There is little doubt that not a few
Nigerians may have been shocked watching Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers
State on television complained about the refusal of the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct the rerun election for
the state and National Assembly elections.
Watching the governor on that particular
day, it was apparent to see that he struggled to control his emotion
when he asked: “How can the National Assembly discuss the Petroleum
Industry Bill without Rivers State, which is a major oil producing
state, being part of it?”
It was a question that brings to mind a proverb made popular by late M.K.O Abiola. “You cannot shave my head in my absence!” The National Assembly is now in the second quarter of the second legislative year, yet Rivers State has but an insignificant number in the House of Representatives while there is no senator in the Senate all these time.
It was a question that brings to mind a proverb made popular by late M.K.O Abiola. “You cannot shave my head in my absence!” The National Assembly is now in the second quarter of the second legislative year, yet Rivers State has but an insignificant number in the House of Representatives while there is no senator in the Senate all these time.
It is an indictment of the legislature
that no one had thought about the incongruity of debating the PIB
without the input of legislators from Rivers, one of the four states
that produce 80 per cent of the crude oil for this country. The others
are: Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, and Delta States.
Aside the issue of the PIB, if the
legislators take their jobs seriously, would they have allowed a
situation, where a state with a population of 5.2 million people (2006
census) is denied representation in the national legislature for upward
of nearly two years? But righting the wrong is never too late, and the
Red Chamber redeemed the legislature when it threatened to suspend
sitting if the INEC failed to conduct the rerun election before December
10.
And as if to prove that the delay in
conducting the election was a deliberate act of sabotage against the
state, the electoral commission announced almost as soon as the Senate
issued the threat that it was ready to conduct the election. It also
came out immediately with a timetable fixing December 10 for all the
outstanding state and National Assembly rerun polls.
If Governor Wike had kept quiet and never
raised any alarm, and the Senate never acted on Wike’s concern, the
chances are that INEC may not have announced a timetable yet for the
election.
Especially in view of the fact that INEC had earlier come out in reaction to Wike that it was ready to conduct the election but it was the Rivers State government and other stakeholders that were unwilling to guarantee peace.
Especially in view of the fact that INEC had earlier come out in reaction to Wike that it was ready to conduct the election but it was the Rivers State government and other stakeholders that were unwilling to guarantee peace.
So, if one may ask, who gave INEC the
guarantee for peace and security that made it change its mind about the
election? I think there is a need for the legislature to investigate
INEC before the elections are conducted on the actual reasons for
delaying the rerun.
Is it possible, as the Peoples Democratic
Party in the state has severally alleged, that INEC was acting the
script of the Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, who fearing
the erosion of his political base, if the PDP wins all the three
senatorial seats, as is likely to happen?
The plan to rig the rerun elections which was exposed again by the governor is another food for thought. A man said to be a relative of Dakuku Peterside, the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress in the 2015 election and now Director General of NIMASA, was caught with printed INEC-marked ballot papers and result sheets. The young man was captured on TV channels looking incredulous and sober while confessing to the heinous criminality to deny the people of Rivers credible representation.
The plan to rig the rerun elections which was exposed again by the governor is another food for thought. A man said to be a relative of Dakuku Peterside, the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress in the 2015 election and now Director General of NIMASA, was caught with printed INEC-marked ballot papers and result sheets. The young man was captured on TV channels looking incredulous and sober while confessing to the heinous criminality to deny the people of Rivers credible representation.
The PDP in the state appropriately
alerted the nation again about a possible plan by the APC-led federal
government to rig the forth-coming elections. The alleged arrest of
three suspects by the Rivers Command of the police further gives
credence as to why the allegation against Amaechi and the APC must not
be dismissed as propaganda.
The statement by the APC leadership in
the state that the alleged plot to rig the election was “stage-managed”
by the Wike administration to blackmail Amaechi and Peterside is hollow
and puerile. The party must jettison this persecution complex and make
credible offer of support for investigation of the plot.
As the ruling party at the federal level,
APC must know that the success or otherwise of the rerun depends on the
extent the government is willing to go to make it transparent and
credible. It does not augur well for our democracy when a state
governor, as Wike did last week, alleged that he sent 15 petitions to
the Inspector General of Police over posting of some senior police
officers with “questionable” character to the state, which are ignored.
Wike alleged at a press conference that
the plan was to use the police to destroy evidence, including video, of
the rigging plot. He has threatened that people of the state would not
fold their hands and allow any rigging plan to succeed. “If you rig, you
rig your life,” he threatened.
Such skewed handling of grave allegations
by the ruling government can only encourage resort to self-help, as
Wike has threatened. Government owes citizens the duty to act on their
concerns and allay their fears, especially on such an important issue as
election matters. It is an incredible way to restore the peoples’
confidence in government.
President Muhammdu Buhari hit the right
cord last week when he charged security agencies and INEC to ensure
hitch-free elections in Rivers and Ondo states. He said the elections
would be the litmus test for the agencies preparedness for the 2019
general election.
One cannot agree less with the president.
But he must not just mount the moral high ground to pontificate; a more
useful measure is to give INEC and security agencies all necessary
logistics support, and put APC and PDP stalwarts in the state under
close surveillance.
No comments:
Post a Comment