The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has declared that President Muhammadu
Buhari’s recent comments on the country’s electoral process under the
current Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) questions the
credibility of the February 2019 presidential election.
The party
noted yesterday that in demanding that INEC and the police should
ensure that the will of the people prevailed in credible elections,
going forward, the president admitted that elections under the current
dispensation had been anything but credible.
In a statement by
its national publicity secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP noted that
in a meeting with the INEC chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, and the
Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Adamu, at the Presidential
Villa, Buhari said, “Our elections must be done in violence-free
atmosphere. The process must be free, fair, decent and devoid of
intimidations and malpractices. It is the duty of the police to
accomplish that and this is what I expect in the elections immediately,
ahead and going forward.
Those that you declare as winners
must be candidates that the people have chosen. Democracy is about free
will, and the will of the people must be allowed to prevail.”
This,
according to the PDP, is “a weighty verdict by the president on the
huge electoral fraud perpetrated in the 2019 elections by his party,
APC.”
It added, “Though the verdict of the Supreme Court on the
presidential election stands, in total obedience to our laws, the fact
remains that the violent manipulations of the 2019 elections in favour
of the APC and its candidates will continue to stare our nation in the
face.”
The major opposition party further stated that Buhari’s
remark showed that beneficiaries of manipulated polls are always
confronted with the truth, in their conscience.
PDP tasked INEC
and the police to come clean of the details of their recent meeting with
Buhari, which was coming ahead of about 28 impending run-offs and
by-elections scheduled for this month.
“Our party holds that INEC
is an independent electoral commission whose activities and processes
are clearly governed by the law and extant rules and not by the dictates
or prescriptions of the president,” the statement added.
It
urged the president to steer clear of INEC, adding that the commission
must assert its independence and “desist from going to the Presidential
Villa for instructions on elections.”
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