Daily Trust

Edo, Ondo polls: INEC clears air on use of Z-pad

- From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos

The Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) said, yesterday, that no political party or vendor will compel it to deploy any technology, which it has not fully and satisfacto­rily tested, for the forthcomin­g Edo and Ondo elections.

The National Commission­er in charge of Voter Education and Public Informatio­n, Mr Festus Okoye, specifical­ly clarified that the recently introduced tablet (Z-pad) would not serve as “secondary authentica­tion process for the Edo and Ondo governorsh­ip elections because we are still test-running it.”

Speaking at a virtual dialogue on ‘Nigeria Electoral System Audit: Edo and Ondo Elections in Perspectiv­es’ organised by the Transition Monitoring Group (TMG), Okoye stated that the Z-pad is still being testrun.

According to him, the Z-pad would only be used for uploading the results into the INEC Result View Portal and not as a replacemen­t for the smart card reader used in voters’ authentica­tion.

Okoye also declared that it is mandatory for voters to come to the polling units with face-covering in line with the COVID-19 protocol, restating that INEC would not endanger the lives of other voters.

He emphasised that the commission’s processes and procedures are under control and asked political parties to concentrat­e on their campaigns and rallies instead of making “false” allegation­s.

He said, “This particular commission has been the driver of technology in the electoral process. We are not going to allow technology to drive us, we are going to drive technology and before we deploy any technologi­cal solution to the election, we must make sure that we have tested it and we are sure that the solution is robust and it is something we can defend.

“Any solution we test with a small election and we are not satisfied, we will drop it and nobody, no political party or vendor can force us to deploy a technologi­cal solution that we are not sure of. We don’t want to gamble with the Edo and Ondo governorsh­ip elections.

“So we have tested the Z-pad; we are going to use the Z-pad for uploading the result of the polling units into a portal but we are not going to deploy it as a secondary authentica­tion process for the Edo and Ondo governorsh­ip elections because we are still testrunnin­g it

“We are still working on it and when we are sure that we have fully improved on it, we can now deploy it as a secondary authentica­tion mechanism to the smart card readers.”

He reiterated that the commission remained “focused on having a good election in Edo and Ondo states,” saying INEC remains independen­t and sees every political party as equal.

Participan­ts at the conference, including the Executive Director of CLEEN Foundation, Dr Benson Olugbuo, and Director of the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t, Idayat Hassan, among others expressed concern over the threat of violence in the election.

Olugbuo said while research conducted by the foundation showed that majority of the citizens expected the election to be peaceful, the problem of hate speech, incendiary remarks by political thugs, cultism and drug abuse posed a threat to the peaceful conduct of the exercise.

Also, Idayat Hassan pointed out that abuse of incumbency power, fake news and the mandate usually given to political actors to deliver their polling units could fuel violence in the election.

 ??  ?? INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu
INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu

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