By Jude Obuseh
In today’s Nigeria, the contradiction is stark and unsettling. Armed groups in remote forests upload videos in real time. Kidnappers broadcast proof-of-life clips within minutes. Terrorists circulate propaganda across multiple platforms with ease. Yet, when it comes to elections—the very foundation of democratic legitimacy—citizens are repeatedly told that electronic transmission of results is “not always feasible.”
The question therefore forces itself into the national conscience: if bandits can transmit their crimes live, why can’t the Nigerian state transmit election results electronically? This is not a debate about abstract technology. Nigeria has over 120 million internet subscribers, according to data from the Nigerian Communications Commission, and mobile network coverage extends to over 85 percent of the population. Banks process millions of electronic transactions daily.
Government agencies collect taxes,
fees, and levies through digital platforms. INEC itself already deploys
technology such as the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC
Result Viewing Portal (IReV), both of which rely on internet connectivity. The
infrastructure, while imperfect, clearly exists.
What is at issue is not whether
electronic transmission is possible, but whether it is consistently enforced.
Since 2015, Nigeria has spent billions of naira modernising its electoral
process. In the 2023 general elections alone, INEC’s budget exceeded ₦300 billion, with a significant
portion allocated to technology, logistics, and ICT systems. Yet the same
election cycle was marred by delays, partial uploads, and manual collation
controversies that reignited public distrust. Courts were flooded with
petitions, political tensions rose, and confidence in the process suffered another
blow.
Defenders of flexible transmission
rules argue that Nigeria’s terrain, network gaps, and security challenges make
mandatory electronic transmission risky. They warn that results could be
invalidated due to technical failures, disenfranchising voters. This concern is
not entirely baseless. Nigeria’s digital divide is real, and elections must not
collapse because of a weak signal in a remote polling unit. A democracy must be
resilient.
However, this argument collapses
under scrutiny when placed beside everyday realities. The same rural areas
deemed “too disconnected” for election uploads are often the very places where
mobile money alerts arrive instantly, WhatsApp videos circulate freely, and
insurgents release footage without interruption.
Even where connectivity is weak,
store-and-forward systems exist, allowing data to be securely uploaded once a
signal becomes available. Many countries with comparable or worse
infrastructure have adopted mandatory electronic result transmission precisely
to reduce human interference during collation.
The deeper issue, then, is trust.
Nigerians are asked to trust a system where votes are cast in public but
results are often finalised behind closed doors. Citizens are expected to pay
taxes digitally, accept electronic fines, and comply with biometric
verification, yet are told that their votes cannot always enjoy the same
transparency. This asymmetry fuels suspicion. Democracy cannot thrive where
citizens feel audited but not respected.
Globally, credible elections increasingly
rely on transparent result management. Countries that have reduced
post-election violence and litigation did so by minimising human discretion at
the collation stage, not expanding it. Nigeria’s repeated electoral
disputes—running into the hundreds after every general election—carry economic
and political costs that far outweigh the challenges of improving transmission
infrastructure.
A balanced position is therefore
clear. Electronic transmission should not be optional or subject to political bargaining,
but it must also be intelligently implemented. Mandatory electronic
transmission, backed by legal clarity, redundancy systems, offline backups, and
strict timelines, is not radical—it is overdue. Where technology fails,
transparent audit trails should exist. Where officials sabotage uploads,
sanctions must be swift and real.
The core principle is simple: if the
state can see Nigerians clearly when collecting revenue, it must also allow
Nigerians to see clearly when counting votes. Anything less undermines the
social contract.
Nigeria does not lack the tools.
What it lacks is the courage to remove ambiguity from its electoral laws and
the discipline to enforce transparency without exceptions. Until that happens,
the haunting irony will remain: in a country where criminals can broadcast
their crimes instantly, democracy still struggles to broadcast the will of the
people.
*Obuseh is a commentator on public issues
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