A civil society organisation, the Independent Service Delivery Monitoring Group says the call for the removal of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu is an attempt to undermine the electoral process.
Executive Director of the Civil Society Organisation, Dr Chima Amadi, made this known while briefing newsmen in Abuja on Thursday.
News men recalled that there were calls by the Southern and Middle-Belt Leaders Forum for the removal of Yakubu.
According to the forum, there are accumulated indications that he might rig the 2019 election in favour of President Muhammadu Buhari.
Amadi therefore said that as stakeholders in the electoral process, they saw the call as “the growing attempts by ethnic entrepreneurs to undermine the integrity of the electoral process.
” We also see it as an attempt to diminish the democratic gains our country has made since the return to civil rule in 1999.
“If there are accumulated indications, they point to those successful governorship elections conducted in Bayelsa and Rivers by the selfsame Professor Mahmood Yakubu and won by the opposition parties.
” The Anambra governorship election is still fresh in our minds in which the candidate of the ruling party lost in every Local Government Area to the extent that even the Ohaneze commended INEC for its transparency in conducting the election.
“The same INEC, two weeks after, successfully concluded the Anambra Central Senatorial District election after staying the course in a protracted legal battle.”
The executive director further explained that Yakubu, been of “the same ethnic stock” with Buhari did not make him any less qualified or incapable of discharging the electoral and constitutional functions of his office.
“This call gladdens our hearts on one hand that the call was not based on competence; they did not say he had committed an infraction against the electoral law and laws of our land.
“Neither did they say he was not qualified to be the chairman of INEC but that he comes from the region of the country that is the same region with the president.
” It is interesting that this same group was at work on the eve of the 2015 General Elections when they called for the sack and arrest of the then INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega.
“They are doing the same as the 2019 General Elections approach. It is their stock-in-trade on behalf of their sponsors,” Amadi said.
Also speaking, President, Public Interest Lawyers League Mr Aminu Mahmud described the call as “intriguingly worrying.”
“For these leaders to come out and pose ethnicity, I think they are posing flash points for an election where the first ballot has not been cast,” he said.
Similarly, Chairman, Partners for Electoral Reforms Mr Ezenwa Nwagwu said the call was “meaningless.”
He said the call was meaningless because it could not be acted upon.
“INEC has closed the opportunity for gatekeepers and there is a reaction.
” I have continued to say that elections have gotten better and better, let’s not make that mistake.
“Things are getting better; violence in our elections is reducing; the process is getting more and more transparent,” Nwagwu said.
He said that the introduction of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) and the Card Readers was the game changer.