The hopes of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Niger State to
participate in this year’s elections has been dashed by the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) as its Resident Electoral
Commissioner (REC) in the state, Prof. Sam Egwu, has said there is no
voting for the IDPs.
Prof. Egwu, while addressing newsmen
Wednesday on the preparations so far made by the commission for the
conduct of the polls, said: “There will be no voting for IDPs in Niger,
there is no official IDP camp in Niger known to Niger INEC. We do not
have preparation for IDPs voting.”
Contrary to the claim by the
REC, there were thousands of IDPs in Zungeru, Wushishi Local Government
and in Gulu in the Lapai Local Government.
The IDPs were
displaced from their ancestral homes by the 2018 flood, while some of
those in Gulu relocated to the town following insurgency in Benue State.
Prof.
Egwu said initially, INEC penciled eight states where there were IDPs
but that the number had increased to 16 states. He did not name the
states.He disclosed that out of the approximately 455 people contesting the March 2019 election in the state, only 50 are women.
Giving
the breakdown, Egwu said there are two female candidates in the
governorship race out of 31 contenders, seven others are deputy
governorship candidates, while four women out of 37 are contesting for
the senatorial seats.
Out of the 126 candidates vieing for the House
of Representatives seats, nine of them are women just as only 28 women
are in the race for the 27 House of Assembly seats out of a total of 361
candidates, Egwu declared.
He said of the 2,390,000 eligible voters
in the state, 2,167,788 collected their PVCs, adding that: “We expect
all these people to vote in all the elections.”
The REC said to
ensure all eligible voters cast their ballots during elections, there
was need for the country to legalise early voting.
“There is need for
early voting so that some category of people will be able to vote two
or three days before election but first we need to trust the electoral
body,” he said.
Egwu also said that priority would be given to the
physically challenged people and pregnant women on election day even as
the commission has domesticated the memorandum of understanding (MoU)
signed with the National Union of Road Transport Employers Association
and the National Union of Road Transport Workers for the transportation
of election materials.
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