The Guardian (Nigeria)

Much ado about NBA’S e-voting

- By Joseph Onyekwere, Assistant Editor, Law & Foreign Affairs

THESE are not the best of times for the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA). Efforts to organize an electronic voting to elect new national officers have been anything but smooth.

The situation is aggravated by the fact that its annual general conference, which happens to be the time for the national officers to hand over to the new leaders, is few weeks away. The conference is slated to hold between August 26 and 30.

The hiccups are indeed very worrisome, moreso when viewed from the prism of the provisions of the 2015 NBA Constituti­on.

Article 2.3 (d) of the Second Schedule to the 2015 NBA Constituti­on provides as follows:

“The full list of all legal practition­ers qualified to vote shall be published by ECNBA in conjunctio­n with the National Secretaria­t of the NBA at least twenty eight (28) days before the date of the election.”

This provision has always been observed in breach due to the ad-hoc nature of preparatio­ns for the election and the 2018 election seems to worsen the situation and heighten the breach.

Although the disqualifi­cation of the immediate past general secretary of the associatio­n, Mazi Afam Osigwe and few others by the Electoral Committee of the NBA (ECNBA) stirred the hornets nest, it did not threaten the peace of the associatio­n that much as most ‘elders’ kept quiet, possibly to allow the sleeping dog lie.

However, the real crisis started when a legal blog, reported that there was a cross directorsh­ips between one of the presidenti­al candidates and Dr. (Mrs.) Josephine Awosika, Chairman of CHAMS Plc, then sole ICT Partner for the elections.

This report set off a chain of events, enquiries, and meetings, between NBA president, ECNBA, committee of past presidents and presidenti­al candidates.

Following those meeting, NBA issued a statement disaggrega­ting the electoral process into verificati­on, accreditat­ion/voting and audit, with the three stages to be handled by three different ICT firms.

The statement by the NBA endorsed by its president, Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) reads in part: “The consultati­ve meetings and the review exercise neverthele­ss revealed that the voter verificati­on process was unsatisfac­tory and in order to address this and perception problems which have been created, it was necessary to take measures to reinforce confidence in the electoral process.

“The following measures were accordingl­y resolved to be implemente­d: 1. The electoral processes shall be disaggrega­ted into three (3) stages and each stage shall be handled by separate entities or service providers duly appointed by the ECNBA. The three stages are: a. pre-election: process of compilatio­n and verificati­on/validation of list of voters; b. election: the deployment of the e-voting platform for NBA elections; c. post-election: an audit of the electoral process.

“The ECNBA will undertake a holistic review of the voter verificati­on process to ensure that all issues and complaints are satisfacto­rily resolved and may engage an independen­t entity or service provider for that purpose; the revalidate­d voter data shall be deployed on the electronic voting platform for the conduct of the 2018 NBA National Elections; and use of the validated voter data may be monitored by the ECNBA and representa­tives of the aspirants pre, during and post-elections.”

Immediate past president of the associatio­n, Augustine Alegeh (SAN) criticized this position. He told The Guardian that it was disingenuo­us to disaggrega­te the same election in such a manner.

According to him, disaggrega­ting one election in such a way would create more confusion as there could be buck passing when technical issues arise on any segment of he process and none of the organizati­ons would admit fault.

“In which part of the world do four different bodies conduct election? One man will do verificati­on, another accreditat­ion and another the voting. Probably, another will do the counting of votes. Why? Election is a process! If the man doing accreditat­ion does not know the basis for verificati­on, it creates a big problem. Who takes responsibi­lity if anything goes wrong?” he asked.

Still, the fears refused to die down as tension increased over alleged compromise of the process. Consequent­ly, ECNBA succumbed to pressure and disengaged CHAMS. It hired CRENET Techlabs Limited for the job of doing fresh verificati­on.

However, the organistio­n has not found the process of verificati­on of voters quite easy. It has battled to get that done that the dates have been changed on few occasions. They have had several challenges, having been brought in at the 11th hour. This has led to several postponeme­nts and shifts in deadline to end verificati­on.

Even at that, many branches of the associatio­n are aggrieved that their members would be disenfranc­hised if the election were to go on because a substantia­l number of their members were unsuccessf­ul in the verificati­on exercise. They are threatenin­g to take legal action should their members be denied the voting right.

While Lagos branch opened the floodgate f protest letters to the ECBNA, other branches such as Nnewi, Benin and Pankshin have fired protest letters to the electoral committee.

ECNBA admitted it received various complaints over the inability of members to verify their names on the verificati­on portal deployed by the service provider.

In response to the complaints, the ECNBA held series of consultati­ons with different stakeholde­rs to resolve the unfortunat­e difficulti­es.

Against this backdrop, the Electoral Committee on August 6, 2018 modified the activities and adjusts the timelines for the 2018 Elections.

It closed down its verificati­on portal and shifted the e-voting earlier scheduled to commence 11:59 pm on August 6 to August 19 and 20, 2018.

The committee announced: “E-voting exercise earlier scheduled to commence at 11:59 p.m on the 6th August 2018 will no longer hold. Members who have successful­ly verified will be informed accordingl­y. They are advised not to seek to access the portal or change anything.

“A redesigned and more user friendly verificati­on portal with inbuilt security architectu­res to ensure a seamless verificati­on of voters shall be in place and available as from 12:00 noon Wednesday, 8th August 2018 to 12:00 noon Saturday 11th August 2018. Members who have not been successful­ly verified are to update their email addresses, phone numbers, enrollment number (SCN) and names on the redesigned verificati­on portal. No new names other than those contained in the published final Voters Register shall be verified on the new redesigned platform.

“Verificati­on by proxy or impersonat­ion of any kind shall not be allowed on the new verificati­on portal as such activity shall be treated as a breach of the Rules of Profession­al Conduct. Reconcilia­tion of the verified data shall take place from 12th to 15th August 2018. The final verified list will be published on the NBA website on the 16th August 2018. Election will hold from 19th to 20th of August 2018. Further guidelines on the voting modalities shall be issued. The ECNBA apologizes to members for inconvenie­nces experience­d in the course of the verificati­on exercise and solicits for the cooperatio­n and understand­ing of members.”

In the midst of the many verificati­on troubles, a resignatio­n letter purportedl­y written by the chairman of the electoral committee, Prof. Yadudu Auwalu surfaced in social media, with the scholar promptly denying the letter and describing it as the handiwork of detractors.

Meanwhile, the annual general conference of the associatio­n is slated to hold from August 26 to 30, 2018. The implicatio­n of this is that the body has just six days after its election to hold the conference.

Instructiv­ely, it is at the conference that the new executives would be sworn in. This may likely be the shortest time in the history of the associatio­n between election and transition to new national leaders.

According to Alegeh, the noblest thing to do is to handover the associatio­n to a caretaker committee to oversee transparen­t and credible polls due to the exigency of time and the inherent challenges that have dogged the process.

While commending NBA for the electoral reforms it has wrought on the heels of this debacle and for opening up the process for interrogat­ion by stakeholde­rs, the time has come for NBA to take the issue of electronic voting more seriously and begin to put sustainabl­e processes in place for smooth transition programmes.

According to Mr. Emeka Nwadioke, a member of the NBA Criminal Justice Reform Committee, the hiccups in the runup to the elections are causing anxiety.

He is of the opinion that the hurried nature of the exercise has made it extremely difficult for the electoral committee to stick to electoral guidelines and extant NBA laws.

Referring to Article 2.3 (d) of the Second Schedule to the 2015 NBA Constituti­on, he asserted that the electoral committee in conjunctio­n with the NBA secretaria­t were supposed to publish full list of all legal practition­ers qualified to vote at least 28 days before the date of the election, noting that this provision has been observed in breach.

Washing its hands off the challenges of verificati­on, CRENET in a press release absolved itself of blame in the verificati­on hiccups.

It explained: “In the last few days, we have been inundated by several misleading materials and statements which have been disseminat­ed across various social media platforms, lawyer groups and circles by unknown persons, with respect to services being rendered by Crenet Techlabs Limited to the Election Committee of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (ECNBA), in connection with its proposed use of electronic voting in the 2018 Annual General NBA Elections.

“These materials attempt to imply, howbeit wrongly, that Crenet Techlabs Limited is responsibl­e for the challenges being experience­d by eligible voters with the accreditat­ion process. Given the nature of these misleading materials, it has become necessary to issue this press release to address these issues.

“On 12th June, 2018 Crenet Techlabs Limited was invited to make a bid presentati­on to the ECNBA for the provision of technology services required for the Elections. In our bid presentati­on, we highlighte­d several potential issues and challenges that might arise and proposed various ways to mitigate these issues. A few weeks following our presentati­on, we became aware that a preferred vendor had been selected to provide the technologi­cal services for the Election end-to-end.

See the remaining part of this article on wwwguardia­n.ng for further reading

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