The Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, on Monday expressed fears of participating in the upcoming
gubernatorial elections being planned for Edo and Ondo states in 2020.
It
also re-echoed its disappointment in the conduct of the just concluded
Kogi and Bayelsa governorship elections by the Independent National
Electoral Commission, INEC.
PDP, therefore, tasked the
Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, to embark on electoral
amendment through the National Assembly to address most of the
challenges in conducting elections in the country.
The PDP
National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus said this while addressing INEC
delegation who came to carry out a routine verification exercise at the
party’s national headquarters in Abuja.
While addressing some of
the operatives of the electoral umpire, Secondus alleged that the INEC
integrity was at stake given the trajectory of elections it has
conducted so far in the country.
He pointed out that some of the INEC staff have compromised their offices.
In his words, “INEC as presently constituted has integrity questions. Some of the staff have compromised their offices.
“We advise that INEC should go back to the drawing board and consider the past elections it has conducted.
“Even
INEC needs a reform. We can’t continue this way. Is either we practice
the American model or adopt the Egyptian model where soldiers shall be
part and parcel of the election process.
Further, the PDP
National Chairman affirmed it was time for INEC to submit the necessary
amendments to the National Assembly so that an improved legal framework
can be put in place for a free and fair election to be achieved.
He, however, added that the conduct of the 2019 general elections set Nigeria backwards.
Some
of the bitter lessons, according to Secondus, are: thuggery, killing,
militarisation of voting scenes and disruptions of voting process.
Others
are the alleged INEC involvement in operating the APC agenda,
brigandage, intimidation, coercion and manipulation of results,
hijacking of election materials and deployment of military helicopters
among others.
It was on this premise that the PDP advocated for
the legalization of electronic voting and ban on military participation
in elections.
In his reaction, the INEC Deputy Director, Election
and Party Monitoring who headed the delegation, Musa Husunu said all
the comments, observations and concerns of the PDP would be considered.
Husunu,
however, reeled out things the INEC team came to do as a matter of
routine verification exercise to include evidence of office
headquarters, 5 copies of the party’s constitution, list of NEC
committee members, physical presence of NEC members, membership
registration and books of account.
But the PDP averred that what
happened in Osun, Ekiti, Bayelsa and Kogi states were not democratic
enough to guarantee future participation in elections by the opposition
political parties.
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