There
are plans to replace the card reader in the conduct of elections in the
country,the Executive Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, National
Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), Mohammed
Sani Haruna has said.
He gave the hint yesterday after the
National Economic Council ( NEC) meeting presided over by Vice President
Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa.
LEADERSHIP recalls that
the card reader which was first used in the 2015 general election, is a
portable electronic voter authentication device, configured to read
only the Permanent Voter Cards issued by the Independent National
Electoral Commission.
The card reader was designed specifically
for the accreditation process, authentication of eligible voters before
voting.The machine was configured to read only the PVCs of a particular
polling unit and can only work on Election Day.
According to
Haruna,the replacement would be a made in Nigeria “Solar-Powered
Electronic Voting System” to effectively mitigate current electronic
woes.
He said “The Executive Vice Chairman/CEo of the NASENI
presented an homegrown proposal to the NEC for the replacement of the
“Card Reader” in the conduct of Elections in the country
“The proposal is a made in Nigeria “Solar-Powered Electronic Voting System” to effectively mitigate current electronic woes.
“The
new proposed robust e-voting device will minimize human interference
with electoral process. The same proposal which has already been
presented to INEC is also expected to be presented to the National
Assembly.
During his briefing, the minister of Budget and
National Planning, Udo Udoma informed council that signs of recovery in
the economy had been observed since Q3 2016 and the recovery
consolidated in Q3 2017 with GDP doubling to 1.40% Non-oil GDP contracts
in Q3 2017 by 0.76% after growing in Q1 R Q2 2017.
While noting
that the services sector is still in the negative, he added that the
manufacturing sector grows negative in Q3 2017 also.
He explained
that due to high inflationary pressures, household consumption
expenditures remain constrained, though it appears such pressure is
easing.
Udoma observed that headline inflation has declined since
January reflecting tight monetary policy even as food price increases
have remained persistent but slowing down.
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