Friday, 9 September 2016

INEC Bows to APC Pressure, Postpones Edo Election


From left, Force Public Relations Officer, Deputy Commissioner of Police Don Awunah and Mr Garba Abdullahi of Department of State Services addressing pressmen in Abuja on the credible intelligence availed the agencies of plans by insurgent/extremist element to attack vulnerable communities and soft targets with high population during Sallah celebrations between 12th and 13th September, 2016 and the need to postpone Edo State Election at the weekend . Photo by Gbemiga Olamikan.Oshiomhole engineered the postponement – Edo PDP BENIN-CITY—THE fog of uncertainty beclouding conduct of the Edo State governorship election has cleared. The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, last night, yielded to security advice and postponed the election to Wednesday, September 28, 2016.
But for the postponement, which is raising dust in the polity, the polls would have been held tomorrow. INEC National Commissioner for Voters Education and Publicity, Mr Solomon Atoyebi, anchored the postponement on security concerns at a news briefing in Benin, the Edo State capital at 8pm.

Mr. Atoyebi had at an earlier briefing, yesterday afternoon, brushed aside the security advice from the police and the Department of State Services, DSS, to postpone the polls on the basis of alleged security threats directed against some states of the federation, Edo inclusive, because the electoral commission was 97 per cent prepared to conduct the exercise.
The postponement elicited immediate response from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, which rejected the move and Governor of Ekiti State, Mr Ayodele Fayose, who said the development was a bad signal for Nigeria’s democracy.
Meanwhile there  was 
pandemonium, yesterday, in Okpella, Estako East Local Government area of Edo State as supporters of the PDP and the All Progressives Congress, APC, clashed over the issue. It was gathered that the incident started brewing in the early hours of yesterday, when some PDP supporters were alleged to have threatened to attack any Okpella indigene supporting the ruling APC. The clash came few hours to INEC’s postponement of the election. Postponement illegal, unconstitutional —PDP Rejecting the postponement, the PDP said the Saturday, September 10, 2016  (tomorrow) election date should remain sacrosanct, since there was no tangible reason(s) evident to tamper with the election. In a statement issued in Abuja by the spokesman of the party, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, it said the “postponement of the election by top hierarchy of the security agencies predicated on alleged security threat was a less than ingenious attempt to buy time for the APC, which is clearly heading for a major electoral catastrophe on Saturday. “It is shameful and indeed a major constitutional breach for the security agencies to act in concert with the APC to truncate an election that had been planned for months. Nigerians were not deceived by the obvious concoctions of the security agencies, which performances during elections had been less than average since the advent of the Buhari administration. Indeed, they have become instruments in the hands of the ruling party to harass, intimidate and punish opponents.” He said the time might be ripe now for President Buhari and the National Assembly to conduct a non-partisan holistic review and investigation of the national security apparatus to save the nation’s fledging democracy. “Finally, we call on all stakeholders – The Media, civil society organizations, all political parties and indeed all Nigerians and the international community to rise to defend our hard earned democracy from the assault being unleashed on it by the APC government,” he said. Fayose: It’s bad signal for democracy Ekiti State Governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose described the postponement as a bad signal and beginning of the end of democracy in Nigeria. He added: “It is obvious that the APC feared that it couldn’t win the election and was ready to employ whatever crude means to subvert the wish of the people.” The governor, who said he was alarmed by the APC government of President Mohammadu Buhari’s use of security agencies to arm-twist democratic process said: “I warned Nigerians not to elect Buhari, now we are all seeing the results. Our economy is in recession and democracy is also in recession.” In a statement by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, the governor said INEC knew that it was not going to conduct the election on Saturday as scheduled but opted to deceive Nigerians. “Apart from the security agencies that they instructed not to provide security for the election, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) was under instruction since, yesterday (Wednesday) not to release electoral materials to INEC. “It was just a game by the APC-led federal government to frustrate the people of Edo State from kick-starting the journey of changing the APC one-chance change in Nigeria, but they should realise that the power of the people will always be greater than the power of those in power.” Tension in Okpella, as PDP, APC supporters clash The APC and PDP supporters clash came three days after a youth body in Okpella- Okpella Youth Council, warned in a publication, of a possible invasion of the community by thugs allegedly hired by unknown politicians in Okpella. It was also gathered that the youths initially reacted to an alleged gun shot at the gate of a PDP stalwart in Okpella that took place at about 3am, yesterday. According to an eyewitness and a victim of the attack, Afebu Musa, who spoke on phone, they summoned a meeting to explain the details to party supporters, who were curious about the likelihood of the election not holding on Saturday after reports from the police and DSS that there was a security threat in the state. Afebu said: “We were at a meeting when they (party supporters) were passing during their campaign and they stopped, shouting who is doing this here? I could hear some of them saying, ‘this will not happen!’ “As if the property they destroyed were not enough, they chased my pregnant wife and one of my tenants, who they injured. I sneaked out of my house with the help of God and I don’t know how to go back home because the police in Okpella were helpless at the scene of the incident. We call on security agencies to help save us from the hands of these boys. We have been peaceful all this while and no one has found us wanting throughout the campaigns, but I am surprised to see this happening.” Oshiomhole slams Wike, Okowa Before the postponement, Governor Adams Oshiomhole, had earlier, yesterday, alleged that governors Nyesom Wike of Rivers State and Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State had deployed militants from both states to Edo State to perpetrate violence and disrupt the governorship election. He, therefore, urged security agents to watch out for such planned violence, saying that the APC was ready for election but “no nobody should shed the blood of our people.” Oshiomhole raised the alarm when he received the National President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists, NUJ, Alhaji Waheed Odusile. PDP’s planned violence has failed – Senator Obende The Director of Publicity of the APC Campaign Council in Edo, Senator Domingo Obende, said PDP  leaders were angry over the postponement because they would not be able to perpetrate violence any more. “I think we have two feelings and reactions. First and foremost, we have prepared so hard and we believe and know that the voters were behind us and we were going to win. Secondly, we are also happy because Edo has not been known to be a state where violence is the order of the day. “So, if actually, for security reasons, as stated by both the police and the DSS, this shift is realized, then I think I am happy for it. It means any time they decide to fix it, election will be peaceful. That is why I said I have mixed feelings. PDP is saying rubbish because they have imported thugs and brought aliens to  register in Edo State. What is more is that our strength is the voters and we have them behind us, they are not going to die. For us, any time, any day, we are ready for the elections,’’ he said. Postponement advice poorly timed, wrongly presented — TMG Civil society groups under the aegis of the Transition Monitoring Group, TMG, in collaboration with the Conference of Edo State Non-Governmental Organizations and Civil Society Organizations, said that the advice by the Police and DSS to INEC to shift the election was poorly timed and wrongly presented. Chairperson of TMG, Dr. Abiola Afolabi, told a press conference in Benin, yesterday, that INEC and security agencies have channels of communication to address the issue.She added that it was astonishing that INEC was not taken into confidence before the security agencies announced their preference for a postponement. Noting that there are undercurrents in the security apparatus who are trying to suppress the electoral process, said: “With the present economic recession as witnessed in the country, it is not economically viable to postpone the election given the resources that have been committed to the process by INEC, domestic and international observer group, security as well as other stakeholders. “This clear interference in the electoral process by security agencies is a throwback to the 2015 general election, which was postponed at the behest of the nation’s security chiefs. We feel strongly that this tendency could undermine the confidence of voters and precipitate apathy and capable of building tension in the electoral space. This could lead to electoral violence, which the security agencies are supposedly trying to prevent.’’ The group called on INEC, the security agencies as well as political parties to learn from the experiences of previous elections and ensure that unsavoury incidents, which tainted the legitimacy of the electoral process in the Kogi and Bayelsa governorship elections do not recur. Oshiomhole engineered the postponement – Edo PDP EDO state chapter of the PDP fingered Governor Oshiomhole in the advice by the Police and DSS to INEC to postpone the election. Faulting the security threat adduced for the postponement, the party also alleged that the plot to postpone the election was hatched by the Edo State government led by the governor in conjunction with some members of a cabal. PDP governorship candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, and state chairman, Chief Dan Orbih, made the allegation, yesterday, in Benin in their addresses to party members and supporters at an emergency stakeholders’ meeting on the  planned postponement of the poll. Ize-Iyamu said: “I have been reliably informed that when the chairman of INEC called the President, he categorically told him (president) that he was not aware of such (security) challenges.  It was arranged by the state government with a cabal to postpone a day of reckoning.’’ On his part, Orbih claimed that the PDP had uncovered a proposal made by some people to the INEC to change Electoral Officers (EO) already trained and mobilized for the election, adding that the party was already in possession of the names of the electoral officers and that any attempt to change them will be resisted by the PDP. He said at the stakeholders meeting held with the INEC on Wednesday, the participating political parties were assured that additional 25,000 policemen apart from the para-military groups had been deployed for the election, adding that no threat would be too big in such situation. “If one may ask, how did a state that hosted the president during the APC rally in Benin 24 hours earlier without any hitches suddenly become unsafe? If Edo was so unsafe as claimed, the security operatives would certainly have advised Mr. president not to come.’’ We are ready for elections but lives must be protected – Oyegun National Chairman of APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, declared that the party was ready for the election but security agents must check violence allegedly being plotted by the PDP. Oyegun who reacted to the earlier decision of the INEC to go on with the election, told journalists in Benin City: “I must confess that I am stunned and surprised, suspicious and even begin to wonder if the security concerns expressed by security agents have not started playing out. But whatever happens we have to prepare ourselves INEC is the final arbiter on this issue. I have to make two appeals. “Security agents must do everything humanly possible to make sure that the security threats that they perceived, some of which some of us as party leaders have come across, are contained. And I think in the interest of the nation, they will do everything they possibly can to make sure that the fears that has been expressed do not materialize because we take their views seriously and we think everybody should but we are faced with this most unusual situation. “Secondly, very very deep appeal will be to the voters of Edo State not to be distracted by the seeming contradictions and confusions by fears of insecurity because I have a feeling that with what INEC has done, security agencies will pull out all the stunts to make sure nothing evil happens. So they should not be afraid of their personal safety.


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