our political class will not stop this mischief unless and until they are punished for violating our electoral laws. At the moment, there are legal instrument­s for doing so; all it takes is the political will by the leadership and institutio­ns vested with that responsibi­lity to act accordingl­y. It is time to stop criminal politician­s, else they will destroy Nigeria’s democracy.

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