• Opposition party alleges foreign journalists are being denied visas
Olawale Olaleye in Lagos and Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja
The plot continued to thicken for a postponement of the elections on
Tuesday,
when 16 out of the 26 registered political parties endorsed
calls for a shift of dates for the polls slated for February 14 and 28,
citing insecurity, issues with the distribution of permanent voters’
cards (PVCs) and the exodus of people from the cities to their villages.Also, five of the 14 presidential candidates signed a statement urging the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to postpone the elections to a more appropriate date.
The parties are the United Democratic Party (UDP), Citizen Peoples
Party (CPP), Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), Action Alliance (AA),
Peoples Democratic Congress (PDC), Allied Party of Nigeria (ACPN),
Labour Party (LP), Mega Progressive People's Party (MPPP), United Party
of Nigeria (UPN), Alliance for Democracy (AD), African Democratic
Congress (ADC), Advanced Congress of Democrats (ACD), Democratic Peoples
Party (DPP), New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP), Peoples Party of
Nigeria (PPN) and Independent Democrat (ID).
The five presidential candidates who endorsed the postponement are
Godson Okoye (UDP), Chief Sam Okoye (CPP), Prince C.O Allagoe (PPN),
Tunde Anifowose (AA) and Ganiu Galadima (ACPN).
The political parties, in a resolution calling for the postponement,
said: “Fellow Nigerians, we the concerned leaders of political parties,
in the run up to the 2015 February general election, have observed some
dangerous trends, which if not checked may negatively and adversely
affect our democracy.”
The parties hinged their call for the postponement on security,
distribution of PVCs and people deserting their residences for their
villages.
They also threatened to boycott the elections if their position was not
respected.
The leaders of the 16 parties called on the federal government to take
the necessary steps to provide adequate security for Nigerians to go out
and collect their PVCs in order to be able to exercise their civic and
constitutional duty.
The parties said INEC should seriously consider shifting the date of
elections to sometime in March or April, which would still not be
against the provisions of Sections 25 and 26 of the Electoral Act.
“We are not urging INEC to do anything that is unlawful, illegal or
unconstitutional. It is unfortunately becoming clear by the day that
most Nigerians appear not to be ready for election but are ready for
violence,” the parties said.
On what the shift in date would achieve, the parties said: “This shift
in date, which does not in any way contravene the provisions of Section
25 and 26 of the Electoral Act will afford INEC enough time to
distribute the remaining PVCs so that at least more than 98 per cent of
the registered voters in the country would have collected their PVCs.
“In this regard the concerned political leaders should offer to assist
the INEC in all necessary ways to ensure that these PVCs are collected
on time for the rescheduled election.”
One of the representatives of the political parties said they took the
decision against the position of the chairman of Inter-party Advisory
Council (IPAC).
According to him, the IPAC Chairman, Dr. Tanko Yunusa, had overruled
them at the last meeting with INEC. The party chieftain alleged that
because the IPAC chairman has an alliance with the All Progressives
Congress (APC), he insisted that the elections must hold as scheduled.
Okoye, who read the statement on behalf of the political parties, also
expressed disappointment over the visit of the US Secretary of State,
John Kerry, to only two presidential candidates and that the
presidential debate centered on the APC presidential candidate,
Major-General Muhammadu Buhari and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
presidential candidate, President Goodluck Jonathan.
However, the presidential candidate of the United Progressive Party,
Chief Chekwas Okorie, has condemned the call for the postponement of the
elections.
Briefing journalists in Abuja, Okorie said: “I condemn in the strongest
terms the recent mischievously contrived clamor for the postponement
of the 2015 general election to another date outside the dates and
timetable announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) in February 2014, over twelve months ago.
“The reasons given by the proponents of the postponement that a great
number of Nigerians will be disenfranchised having not been given their
permanent voters’ cards which will enable them to participate in the
election is a contrived reason and to a large extent pedestrian.
“As we speak, over 80 per cent of registered voters have received their
PVCs, according to the latest figures released by INEC and this may
increase to 90 per cent or above after the close of distribution of PVCs
on February 8, 2015, as planned by INEC.”
Also kicking against the postponement of the polls, the APC yesterday
warned of a plot by President Goodluck Jonathan and his party, the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to precipitate a constitutional crisis
that would forestall the elections this month and pave the way for an
interim government.
This idea, the APC alleged, would be broached tomorrow by the president
at the Council of State meeting in Abuja, urging the elder statesmen
(Nigerian ex-presidents and heads of state) to live up to their
billings.
The party alleged that some elements in the country were trying to
manipulate the courts and tribunals to achieve the devilish plot.
APC National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, told reporters in Lagos that the agents of darkness may procure “pliant judges” to give outrageous and unpopular judgments at the election tribunals and courts to destabilize the polity.
APC National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, told reporters in Lagos that the agents of darkness may procure “pliant judges” to give outrageous and unpopular judgments at the election tribunals and courts to destabilize the polity.
He warned that any outrageous and unpopular judgment would trigger
massive violence, which they would cite as an excuse to scuttle the
elections and form an interim government.
Mohammed said: “At the last count, six cases had been filed by the
agents of those working to scuttle the elections, and we expect more. In
one of the cases, Justice Ademola of the Federal High Court in Abuja on
Monday gave the order for a substituted service in the case instituted
by Max Uzoaka against our candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.
“The Jonathan administration and the PDP do not want elections despite
their deceitful statements that they are ready for the polls, and they
will stop at nothing to ensure that the polls do not hold as scheduled,
if at all.
“This is why they have not been asking Nigerians to go and collect
their PVCs, even when the INEC has said the cards for all registered
voters are now ready for collection, putting a lie to the campaign that
the cards will not be ready before the elections.
“That is why they have refused hordes of foreign journalists visas to
come to Nigeria. The denial of visas to foreign journalists is systemic,
aimed at preventing the international community from seeing or watching
the desperate plots to scuttle the elections.
“An administration that has nothing to hide will not embark on a deliberate move to shut foreign journalists out of what is definitely one of the most important elections in the world this year.”
“An administration that has nothing to hide will not embark on a deliberate move to shut foreign journalists out of what is definitely one of the most important elections in the world this year.”
Mohammed alleged that apart from manipulating the courts, unpatriotic
elements have resorted to lobbying some members of the Council of State
to support their clamor for election postponement.
He urged the council, which is expected to meet tomorrow, to put the national interest above narrow, partisan considerations by rejecting the calls for postponement.
He urged the council, which is expected to meet tomorrow, to put the national interest above narrow, partisan considerations by rejecting the calls for postponement.
Mohammed also urged local and foreign observers to take note of the
scheming by the election-postponement campaigners, adding that if they
succeed, they would have no elections to observe.
He said since the elections are a process and not restricted to the
election day, all the steps leading to the elections are as important as
the actual voting.
“We call on Nigerians to remain vigilant, especially in the days ahead,
and to continue to reject all attempts by anti-democratic forces to
cling to or get power through means that are not democratic.
“We urge our members and supporters in particular to eschew violence
under any guise, even in the face of the most egregious provocations, so
as not to play into the hands of those working to scuttle the
elections.
“If the Jonathan administration and the PDP are indeed committed to the
February 14 and 28 dates for the elections, as they have said, we
challenge them to heed our call for a two-day public holiday so that
working class Nigerians who have yet to collect their PVCs can do so. By
the way, APC states will declare two public holidays for this purpose.
“We will also like to repeat our appeal to the judiciary to act as a
bulwark against any attempt to truncate our nation’s hard-earned
democracy by refusing to be used to scuttle the elections.
“We consider it an insult to the judiciary for the advocates of
election-shift to believe they can use their dirty funds to influence
the course of justice. We believe the judiciary will not take this bait.
“We will not relent in speaking out against ongoing efforts to scuttle
the elections. The APC is ready for the elections as scheduled. The PDP
and the Jonathan administration should stop their scheming and get
themselves ready for the elections too. Nigerians have seen through them
and have rejected their evil plots.
“The elections dates of February 14 and 28 are sacrosanct,” he said.
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