By Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa
Year in and year out, the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, conducts elections into various offices in Nigeria, either through the main general elections, the bye-elections or other elections. INEC has been involved in the conduct of elections for an unbroken period of twenty-four years on, from 1999 to 2023. It would seem however that there is still a lot to do to get the electoral umpire moving. For sure, INEC is the only statutory body authorised to organise or conduct elections in Nigeria, in respect of certain offices created by the Constitution.
*YakubuINEC is one of the federal executive agencies of the State established under section 153 (1) of the 1999 Constitution as amended, with its functions stated in paragraph 15 of the Third Schedule of the said Constitution. Under and by virtue of paragraph 14 of the said Third Schedule, the Chairman of INEC should be at least forty years old, he must be non-partisan, he must not be a member of a political party and he must be a person of unquestionable integrity.
By
law, the major functions of INEC are to: organize, undertake and supervise all
elections into major positions of national importance as stated in the
Constitution; register political parties; monitor the organisation and operation
of the political parties, including their finances, conventions, congresses and
party primaries; arrange and conduct the registration of persons qualified to
vote and prepare, maintain and revise the register of voters for the purpose of
any election; monitor political campaigns and provide rules and regulations
which shall govern the political parties.
From all the above, INEC is the alpha and omega of major elections
in Nigeria. This is further confirmed by section 158 (1) of the Constitution
which states that INEC shall not be subject to the direction or control of any
other authority or person. In plain language, the Constitution has set out to
establish an electoral body that is truly independent, because of the unique
roles that INEC has to play in the emergence of leaders across the land.
Statutorily and financially therefore, the goal is to make INEC a
self-accounting body, in order to guarantee its independence and impartiality.
But this has not been the case at all, over the years.
Now let us relate all these with the recent presidential and
national assembly elections that were held on February 25, 2023. There were too
many challenges associated with the registration of voters and issuance and
collection of the permanent voter’s cards, which indeed should be the
foundation of any electoral success. Without any doubt whatsoever, there was
some form of disconnect between INEC and the voters, in terms of voter
education and information, especially in relation to the collection of the
voter cards. The procedure was unduly bureaucratic, unwieldy and frustrating.
You just have to keep going and going, at times for many days on end. With the
resources committed to this exercise, there is no reason any voter should have
been denied this entitlement at all. To the extent that a court in Abuja had to
issue an order upon INEC to allow Nigerians with temporary voter cards to
participate in the elections!
Then comes the main election. The first thing to note is that INEC cannot boast
of adequate personnel to handle its very sensitive matters. For sure, the
Constitution has stated clearly that its personnel must be impartial and
non-partisan. For crying out loud, how do you recruit youth corps members from
all over the country and you don’t expect them to be partisan? When they have
parents and relations some of whom are actively involved in politics? And some
of the youth corps members themselves are active politicians! There is just no
way anyone can expect loyalty from a youth whose father, mother, brother or
uncle is contesting election on the platform of a political party, no matter
the jurisdiction of his posting, as loyalty for the presidential election for
instance, is to the party, not the individual.
Then comes the returning officers, who are mostly members of the
academic community, recruited on temporary contracts to assist in the collation
and announcement of the election results. These are very elderly men and women
mostly in their late fifties or early sixties, who have risen in rank through
the system to become Vice-Chancellors, over many years. The Supreme Court has
recently ruled that civil servants are not exempted from participating in
politics, thus making it possible for these returning officers to have
allegiance to certain political interests.
This is not to impugn their integrity in any way, but it is
possible that in the process of time, a lecturer may have become influenced by
one political leaning or the other. The issue then is that there is no way INEC
could boast of the impartiality or neutrality of its ad hoc personnel, not to
be biased in one way or the other, in favour of or against a particular
political party. On the day of election itself, we met the unexpected, as there
were cases of locations that were totally neglected by INEC, which did not
benefit from the distribution of election materials, especially in the
difficult terrains of the Niger Delta and other rural areas.
In some other cases, the election materials did not arrive early, whilst yet in other cases, INEC personnel were simply overwhelmed by partisan security agencies or thugs recruited by politicians. It was a case of general unpreparedness on the part of INEC, notwithstanding all the time it had to prepare and organise the elections and the huge funds committed to it. For a fact, INEC budgeted a whooping N355B for the 2023 elections, broken down into several categories.
Nigerians put pressure on the National Assembly to approve
the budget in order to guarantee free, fair and credible elections. The
breakdown includes: Printing of ballot papers; Logistics expenses; Logistics
for technical officers Procurement of non-sensitive materials; Feeding of
policemen and other security personnel; Election day allowances for ad-hoc
staff; Deployment of support staff; Campaign finance tracking; Monitoring of
parties, primaries Supervision and reconnaissance; Outreach activities; Interface
with groups; Advertisement; Voter education; Situation room, etc.
There are
still many more of these ridiculous items budgeted by INEC and for which fund
was duly released, but for which no tangible results were obtained. It should
be possible for the National Assembly as part of its oversight functions, to do
a thorough audit of INEC finances, especially against the background of the
poor outing of the agency in the last presidential and national assembly
elections, which is nothing but money down the drain.
As we approach the governorship and house of assembly elections,
the only way the electoral umpire will continue to earn the confidence of
Nigerians is to go back to the drawing board to improve upon its game.
Elections most times have to do with the perception of the people and unless
there is an apparent display of neutrality and capacity, the people may soon
become weary with INEC and its controversial elections. Given that technology
is subject to errors and glitches as they now call them, there is an urgent
need for INEC to douse the suspicions that characterized the presidential and
National Assembly election
The governorship and house of assembly elections are generally
regarded as local games for which there is a greater degree of involvement by
the people in the grassroots, which is why there is need for solid preparations
by INEC in order to avoid the pitfalls of the past. Through the tracking device
of technology, INEC should be able to determine the locations of its personnel
who have been assigned to different polling units into monitors and checkmate
cases of late deployment of staff and failure to upload election results.
Whereas we do not at all discountenance the efforts put into the electoral
process by INEC, but once the lapses seem to overwhelm these efforts, it
becomes very difficult to assess the electoral body for any serious pass mark.
Enough has been said, time has been given and fund has been provided, so let
there be no further excuses. We are all concerned that election holidays have
now graduated from the Saturday of the election into days and even weeks of
uncertainties.
*Adegboruwa
is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN).
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