Hehehe...The Peoples Democratic Party Governors’
Forum has kicked against the use of card readers for the March 28 and
April 11 general elections.
The governors, at an interactive session
with the media and civil society organisations in Lagos on Tuesday, also
faulted the Independent National Electoral Commission preparedness
for the elections.
Before the interactive session titled ‘Sustenance of Democratic Values and National Development,’ ended, Fidelis Chidi blog learnt that INEC had summoned leaders of all the political parties in the country to a meeting on Thursday over the polls.
As if acting a script with its governors,
the PDP also on Tuesday sent a letter to the electoral body detailing
its observations on Saturday’s Card Readers mock in 12 states.
The governors at the Lagos forum were
Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom); Liyel Imoke (Cross River); Seriake Dickson
(Bayelsa); Babangida Aliyu (Niger); Sule Lamido (Jigawa); Bala Ngilari
(Adamawa); Ayo Fayose (Ekiti) and Olusegun Mimiko (Ondo).
Others were Ibrahim Shema (Katsina); Jonah Jang (Plateau); Mukhtar Yero (Kaduna) and Ibrahim Danwambo (Gombe).
The PDPGF usually holds its meetings in
Abuja or any PDP state but this time round they chose Lagos, a
stronghold of the opposition All Progressives Congress for the
interactive session.
Akpabio, who is the chairman of the
PDPGF, said Lagos was chosen because it is the headquarters of the media
and activism in Nigeria.
Akpabio said that Lagos had been plagued
by the propaganda of the APC and that the PDP wanted to showcase its
achievements in the city.
He said the postponement of the elections
were justifiable. Although the governors did not canvass for the use of
Temporary Voter Cards, they maintained that people who do not have
Permanent Voter Cards should be allowed to vote.
Akpabio said Nigerians should be grateful to the PDP for ensuring that the country had the longest span(16 years) of democracy.
He said, “The continued quest of the
PDP-led Federal Government for free, fair and credible elections is
witnessed in President Goodluck Jonathan’s robust support through
adequate and sustained funding as well as the free hand given to INEC to
operate.
“But surprisingly, in our own opinion,
INEC appears ill-prepared for the 2015 elections. For example, at the
time the polls were shifted due to security concerns, over 23 million
registered voters had yet to collect their PVCs and you know there are
some countries with populations of about just three million.
“Twenty-three million would amount to disenfranchising more than five West African countries in their own elections.
“It will be recalled that even the INEC
chairman(Prof. Attahiru Jega) admitted on the floor of the Senate that
over one million PVCs had yet to be printed in far away China.
“According to the INEC chairman, the
postponement was a blessing in disguise. How then can Nigerians
reconcile the purported readiness of INEC for the February 14 election
with the testing of card readers more than a month after the
postponement? More than three weeks after the elections have been
shifted, they are then testing the card readers that would have been
used. Given the failure rate of the card readers during the recent mock
exercise, it is apparent that many Nigerians will be disenfranchised
even when they are registered to vote.
“We re-assert that on no account should
any registered voter be disenfranchised for non-possession of PVC even
when the person has a TVC when it is not due to one’s own personal
fault; even when the card reader has rejected or refused to recognise
the thumbprint or the battery is dead and there is no electricity in
that area to charge it.
“We don’t want anyone disenfranchised and
we are pleading also that elections should not be shifted again because
the impression is that we were not ready for elections even though we
know that we would have won the elections if they had been allowed to
hold.”
Also, Imoke said prior to 2011, Jega was seen as a man of integrity and that was why he was appointed by Jonathan.
He, however, said recent happenings in INEC were beginning to prove otherwise.
Imoke said no one should be disenfranchised on account of the PVC or card reader.
He said, “The facts are before us. The
testing of card reader and its failure have not been addressed. PVCs
remain unprinted as we speak. INEC has no right whatsoever to
disenfranchise any Nigerian.
“I will appreciate it if the media can
focus on this issue. I will not want to go to a polling unit and be told
that as a result of no fault of mine, my card was rejected. My picture
is on my PVC, it looks like me and it is me but because the card reader
cannot recognise my fingerprint, I will not be allowed to vote?
“So for us, it is important that we
understand democratic values and appreciate that the values of democracy
rest squarely on equity and the right of every Nigerian to participate
in the process of selecting their leaders.”
Jang, who is the chairman of a faction of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, said he had not been able to collect his PVC.
He said that it was ironic that INEC was
insisting on the use of card readers when its chairman had said last
year that the card readers would be tested before being used for major
elections.
While reading a message alongside
Akpabio, he said, “I received a text message from someone this(Tuesday)
morning and it reads, ‘During a meeting with a team from the United
States last year, Jega had said card readers would not be used for the
Ekiti and Osun governorship elections because they were too crucial to
be used for experiments.
“INEC said the card readers would be
tested in by-elections but now INEC is insisting on using card readers
for elections. Are governorship elections of two states more crucial
than a presidential election?
“I don’t even have a PVC. What happens if my PVC does not find its way to Plateau State before the elections?”
The governors said Nigerians should not be deceived by the mantra of change propagated by the APC.
Akpabio said the APC Presidential
candidate, Maj.Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), truncated democracy under
the guise of fighting corruption but only ended up arresting Nigerians
arbitrarily.
He said Buhari had returned with the same
issue of corruption, which according to him, is deceitful as those
campaigning for him are extremely corrupt.
While responding to a question from
journalists over the use of government-owned jets for party campaigns,
Jang said democracy was for the rich in most parts of the world and
people needed such luxury for protection.
He said, “All over the world, democracy
is for the rich. Even in the US, congressmen and senators are rich. You
cannot become the President if you are not a millionaire.
“If I leave my house without security,
there is no guarantee that I will get back home safely because as a
governor, you would have offended some people.”
Governor Aliyu said the APC presidential primary of last December was not won by Buhari but his victory was paid for with money.
Speaking at the PDP Governors forum in Lagos earlier
today, Governor of Jigawa state, Sule Lamido, described the APC as a
party whose formation is based on hate, anger, frustration, envy and malice
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