Monday, March 16, 2015

THE ELECTIONS WOULD BE FREE AND FAIR- JEGA

The head of Nigeria’s electoral body said on Monday it was ready to conduct presidential and parliamentary elections in less than two weeks’ time, after the vote was delayed by security concerns.

Attahiru Jega told a meeting in the capital city Abuja that his Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had done “everything humanly possible” for a free, fair, credible and peaceful vote on March 28.
INEC has come under close scrutiny since last month when Jega was forced to postpone the February 14 general election on the grounds that troops could not provide adequate security on polling day.
Nigerian soldiers, backed by troops from Cameroon, Chad and Niger, are currently involved in a major offensive against Boko Haram, which has seized swathes of territory in Nigeria’s northeast.
The Islamist insurgency, which began in 2009, has killed more than 13,000 people and forced hundreds of thousands more to flee, raising the prospect that the displaced will be unable to vote.
Despite a series of claimed military successes, security fears remain over the safety of polling stations after an increase in bomb and suicide attacks in recent weeks.
On Saturday, two homemade bombs were found in an IDP camp in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, adding to security fears.
Jega maintained that the election would be peaceful, despite the insurgency and election-linked violence, and said the six-week delay had given his organisation more time to prepare.
“There is evidence indicating that we are much better off security-wise than we were before the postponement of the elections,” he added.
Last week, the government said that Boko Haram had been forced out of 36 towns in the northeast and that Adamawa state had been “cleared” of Islamist fighters.
On Monday, the military said that the militants were forced out of Goniri, southeast of the Yobe state capital, Damaturu.
– Voter ID cards –
A week before February 14, INEC said that two-thirds of the 68.8 million registered voters had collected their ID cards, prompting claims that it was unprepared.
On Monday, Jega said 67.8 million cards had been produced and distributed to individual states, including to the internally displaced, who would be able to vote near camps in the north.
But he added: “The level of collection… nationwide is about 56 million out of these 68.8 million (81 percent).
“So, there are millions of cards out there that… people have not gone out and collected.”
President Goodluck Jonathan’s ruling party has raised concerns about the use of electronic card readers, claiming it is untested technology, as well as the rate of distribution of cards.
But Jega said the card readers, which scan fingerprints and record personal data against the electoral roll, will work and reduce the possibility of the persistent problem of fraud.
Cloned cards would not work, he said, adding that INEC had “cleaned” the electoral register since the last vote in 2011, removing over four million multiple registrations.
Jonathan is seeking a second term in office but has faced a strong challenge from the main opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler.
An Afrobarometer poll published in late January put the two candidates neck-and-neck on 42 percent but observers have said that the extended campaign could hand Jonathan an advantage.

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