"The 2011 Elections promise to be another "watershed" in Nigeria's "nascent democracy" as we continue along a "learning process" - again. We all must be tired of these hackneyed phrases already."
- Professor Aluko
Prof, you are right; we the people are tired of the bullsh*t. We are very tired of the mimicry and the foolishness. By the way, it is telling that the "maiden press conference" of the Professor comes bearing a typo in its header. In addition to buying computer hardware that will be promptly stolen, it appears that the professor is in need of a word processor with a spell checker. That should cost $77 billion. Really, it is impossible to respect our Nigerian leaders. They have zero credibility and they just don't get it. Hear Professor Jega parrot the words of nations that have their act together: "Four day retreat", "partners", "stakeholders", "collaboration." Prattle, prattle, prattle. Why do they all babble bs? They sound like drunken parrots. Well, let's hold our noses and try to analyze this latest piece of bs. This will be hard but I will try to understand this.
Hear Professor Jega: "…our assessment is that a lot of work is required in institutional restructuring, planning and execution if we are to reposition INEC to deliver on its core mandate of free, fair and credible elections in 2011 and beyond." After this ALARMING and sobering conclusion, in order to do all this work he is asking for a few months' extension. Haba. They need to shut the place down for at least one year while they do serious work. And they say this one is the messiah!
It gets worse. The Voters' Register, he confesses "falls far short of the level of credibility required for free and fair elections. In the course of our retreat in Uyo, we closely looked through the existing Voters' Register sampling over 100 polling units from randomly selected 19 States. What we found were massive inadequacies including underage registrants, hundreds of blank or blurred photographs and multiple registrations by the same persons." How did they come up with this massive deduction after a 4 day retreat? Who believes this crap? How can you say in one breath that you don't have the database and resources to do these things and then draw grand sweeping conclusions out of the air? Why not simply say the truth that we all know: "We do not know what we are doing because those before us STOLE everything that was not welded to the ground. But we will soldier on because we are invested in MIMICRY. The white man has democracy and so we must have democracy, even if it kills us.
Four months to compile a new Voters' Register in that country is not merely Herculean, it is an impossible task. It appears from reading through the lines that the Professor has very little to work with. Besides it appears he is still working with the buffoons that put us in this mess. If there has been a massive purge of INEC it is news to me.
And all of this is supposed to happen with equipment that has yet to be purchased, configured and DEPLOYED. Get this: This new ambitious foolishly optimistic timeline began August 1, 2010, this month. Is this a country or what?
Look folks, this is all a waste of our time. The real problem is this: The various factions of our "stakeholders" are merely puzzled proxies for the fight amongst our compatriots stealing the country blind. This democracy should be illegal and we all know it. We cannot afford this nonsense. How can it be that someone can simply wake up and say, well, I have only been here for two weeks, it looks like someone stole everything. Give me money to buy everything over again. And we say this is democracy? This is the definition of madness.
- Ikhide
From: Mobolaji ALUKO <alukome@gmail.com>
To: USAAfrica Dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>; NaijaPolitics e-Group <NaijaPolitics@yahoogroups.com>; naijaintellects <naijaintellects@googlegroups.com>; NIDOA <NIDOA@yahoogroups.com>; OmoOdua <OmoOdua@yahoogroups.com>; ekiti ekitigroups <ekitipanupo@yahoogroups.com>; nderg <nderg@yahoogroups.com>; NigerianWorldForum <NIgerianWorldForum@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Mon, August 2, 2010 10:32:03 AM
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MONDAY QUARTER-BACKING: On the Matter of INEC's Chairman Jega's Maiden Press Conference (July 22, 2010) - by Mobolaji Aluko
3. The January 2011 date for the General Elections should be dumped once-and-for-all in preference for April 2011 for logistical reasons related to obtaining this new and credible voters' register. We cannot register 60 million people in 60 days. In six months - between mid-August and mid-February 2011 - yes; in two months, no. Jega may be hesitant to say so, but Nigerians should scream so into the ears of the National Assembly and the President who must still sign their amendments into law.
4. We don't need 120,000 machines as stated by Jega below - that is, one machine per polling unit. In fact, for partial redundancy, in that case, we might need as many as 180,000 machines! Rather, we should base the number of machines on three REGISTRATION CENTERS per ward (on average). With about 9,000 wards in the country, that is about 30,000 machines, and with partial redundancy, we can get away with 50,000 machines. That will save us N21 billion in foreign exchange for data capture machines, etc.
5. Dispute resolution before installation of elected officials remains an inviolable concept. Note: disputed legislators can always wait - provided their relevant House or Assemblies form a quorum without them - while disputed President/governors can be filled in for temporarily by a constitutionally-elected Senate President/Assembly Speaker as the case may be. The notion of possibly illegal legislators making laws, or possibly illegal executive using "security votes" to pay for legal services to secure their possibly stolen mandates; embarking on "permanent campaigns" with an eye to re-run elections, and in even extending their tenures by another four years in the event that they win their re-run elections should violate every democratic instinct in humanity.
6. The argument for the January 2011 poll was for adequate time for dispute resolutions before the May 29 hand-over date. The argument for April 2011 should NOT however be predicated on extending that hand-over date to October 1 - that is backdoor and un-constitutional tenure extension, which should not be an option!
7. With a more credible electoral process - including un-biased umpire(s) as we hope in the new INEC - will come much fewer complaints, or complaints that can be prima-facie and/or quickly dismissed in court. It is a myth that the Nigerian is a sore election loser even in the face of fair umpiring. With Gubernatorial Dispute tribunals now separated from Legislative Dispute tribunals, more attention can be quickly given to combat the more negative aspect of interminable gubernatorial disputes. Considering the overall disputes to be civil rather than criminal - and parking the individual criminal acts to an Electoral Offences Tribunal - will lower the existing bar of "proof beyond reasonable doubt." Finally, if dispute resolutions are restricted to physical ballot recounts - rather than judges adding and subtracting votes in mid-air, including working-to-the-answer - they will be more quickly disposed of.
8. The 2011 Elections promise to be another "watershed" in Nigeria's "nascent democracy" as we continue along a "learning process" - again. We all must be tired of these hackneyed phrases already.
http://inecnigeria.org/index.php?cateid=8&contid=318
MAIDEN PRESS CONFERFENCE BY THE CHAIRMAN, INDEPENDENT NATIONAL ELECTORAL COMMISSION, PROF. ATTAHIRU M. JEGA, OFR,
22 JULY 2010
Preamble
ASSESSMENT OF PRESENT STATE OF INEC
Implications of Constitutional Amendments
Time and Funding
Timelines for Compiling New Voters' Register
Deliverables | Timelines | |
(i) | Identification of equipment suppliers | Early August 2010 |
(ii) | Award of contract | Early August 2010 |
(iii) | Delivery of 15,000 units of equipment for training | Early September 2010 |
(iv) | Delivery of balance of equipment for registration exercise | Mid October 2010 |
(v) | Training | Early to Mid September 2010 |
(vi) | Completion of deployment of equipment to polling units | Mid October 2010 |
(vii) | Registration exercise | Late Oct. – Early Nov. 2010 |
(viii) | Printing of Voters' Register for display | Early November 2010 |
(ix) | Display of Voters' Register | Mid November 2010 |
(x) | Verification, correction and certification | Mid Nov. – Early Dec. 2010 |
Possibility of Cleaning Up the Existing Register
It goes without saying that our absolute preference is to compile a new Voters' Register, the constraint of time notwithstanding, given the massive problems that have trailed the existing Register. If, however, we do not get the requisite amendments to the electoral law and/or the funding is not provided in good time, we will have no option than to work within the law and attempt to "salvage" the existing register by 9th November, as presently provided by the Electoral Act. Should such a lamentable circumstance arise, this Commission can only guarantee raising the credibility of that register perhaps by only about 10%, based on what we have seen of it. This is again based on the availability of at least 30,000 direct capture machines and the following timelines:
Deliverables | Timelines | |
(i) | Complete selective bidding for printing existing register | Early August 2010 |
(ii) | Complete printing of register | Early August 2010 |
(iii) | Distribution of register to Pus | Mid August 2010 |
(iv) | Completion of pasting of register | Mid to Late August 2010 |
(v) | Display and acceptance of claims and objections (14 days) | Late Aug. – Early Sept. 2010 |
(vi) | Verification of claims and objections (in-house) | Early September 2010 |
(vii) | Identification of equipment suppliers | Early August 2010 |
(viii) | Award of contract | Early August 2010 |
(ix) | Delivery of 30,000 units of equipment for training | Mid September 2010 |
(x) | Training | Mid September 2010 |
(xi) | Completion of deployment of equipment | Late September 2010 |
(xii) | Correction of verified claims and objections moving from Zone to Zone | Late Sept – Late October 2010 |
(xiii) | Final processing and certification of register | Late Oct – Early Nov 2010 |
Conclusion
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