The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, says
Lagos State now has 5.9 million registered voters ahead of next week’s
presidential election
.
The commission has also deployed
its staff to all polling units in Lagos to distribute the Permanent
Voter’s Cards, PVCs in the next five days.
Lagos State
Governor, Babatunde Fashola addressed newsmen on Thursday evening after a
meeting with INEC’s Resident Electoral Commissioner, REC, for Lagos,
Akin Orebiyi.
He said from his interface with the REC,
Lagos now has 5,905,000 registered voters, urging all residents who had
registered but who had not collected their PVCs to proceed to their
polling units from today by 8.30am to start collecting their cards.
Speaking
at the State House, Ikeja, Lagos, southwest Nigeria, Fashola said the
REC had briefed him of the readiness of INEC to commence the
distribution exercise from Wednesday 8.30a.m to 5.30p.m in the evening
daily and lasting till Sunday.
He stated that what has
changed is that from the former Wards Collation Offices of INEC, the
collection has been moved closer to the people at the primary places
where they usually vote and which they are familiar with and
irrespective of where they registered.
The governor
also advised all those who have registered freshly to also proceed to
the Polling Units where INEC has made arrangements to distribute the PVC
to them, stressing that in case there are difficulties the state
government would continue to work with INEC towards providing solutions.
“I
would keep an eye to see this new phase of the exercise. It allows the
people the opportunity to vote and as I said, this exercise would start
Wednesday. There are five days to do this, so that as many people as
possible and hopefully everybody who is registered can get theirs at
their poling units,” he stated.
On what Lagosians
should expect from the latest exercise, Fashola said it is for them to
make out time and go out and make the sacrifice, adding that he would
continue to insist that the umpire must get it right.
“I
know people have tried. I have heard people say they have been to the
places, the Ward Offices eight times and some four times and for me if
you have made that kind of efforts, the real success must come in not
giving up and I don’t give up and that is why I continue to address the
issue.
“I have made state broadcasts, I have granted
interviews, I won’t give up on our people. They must get a chance to
participate so the people themselves must be willing to persist and to
persevere so that they will get an opportunity to have a say in how
their affairs are ordered by being able to vote at the next elections,”
he explained.
He appealed to such people to see the
hitherto unsuccessful efforts as adversity and hopefully when they
succeed they would have the final joy on election days to say they
finally voted and that would be the real success story in the difficult
exercise of collecting Permanent Voter’s Cards.
When
reminded that he was yet to collect his PVC, the governor maintained
that he won’t give up and that INEC has acknowledged that it has
received quite a number of more voter’s cards and his is presumably
amongst them.
Affirming that he would not collect the
PVC until the majority of Lagosians collect theirs, he declared: “A
captain does not leave a ship when there is crisis and I must make sure
all the passengers are safely evacuated so I want Lagosians to get
theirs first. As a Governor, I enjoy certain privileges but I can’t go
ahead of them so I want them to take the fullest benefit of this
exercise before I collect mine.”
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