• Commission makes final decision today
Military service chiefs
have told the Independent National Electoral Commission [INEC] that no
soldiers will be available to provide security anywhere in the country
if it goes ahead with its plans to hold the presidential elections on
Saturday next week because they are too busy with operations in the
North East region. The commission is expected to table this position,
which has created for it a huge dilemma, at meetings planned for this
morning with registered political parties, civil society groups and its
resident electoral commissioners before it announces its final decision
on whether or not to go ahead with the polls as scheduled.
Weekly
Trust learnt yesterday that while all national attention was focused on
last Thursday’s meeting of the National Council of State which failed
to reach a consensus on whether or not the polls should be shifted, the
military service chiefs had already advised INEC in writing to postpone
the polls for at least six weeks. The letter, Weekly Trust learnt, was
sent to INEC chairman Professor Attahiru Jega on Wednesday by the
President’s National Security Adviser Colonel Sambo Dasuki. The NSA said
he was “strongly advising”
INEC to postpone the polls on the basis of a
letter which he received from Chief of Defence Staff Air Chief Marshal
Alex Badeh.
Badeh’s letter to the NSA, which he said had the
concurrence of all the service chiefs, said the military had just
launched a major effort with the collaboration of Chad, Cameroon and
Niger Republic to rid the North East region of Boko Haram insurgents
once and for all. He said while the operation lasts, it will not be
possible to hold elections in Adamawa, Yobe, Borno and Gombe states. The
CDS therefore advised the NSA to advise INEC to either defer elections
in the four states or alternatively to postpone elections throughout the
country for at least six weeks. He indicated that the military
preferred the second option.
Weekly Trust learnt that when the
INEC chairman made his presentation at the Council of State meeting, he
essentially said INEC was ready to go ahead with the polls as planned.
He however added that INEC had received a new security report which
could change the equation but did not elaborate on it. Afterwards, the
NSA briefed the council and restated the military brass’ call for an
election postponement while the operation in the North East lasts. When
Army Chief Lt Gen Kenneth Minimah was asked to speak, sources said he
added another joker. He said if INEC decides to go ahead with the polls
next week there will be no soldiers available anywhere to provide
election security. Director General of the State Security Service then
followed up by warning that Boko Haram’s terrorist ambitions are
national and not just regional. He said the service recently caught
terrorists in Abuja and Uyo as they were planning to carry out major
attacks. He strongly supported the call for election postponement.
Weekly
Trust learnt that APC presidential candidate General Muhammadu Buhari
spoke against election postponement, saying as a military man himself he
knew that the arrival of new weapons alone could not end the Boko Haram
carnage because the weapons have to be unpacked and tested and the
personnel must be trained to handle them. His position was supported by
all the APC governors notably Rochas Okorocha and Rauf Aregbesola.
However, Vice President Mohamed Namadi Sambo said he did not believe
that INEC was ready to conduct the elections next week, saying its
chairman’s report failed to align systems and timing. All the PDP
governors then supported Sambo, saying more time was needed to enable
Nigerians collect their permanent voters’ cards.
General Ibrahim
Babangida then spoke, saying the INEC chairman should explain if it was
okay to hold the elections in the rest of the country without the four
troubled states. General Yakubu Gowon and General Abdulsalami Abubakar
both supported IBB’s view but President Goodluck Jonathan brushed the
suggestion aside, saying he would not allow elections to be held without
the North East states. If that happened, he said, it would lend support
to the charge that he allowed the Boko Haram to fester or even created
it in order to disenfranchise a part of the country. The meeting ended
after eight hours with the president saying INEC heard all the views
expressed and should go and consult before making its final decision
known to the public.
Weekly Trust learnt last night that the
commission has scheduled a series of meetings for today. Professor Jega
and his commissioners will meet with political party representatives at
10 am, meet with civil society groups at noon, meet with Resident
Electoral Commissioners [RECs] at 2 pm and then hold a full meeting of
the commission at 4pm. Afterwards, INEC would announce its final
decision to the public. Informed sources told Weekly Trust that contrary
to the impression created by many newspapers yesterday that the Council
of State okayed the polls to go ahead next week, the military service
chiefs’ “strong advice” to INEC to postpone the polls could be the game
changer. The sources said it was difficult to see how elections could go
ahead with security agencies washing their hands off the provision of
security but the final decision would only be known this afternoon.
Source: DailyTrust
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