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Wednesday, 6 March 2019

Women storm INEC headquarters, fault military involvement in elections

Women protesting
against
Independent National
Electoral Commission,
INEC, in Owerri.
The women who marched to the headquarters of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Abuja, on the auspices of Save Democracy Women, also called on the electoral umpire to demonstrate high level of non partisanship in Saturday’s elections.


Led by May Uneku, convener, Impact Future Nigeria, the women carried placards bearing various inscriptions to press home their demands.


Some of the placards read: “Nepotism must stop,” “Restore our stolen mandate,” “No place for tyranny in modern democracy’,” “Save our democracy,” “Black cloud over Nigeria,” “Let our votes count,” among others.


The protest follows on the heels of a similar one engineered by the main opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, on Tuesday, accusing INEC of violating electoral laws during the Presidential and National Assembly elections.

While noting that the police remains the lead agency for election security, Uneku attributed the low voters turnout in some parts of the country in the February 23 election to high presence of military personnel. She said: “Unfortunately, these military men helped President Muhammadu Buhari to rig the presidential election for him to come back.

“We condemn in totality the involvement of military in our elections. During the just concluded elections, people were killed. The election was a total charade because there are videos and pictorial evidence of people screening for their lives, soldiers were harassing and shooting people.

“In 2015, there were court judgements in Abuja, Sokoto and Lagos – two federal high court judgements and one Court of Appeal judgement – against the involvement of the military that the President had no powers to involve the military in the elections.

“But a few days to the 2019 elections, the President categorically said the military should shoot anybody that will pick ballot boxes. Though we are not supporting those who will snatch ballot boxes but that pronouncement caused a lot of rancour as military men harassed, intimidated voters”.

The women also presented a petition to the commission wherein they alleged that the February 23 Presidential and National Assembly election was characterised by violence, arson, harassment, intimidation and vandalism.

They mentioned incidences of military personnel deployment and intimidation by political thugs in various states that allegedly led to loss of lives in Rivers, Lagos, Kogi, Delta, Bayelsa among others. The document read in part:

“The recently concluded Presidential and National Assembly elections, on February 23, 2019, witnessed a proliferation in state sponsored violent attacks on citizens and the systematic intimidation of opposition.

State Polls: INEC insists on Card Readers “ln comparison to the 2015 elections, these acts, alongside the arrest and incarceration of leading opposition figures and state sponsored killing of innocent citizens necessitated this correspondence because our democracy is under threat.”

Responding on behalf of INEC chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, Assistant Director of Safety at the Commission, Kelechi Mmaduneme, commended the women for their peaceful conduct, pledging that their petition would be treated on merit.











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