Jega on Wednesday told the Senate that only the Service
Chiefs could guarantee the sanctity of the rescheduled polls in view of
the security challenges facing the country.
Jega, who
was grilled for about four hours by the Senate on INEC’s preparedness
for the elections as well as the effectiveness of the use of card reader
for the accreditation of voters, affirmed that the commission was ready
to conduct credible, free, fair and transparent elections.
He,
nevertheless, confessed that the postponement of the election had
offered the commission the opportunity for extra preparation.
Speaking
on the development, Secretary of The Coalition of Oodua Self
Determination Groups (COSEG), Rasak Olokooba, stated that Nigerians will
not take the issue of another election shift lightly.
According to him, the first shift in election was an abberation hence there is no room for another postponement.
Olokooba stated that the INEC boss’ statement has created confusion in the minds of Nigerians.
“We
don’t know where he belongs now, whether on the people’s side or that
of the government. Saying the security agencies will determine whether
election will take place is like abdicating his official postition and
ceding his power to security agencies,” he said.
Human right activist and public commentator, Richard
Akinola, posted on his facebook page that as part of the moves to
scuttle next month’s election, the hawks have resolved to use the June
12 template, by sponsoring a plethora of cases.
“Two of
such cases would be filed in the next few days. One is for the proper
interpretation of section 135(2) of the 1999 Constitution, which allows
for the election to be postponed to six months if the country is at war.
The second is to stop INEC from using the card reader for the election.
These are apart from the various cases filed against the candidature of
Buhari. Interesting times lie ahead,” Akinola stated.
The
executive chairman of The Committee for the Protection of Peoples
Mandate (CPPM), Nelson Ekujumi, also condemned the statement by Prof
Jega that the conduct of the 2015 general elections is dependent on
security in the north east.
He described it as
unconstitutnal, irresponsible, undemocratic and an abdication of the
constitutional responsibility of INEC which is empowered to conduct
elections by the Electoral Act.
“We reject this
statement in its entirety and call for a retraction as well as an
apology to Nigerians for this assault on democracy,” he averred.
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) Professor Ishaq Akintola, in a statement
made available to P.M.NEWS, joins other well-meaning Nigerians, true
patriots and genuine democrats to warn against the diabolical plot to
extend the tenure of the current administration, describing it as
nothing short of a coup against the people of Nigeria and a sabotage of
what Rousseau called the General Will.
“With the
exemption of a few bootlickers and court jesters, Nigerians are eager to
vote come March 28 and April 11. It is rather unfortunate that the
Presidency seeks to uphold Napoleon Bonaparte’s postulate that the only
lesson which men learn from history is that they learn nothing from
history. Or how else can we describe the present maneuvers from
Nigeria’s seat of power against the backdrop of the June 12 imbroglio
and the subsequent chaos that dragged Nigeria back by several decades?
“Without
the fear of contradicting the Hegelian thesis that history always
repeats itself, we hasten to remind President Jonathan of the Marxist
antithesis adjudging the first repetition of history as a tragedy and
the second, a farce.”
MURIC appeals to President Jonathan not to prove cynics
right, adding that the excuse given for postponing the election
(security) was dismissed by many as a ruse.
“It will be
too bad if this plot is true. It had better not be. It is not the
winners of elections or their losers that emerge heroes among leaders
but those who are most adaptable to change, those who play the game
according to the rules, those who respect the rule of law, those who
choose honour and integrity and those who shun the tempting songs of
power.
“We charge members of the NASS to stand on the
right side of history where their names will be written in letters of
gold. We remind the honourable members that whereas the courage to sell
one’s conscience is cheap, the will to take a principled stand is worth a
governor’s ransom.
“If it is true that President
Jonathan has repeatedly told Nigerians that March 28, April 11 and May
29 are sacrosanct, then we must not be hearing this type of rumour. We
invite Mr. President to fear God, the source of all power. To prove that
he is a true Christian, President Jonathan must keep faith with Numbers
30:2 where the Bible says, ‘When a man vows a vow to the Lord, or
swears an oath to bind himself by a pledge, he shall not break his word;
he shall do according to all that proceeds from his mouth’.
“To
be or not to be? That is the question. Whether President Jonathan is
prepared to prove to Nigerians that he is a good Christian and therefore
worthy of the responsibility of leadership of about 170 million
Nigerians will be largely tied to his readiness to keep a date with the
March 28, April 11 elections and the May 29 inauguration,” he stated.
The
South West Independent Campaign Organisation(SWICO), in its reaction,
asked the INEC boss to go ahead with the rescheduled elections or resign
his appointment as the military has no role in the conduct of
elections.
The SWICO Director General, Moses Olafare
and Director of Media and Publicity, Gbenga Soloki while speaking with
P.M NEWS, maintained that the elections should go on as planned if INEC
is truly prepared.
According to SWICO, “the response of
the INEC boss is uncalled for and diversionary. Prof. Jega has
consistently maintained the preparedness of the commission until
yesterday (Wednesday) when he shocked the world by passing the buck to
the service chiefs who in any sane clime do not have any role in conduct
of elections. It is either INEC is unprepared or its acting a script by
the presidency and the service chiefs to truncate this democratic
process.”
Also speaking, a member of the House of Representatives, James Abiodun Faleke, advised Nigerians to remain vigilant.
“This
is a critical period in the country’s march to enduring democracy. The
ruling party knows it is going to lose the election. That is why it is
employing all forms of tricks to scuttle the election which I know they
will not succeed.
Nigerians should just remain vigilant
and work towards a peacefful election,” Faleke, also coordinator of the
Buhari/Osinbajo Campaign Organisation in Lagos, said.
The
APC candidate for the Mushin Federal Constituency 1 in the House of
Representatives, Taofeek Adeyemi Alli, said INEC is the organ charged
constitutionally to organise elections in the country.
“If
the INEC Chairman now comes around and says he could not deermine
whether election will take place or not, then the signs are not
encouraging at all and we should all come together and ensure that the
right thing is done,” said Alli, former Chairman of Odiolowo/Ojuwoye Local Council Development Area.
Also
speaking on the issue, APC candidate for Surulere Federal Constituency 2
in the House of Representatives, Hakeem Adisa Bamgbola, stated that
elections coming up on 28th March and 11th April should remain
sacroscant.
“When the elections were first shifted,
Nigerians took it in good faith and saw it as a sacrifice they must make
to instal a just government. Another postponement now should not be
entertained. The international community is watching us and we should
not do things that will continue to ridicule us,” Bamgbola, former
Chairman of Itire/Ikate Local Council Development Area, said.
The
Executive Secretary of Odiolowo/Ojuwoye Local Council Development Area,
Rasak Olusola Ajala, advsied Nigerians to remain calm but be vigilant.
“At
this point in time, we should all remain calm but vigilant. I think
there is a hidden agenda to scuttle this election but we must not allow
it to happen,” he said.
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