Registered voters must not be disenfranchised
Registered voters must not be disenfranchised
February 25, 2015
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Prof Attahiru Jega
Last
Thursday, reports claiming that some residents of Lagos State stormed
the state headquarters of the Independent National Electoral Commission
in the Yaba area to demand the release of their Permanent Voter Cards
drew my attention.
The reports also said the protesters
carried placards with inscriptions that accused the INEC of planning to
deprive non-indigenes of the state of their rights to vote in the
forthcoming elections.
The protesters had pointedly declared in
some of the placards, “We want to vote, give us our PVCs”, thereby
underscoring the general mood and anxiety among the teeming masses of
this country whose greatest wish at the moment is to be given the
opportunity to decide who rules them.
In their address to officials of the
commission, led by the Resident Electoral Commissioner, Akin Orebiyi,
the protesters accused INEC of being partial in the distribution of the
PVCs.
According to one of the leaders of the
protest, Francis Abang, about 70 per cent of the non-indigenes resident
in the state had yet to collect their PVCs as of last Thursday.
One after the other, the protesters also
reeled out disturbing accounts of botched attempts to collect their
PVCs. They told of how they were turned back from accredited polling
booths without receiving their cards.
Also, it was alleged that members of a
particular ethnic group resident in Lagos were being exclusively
targeted for discrimination in the collection of the PVCs.
Of course, Orebiyi had apologised to the
protesters for the problems they had encountered and promised to look
into their complaints. But that did not detract from the fact that the
Commission he represents faces an imminent crisis of confidence from
these voters unless something drastic is done urgently to convince them
that there is no plan to deny them their right to vote.
Unless the authorities fail to recognise
and admit it, the fear of disenfranchisement is very real across
Nigeria and expectations of voters waiting to exercise their rights to
human suffrage from March 28.
While INEC has done well, so far, to
address the lapses that had led to extensions in the deadline for the
distribution of the PVCs across the country, as well as to close gaps in
the percentage of cards released, it must make hay to correct the
dangerous notion that some of its officials in some states may have
connived with unscrupulous politicians to ensure that select groups of
voters did not vote in the coming elections.
Now is the time for the Commission to
prove to Nigerians that its feat in the 2011 elections was no fluke. As
an umpire, INEC must prove its neutrality and commitment to preparing
the ground for the Nigeria of the future: a strong, united and
progressive country that unborn generations of Nigerians will be proud
of. The Commission must understand that the much-desired change and the
future of the country rest squarely on its shoulders.
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