Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - INEC

In Trump regime, where Republicans show they are Nigerians in the American clime, asking a CJN to do the right thing and resign is witch-hunt, fake news, and partisanship. Our "intellectuals" are the spin doctors. Many of them forget that if things were like this when they were growing up, they would probably have ended up selling suya or spare parts. They fail to answer simple questions regarding how they became advocates for PDPigs that was borrowing to pay salaries toward the end of their time in Aso Rock - even after the highest prices of crude oil during their tenure. Imagine if they, the PDPings, had invested just 10% of Nigeria's resources in productive infrastructural development, what Nigeria would have become. And they tout NOI as intelligent finance minister - well, she got her fair share of the loot!

When you talk, they say the same asinine things Baba Gana Kingibe said to me when I challenged him years ago - "you must be one of the children of the privileged" - without even knowing my pedigree as a proud descendant of hardworking, honest, self-respecting, decent parents who valued sacrificing for education, instead of drinking akpeteshi or playing "perm any three from five" football pools. What a people? What a waste? Baba Kongi said: Who is afraid of Elesin Oba? In a month's time we will see whether Atiku will be Atikulated, and empowered with his gang to start Atikulooting and Nigeria rendered prostrate and Atikulooted. My hope is that the masses of the people will take the billions on offer and still reject Baba Ole, Omo Ole, Ebi Ole, as they did to GEJ and his Ghana Must Go rounds.

Ire o.

Tunde


Dr. John Ayotunde (Tunde) Isola BEWAJI, FJIM, MNAL
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http://www.cap-press.com/books/isbn/9781611630879/Narratives-of-Struggle (2012)
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https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780739185032/Ontologized-Ethics (2013)

https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781498518383/The-Rule-of-Law-and-Governance-in-Indigenous-Yoruba-Society-A-Study-in-African-Philosophy-of-Law (2016)

http://www.cambridgescholars.com/the-humanities-and-the-dynamics-of-african-culture-in-the-21st-century (2017)


On Tuesday, 15 January 2019, 17:26:24 GMT-5, 'Samuel Amadi' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:


those who have been experts on election monitoring have invested in protecting the reputation of INEC. They are part of the cottage industry that has developed around elections in Nigeria. They are not witness of truth. Discount what they say about the impartiality and fairness of INEC.

Dr. Sam Amadi Abuja, Nigeria 234-803-329-9879


On Sunday, January 13, 2019, 10:13:28 PM GMT+1, Jibrin Ibrahim <jibrinibrahim891@gmail.com> wrote:


Moses I respect your partisanship. keep the flag flying

Professor Jibrin Ibrahim
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja
Follow me on twitter @jibrinibrahim17


On Sun, 13 Jan 2019 at 19:32, Moses Ebe Ochonu <meochonu@gmail.com> wrote:
Jibo wants us to take his word and assurances about Amina Zakari over her own questionable behavior during the controversy over her appointment to head the result collation center committee. What's the basis of his trust? He worked with her in her previous role in INEC. But Amina Zakari gave an interview to the BBC and looked the interviewer deadpan in the face and said "he [Buhari]is not my uncle; I'm not his niece." That was a blatant lie as their relationship is the very dictionary definition of an uncle/niece filial relationship. And as you yourself said, Buhari has in fact been a mentor to her and her her two brothers, one of whom is a minister in his administration, and had "empowered" them during his days in PTF. 

The question is, why did she lie? People with impartial, clear minds and good intent do not lie about something as basic as who they're related to. Why not simply respond to the controversy by reaffirming your professionalism, impartiality, and record and leave it at that. The lying indicates duplicity and raises red flags about her character and integrity and thus substantiates the suspicion of the tens of political parties and members of the public who see a sinister scheme unfolding in her appointment to head the collation center.

Amina Zakari's appointment is not the only disturbing sign of INEC's compromise. Below is a link to a story from PUNCH of a closed door meeting in Aso Rock between the INEC chairman and Abba Kyari, the president's chief of staff. As an experienced election monitor and expert, do you consider this ethically above board? Do you not see something ominously dubious about this unelected occupant of an unconstitutional office, who is the president's fixer, summoning the supposedly independent head of the electoral umpire to Ask Rock for a closed door meeting? This meeting in fact preceded the curious appointment of Zakari to head the collation center committee. Only the two men and God Almighty know the orders Abba Kyari gave to the INEC Chairman at this meeting. Here's the link to the story:


I expect you to invoke your go-to retort to facts that contradict your contentions by claiming that this is fake news. That you would write a piece on INEC and the coming election essentially doing PR for the election umpire by assuring us of its impartiality despite signs and indications to the contrary and not mention this unprecedented Aso Rock meeting is curious to say the least. This is the same INEC that presided over and actively aided the APC's rigging sprees in Ondo, Edo, Ekiti, and more recently Osun. You have your work cut out for you persuading Nigerians to trust this INEC as an impartial arbiter of the electoral process.

Of course, INEC is not the only organ of the state implicated in the effort of Buhari to retain power at all cost. The army, the police, and the DSS have been coopted into this anti-democratic exercise and have been in overdrive to pave the way for the President's second term. Nor is Amina Zakari's appointment the only decision that points to the intent to manipulate the election in favor of Buhari. The president refused to sign the revised electoral act, which had input from all stakeholders and went through at least three revisions to address issues the presidency had raised. Buhari's final, lame excuse was that it arrived his desk too close to the election for him to sign it! Then there is the arrest and detention of opposition members and critics; the freezing of bank accounts belonging to Peter Obi; the retention of the IGP despite his tenure having expired; and the current move to force out the CJN, Walter Onnoghen.

Only partisans or those otherwise invested in the status quo don't see a pattern to these curious events and insist that there is a level electoral playing field.

On Fri, Jan 11, 2019 at 11:51 AM Jibrin Ibrahim <jibrinibrahim891@gmail.com> wrote:

The So-Called INEC Controversies

 

Jibrin Ibrahim, Friday column, Daily Trust, 11thJanuary 2019

 

There has been a lot of controversies surrounding the Independent National Electoral Commission as the elections approach and this is normal. Many people are genuinely concerned about the question whether the announced plans for the conduct of free, fair and credible elections are proceeding smoothly or whether there are attempts to scuttle the plans and return Nigeria to the dark days of State rigged elections. Others are deliberately spreading rumours of rigging plans to smear the image of the Electoral Commission and cause disaffection around the elections for their own purposes. 

 

The climate created by the likelihood of a close contest between the two leading candidates for the presidency would always cause concern for the opposition candidate who would assume that the powers of incumbency would be used to rig them out. This assumption would not be completely unfounded after all its common knowledge that the 1964, 1983, 2003 and 2007 elections were heavily rigged by incumbent ruling parties to the detriment of the opposition. Nonetheless, at this time, I would like to draw our attention to the other fact that since the 2011 general elections there has been steady improvement in the integrity of our elections and that numerous processes have been put in place to ensure that our elections are indeed free, fair and credible.

 

The biggest controversy over the past couple of weeks has been the appointment of Commissioner Amina Zakari to chair the internal INEC committee in charge of the collation centre. The appointment immediately led to wild allegations that she was being put there to rig the elections in favour of President Buhari who was alleged to be her uncle. This allegation is in my view frivolous and mischievous. The parties that led the charge are very much aware that presidential elections are collated at the local government and State levels. They also know that returning officers are drawn from universities and not from within INEC except for the returning officer of the presidential election who is the INEC chair and not the chair of the committee handling the collation centre. 

 

Nigerians also have very clear memories of how the collation centre functioned in 2015 when returning officers from the States came to the collation centre and read out their numbers themselves on live television. The national returning officer therefore received the State results at the same time as all Nigerians watching the event so the idea that Amina Zakary would hoodwink all Nigerians and enter fake results is simply ridiculous.

 

The irony is that if the opposition party is against Amina Zakari, they should have congratulated Professor Mahmoud Yakubu for removing her from the most powerful INEC committee on Operations and logistics; where she was replaced by Professor Okechukwu Ibeanu to the much less influential committee on health and welfare. Her chairing the collation centre committee is therefore directly in line with her commissionership duties of ensuring catering, health and sitting arrangements to the representatives of the 91 political parties and other stakeholders that would be at the venue. Her INEC commissionership had duly received Senate approval so it would be unreasonable to say that she should not perform assigned INEC responsibilities.

 

The controversy over Amina Zakari was worsened by the presidency itself when they released a press statement that she has no blood relationship with President Buhari. She herself said the same thing when interviewed by the BBC. The statements then imposed the next question anyone would ask, what exactly is her relationship to the President. Trust Nigerians, they do their research fast. We all now know that the President's senior sister was married to Amina Zakari's father before she was born. This means that there is a family relationship and its disingenuous to simply say that there is no blood relationship. We also know today that the family relationship has been sustained because when President Buhari was at the PTF she and her two brothers, one of whom is currently a minister had business relations. The "no blood relationship" insistence simply raised suspicions. 

 

When I was a consultant to the Inter-Party Advisory Committee between 2013-2015 and Amina Zakari was INEC Commissioner in charge of political parties, we worked closely with her. She is very smart, competent and conscientious in her work. The fact that President Buhari's senior sister was married to her father before she was born should not be the issue. She has been an INEC commissioner since 2010 and if she has done anything wrong or unethical, the charges should be brought forward, investigated and acted upon if true. The family relationship should not be the determining factor and in any case,  Senate knew about it before they confirmed her second term.

 

The other INEC controversy making the rounds is the return to the procedure of voting immediately after accreditation. It would be recalled that in 2015, voters were asked to move away from the polling unit after accreditation and return in the afternoon to vote. After the 2015 elections, both political parties and observer groups requested that INEC should stop the decoupling of accreditation and voting for the simple reason that many people who leave after accreditation do not return. For the 2015 presidential election, 2.3 million people who were accredited did not return to cast their ballot in the afternoon and this should be a matter of concern. INEC listened to the recommendations of observer groups and political parties and since the January 2016 governorship election in Bayelsa State, voters have been able to vote immediately after accreditation. This has had a positive effect on voter assiduity and reduced queues and waiting time. It is therefore surprising to hear some people now saying it's a new trick to rig the election for someone. Nigerians need to be a bit careful at the type of stories they choose to believe.

 

 

   

Professor Jibrin Ibrahim
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja
Follow me on twitter @jibrinibrahim17

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