Home Articles & Opinions INEC E-transmission: To Mahmood Yakubu I doff my hat; time for Buhari to write his name in gold

INEC E-transmission: To Mahmood Yakubu I doff my hat; time for Buhari to write his name in gold

by Our Reporter

As Nigeria moves within an inch of 2023 general elections fears run rife that the exercise of democratic freedom will again  be restricted   via various anomalies such as vote buying, results’ falsification, ballot stuffing, under-age voting, violence and false  declaration of  results designed to substitute personal or partisan benefits as the senators
elected on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress are reportedly dead against the electronic transmission of results from polling centres to INEC portals and collation centres.

To assuage the fears of the populace and contrary to the infamous resolution adopted by the above-named, Professor Mahmood Yakubu has reassured a beleaguered nation  in a newspaper report, The Punch to be
precise published on Sunday July  18th, 2021  that  electronic transmission of results is possible.

This reassurance by  Nigeria’s electoral umpire – the Independent National Electoral Commission  ( INEC) thus serves as an insurance against  fraud by perpetrators who shift tactics in a bid to consolidate
their hold on power having seen how triumphantly the electronic transmission of results from polling zones to INEC portals and collation centres paid off in the Edo 2020 governorship elections that ultimately
had the choice of the people declared elected in spite of the post-election legal battles by naysayers to have the supreme wish of Edo people annulled like a marriage and ultimately bastardized.

The electoral reforms undertaken by Prof Mahmood Yakubu prior to the gubernatorial elections in Edo and Ondo States was a litmus test  and an eye-opener that something good could come out of Nazareth or put
differently that something good could in deed again  come out of Nigeria’s INEC as against the gross irregularities under Prof. Attahiru Jega in 2015 that marred and eventually subverted  the integrity  of our
electoral process.

The position of the ruling-party incumbents on  electronic transmission of results is not only disheartening, disappointing but alarming.

In modern democracies, leaders the world over have  evolved from stone-age voting. That, I am sure,  was the line toed by Prof Mahmood in the Edo and Ondo governorship  elections rather than the former to
scuttle the credibility of the process.

One therefore wonders the rationale behind  gunning for  electoral authoritarian regime by instrumentality of a planned altered voter-registration lists and rigged vote tabulations which their staunch
opposition to electronic transmission of results represents.

We love Nigeria and therefore want the best for our country. Nigerians need not retain the services of a seer to decipher the physical position unanimously adopted or what is being communicated by the bulk of the
ruling party incumbents at the expense of a transparent electoral process.

It is obvious that the  country’s governing party – the All Progressives Congress –  under Buhari has failed Nigeria abysmally  on all fronts ranging from security, economy, to the provision of  service
infrastructures which makes it scared of its own shadows in 2023 general elections.

Results of opinion polls  conducted in the not-too-distant past show that over 85% of Nigerians want a reversion to the status quo ante – the lost golden age under the erstwhile ruling party when Nigeria rose from behind, overtook South Africa to become Africa’s  largest economy. Life, you know as well as I know,  was much better and in fact super abundant
than it is today  which prepared the ground for a mass Hegira home by many of us who had left the country in droves  in Nigeria’s darkest hour under the jackboot  of the military.

Today, Nigerians groan under the yoke of insecurity which has turned the country to a scene of carnage. On the north-eastern flank of Nigeria rages a bloody insurgency which the ruling party while  in the opposition said it could end in its first six months in office but today it has unbelievably dragged on  for over 6 years with government troops
losing the fight  at every turn.  In the North-Central bandits hold sway with rivers of blood painting the land red. Only a few days ago a Nigerian fighter jet probably on reconnaissance was shot out of the sky by bandits  somewhere in Zamfara State. Many rural communities in the desert cotton fields of northern Nigeria have been sacked by armed
herders and bandits. Parents live in perpetual fear that their children would be kidnapped in schools. True to their fears many have been abducted with the Federal and  various states’ governments paying ransom
to secure their release thus making it a lucrative business in the region.

Down south it is a whole whirlwind of issues  as she is caught in an agonizing web of subjugation lifetrap by a band of  Janjaweed armed militias from Futta Jalon who  masquerade  as pastorialists under the
alleged watch and  tacit backing of the Abuja regime.

The infamous style of governance by the  Abuja policy makers who often conduct themselves like  Olympian gods in the Greek mythology doubtless created the Nnamdi Kanus and Sunday Igbohos that now threaten the country with imminent disintegration  – a country which a breed of noble bloods fought to keep as one indivisible entity in the Gowonist days.

Today there is hunger in the land. Farmers can no more go to the fields to till and cultivate the fields  across Nigeria and this has resulted in food shortage.  Where it is available the cost is prohibitive thus
foisting  the devil’s alternative – crash diet – on many families across Nigeria.

Only 6 days ago Nigeria was reported by  Development Studies – a UK-based think tank,  as the second poorest country in the world in terms of food affordability  amidst inflation that has spiked double
digits. The Naria, our monetary unit has plummeted against all currencies in the international market contrary to campaign promises by the governing party while in the  opposition to make the Naria equal in value to the US Dollar. Alas,  the reverse has become  the case as  the Naria now exchanged for over N500  to the US dollar as against N150 or
much  less  in the Jonathan days.

Official figures released by Nigeria’s Debt Management Office as of March 2021 showed that her total public debt stock stood at N33:107 trillion whose repayment would be pretty  difficult considering the
dwindling oil revenues.

Nigeria, a debtor nation in fact  already saddled by a massive debt burden still makes plans  to borrow $6.2 billion! Into what dangers have they led us? This question often agitates this writer!

The APC-led Federal Government sags under credibility deficit. They did promise to rebuild Nigeria with world-class service infrastructures but what we see  today on the ground is better imagined than real. Our roads are so much in bad shape that motoring on it  could force expectant mothers to involuntary abortion. Our roads,  bad as they are,  have
metamorphosed to valleys of death with the criminal  activities of bandits and kidnappers.

One could recall from dim memory  prior to 2015 federal elections, Babatunde Fashola while  Lagos helmsman  did expressly say the former ruling party should be voted out for Nigeria to have stable electricity.
What is it like today with power supply increasingly becoming a rarity in many communities across Nigeria? Our people depend largely on water sourced from boreholes  as water boards have suffered terminal decline.

How has the economy fared under the APC-controlled Federal Government? To say the economy is in shambles would be an understatement because there is no denying the fact today that the economy is not only in
shambles but in a jumble of retrogression.

Under the Abuja regime Nigeria has become a cash cow in the hands of fantastically corrupt officials who often find soft-landing in the All Progressives Congress  (APC). This is a party that did say every
machinery would be set in motion to make corruption  non-existent  but to our chagrin the hydra-headed monster drains our wealth under Buhari’s watch – the self-styled anti-graft Tzar –  keeps us  trapped in poverty
resulting in  underinvestment in basic infrastructures thereby bringing about a variety of bottlenecks on many economic fronts.

From the foregoing, every sane person  knows where the pendulum would certainly swing under a transparent electoral process  come 2023 having lived through the PDP and APC days  as  Nigeria drifts perilously into
yet another outpost of tyranny under the latter’s control.

President Buhari though apparently  well-intentioned has lost the fight to stabilize Nigeria through his failings and the terrible  failings of his party and trusted lieutenants which is on the ascending order of
magnitude.

It is no surprise the APC federal lawmakers in the Red Chambers had no option but to  speak with one voice the way they did against the electronic transmission of election results since it is obvious the party has become unpopular with Nigerians and therefore riding for a fall come 2023  because of its abysmal failures.

Nigeria with a population of over 211 million is bigger than any individual or partisan interests and President Buhari would be indelibly writing his name in gold with a firm resolve to toe the line of Prof. Mamood Yakubu via neutrality and non-intererence in the Edo and Ondo governorship elections.

Iyoha John Darlington,  a former governorship candidate in the Edo 2020 governorship election on the platform of the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN)  is a writer, social activist and public commentator on national
and global issues.

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