Chairman of the Independent
Electoral Commission, INEC, Professor Attahiru Jega, Wednesday, said he
has no regrets for insisting on deploying Smart Card Reader machines for
the conduct of the general election, saying he knew that the decision
would attract unwarranted attacks on his integrity as a person.
Jega, who stated this while unveiling the Nigeria Civil Society
Situation Room in Abuja yesterday,, maintained that it is only those
that hitherto nurtured plans to fraudulently manipulate the outcome of
the elections, that have been crying foul over the introduction of the
technology which he said would only add credibility to the electoral
process in the country.
He said that INEC had perfected all its strategies and put every apparatus in place with a view to
ensuring a hitch free poll that will reflect the summative choice of Nigerians.
ensuring a hitch free poll that will reflect the summative choice of Nigerians.
“Let me use this opportunity to reassure
Nigerians that we believe that we have done everything possible to
ensure that the 2015 general election is successful. We are adequately
prepared in terms of both logistics and manpower. Likewise, all the
security agencies, especially the police which have a lead role to play
in terms of providing security during elections, have assured us that
they are ready.
“Beginning from today, we are commencing
the rolling out of non-sensitive materials. Likewise, from Friday, all
the sensitive materials will be retrieved from the vault of the Central
Bank Nigeria by our officers, accompanied by security operatives and
representatives of the political parties”.
He said that the materials would be
distributed to states from where it would be taken to local government
areas and subsequently to the ward level.
Jega further highlighted the fact that
the commission has provided and reasonably equipped Registration Area
Centers, RACs, “to ensure that both our staff in various states and
security agents spend few hours of the night on Friday there to enable
them to be ready to deploy the sensitive materials on the election
morning”.
He assured that there will be remarkable
reduction in the delays that were previously experienced in the
commencement of elections, as well as retrieval of materials at the end
of election.
However, the INEC boss said it was
regrettable that the results of the election will not be electronically
transmitted to the collation points. He said though INEC initially
piloted the procedure at two previous elections in Cross River and Niger
States, “we decided that we will not put the electronic transmission of
results to use in 2015 in view of the controversies the procedure might
likely generate from those who don’t see anything good in what we are
doing as a commission.
“We can see the dust that the
introduction of card readers raised. So we decided to keep piloting and
improving on the system beyond 2015, hopefully, by 2019, the commission
will introduce it for the general election”.
‘They know card readers ‘ll stop alteration of figures’
On the issue of the card readers, Jega, who stressed that the process will help address concerns about the alteration of election figures to fraudulently confer advantage on some candidates to the detriment of others, said no such thing would happen this time around.
“This is indeed why they have been
attacking me because they know that the card reader machines will help
us to address all those irregularities, starting from the accreditation
of voters at all the polling units. How can they manipulate the election
when all the information with regards to the number of voters that
turned out at every polling unit is automatically captured and
transmitted by the card reader machines?
‘We have made rigging impossible for them’
He continued; “We have made rigging impossible for them as there is no how the total number of votes cast at the polling unit could exceed the number of accredited persons. Such discrepancy in figures will be immediately spotted. This technology will further make it impossible for any corrupt electoral officer to connive with any politician to pad-up results”, he added.
Besides, Jega noted that in the past,
dubious INEC officials usually delayed the entry of number of accredited
voters until the end of voting so as to have the leeway to tamper with
results, a problem he said would be obviated by the smart card readers.
He said that both the card readers and
the result sheets would be taken to the ward levels, “once there is
evidence of tampering, the information saved in the card reader will be
retrieved.
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