The Guardian (Nigeria)

Minister faults Oshiomhole over call for INEC chairman’s resignatio­n

• Re-opening of campaigns legal, Yadudu, lawyer insist • Engineers accuse electoral body of rejecting logistics support

- From Muyiwa Adeyemi (Ibadan), Collins Olayinka (Abuja), Gordi Udeajah (Umuahia) and Murtala Adewale (Kano)

THE Minister of Communicat­ions, Adebayo Shittu, has disagreed with the national chairman of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, over his call asking the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, to resign over the postponeme­nt of the general elections. He described the advocacy as unfair and unacceptab­le.

Addressing reporters yesterday in Ibadan, Shittu, who flayed the ex-labour leader for conducting “shoddy primaries “, main- tained that if the chairman of the electoral body resigns, it might affect the conduct of the reschedule­d polls this weekend.

The minister queried: “When Oshiomhole supervised horrible primaries of the party, who called for his resignatio­n?”

Besides a Professor of Law at Bayero University, Kano (BUK), Auwalu Hamish Yadudu, and a constituti­onal lawyer/executive Director of Global Centre For Peace & Justice, Dr. Anthony Agbazuere, have given vent to resumption of campaigns by the political parties.

In the wake of the post- ponement of the 2019 general elections by the electoral commission at the weekend, its chair had outlawed fresh electionee­ring.

Reacting to the order, the duo maintained that any political groups that so desire to re-open rallies could proceed, as their action is backed by law.

The senior university lecturer also cautioned the electoral body against plugging the nation into an unnecessar­y crisis if it knew the one-week interval would not be sufficient to right the lapses that prompted the shift in the first place. In an exclusive chat with

The Guardian in Kano, the don maintained that INEC was not on any safe or sound legal footing to restrict political parties to continue canvassing votes, noting that the reasons put forward by the commission may not overrule the position of the constituti­on which stipulates 24 hours before the polls.

Speaking with journalist­s in Umuahia, Agbazuere stated that “it is a national embarrassm­ent that the INEC chairman could not consult his legal department or look at the laws before issuing such an unlawful decree that is of no moment. In a related developmen­t, the Abia State Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Johnson Onuigbo, said the electoral body could end rigging if election materials were lawfully distribute­d and well protected.

He, nonetheles­s, commended Prof. Yakubu for resolving against staggered polls.

Also yesterday, the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) said the ugly scenario could have been avoided had INEC taken the logistics support offered by it.

Its president, Adekunle Mokuolu, claimed that the electoral umpire did not accept the society’s offer to execute logistics for the 2019 polls.

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