From Chuks Okocha, Sufuyan
Ojeifo, Juliana Taiwo, Senator Iroegbu in Abuja and
Toba Suleiman in Ado-Ekiti, 04.23.2009
Insinuations about a possible
deployment of soldiers for the conduct of the
governorship rerun in Ekiti State on Saturday have
been laid to rest.
The Presidency said yesterday that requests that
troops be deployed in Ekiti for the poll would not
be granted.
Special Adviser to President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua on
Media and Publicity, Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, who said
the President would not grant the request for troops
for the rerun, also debunked insinuations that
Yar’Adua would today attend the final rally of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state.
Former governor of the state and PDP candidate, Mr.
Segun Oni, and his Action Congress (AC) counterpart,
Dr. Kayode Fayemi, are to slug it out again at the
rerun in 63 wards in 10 local government areas of
the state.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
had reportedly canvassed deployment of troops for
the poll, maintaining that the police might not be
able to ensure peace and security during the
election.
But yesterday, the commission described as “baseless
and unsubstantiated,” the reports that it was
canvassing deployment of troops in the state.
INEC’s Acting Director, Public Affairs Emmanuel
Umenger said it had never been the policy of the
commission to use soldiers to conduct elections.
Umenger said that soldiers could only be used when
there was total breakdown of law and order and not
to conduct elections “and as far as we are concerned
there is nothing like that in Ekiti”.
Addressing State House Correspondents, Adeniyi
confirmed that there would be no deployment of
troops in Ekiti.
He said: “There will be no such thing. Of course the
President is interested in security in Ekiti and in
every other state and will ensure that people go out
and vote without any molestation or hindrance, but
there will be no deployment of troops because there
is no breakdown of law and order in Ekiti.
“INEC does not have the power of the
Commander-in-Chief to deploy troops. All that will
happen on Saturday is that there will be adequate
security for people who want to go out to vote.”
On reports that Yar’Adua would go back to Ekiti for
Oni’s final rally, Adeniyi said: “The report that
the President is going back to campaign in Ekiti is
not accurate. The President is not going back and
there was never a plan for him to go back. He went
the week before to declare the campaign open and is
not going back.
“The President is not in the habit of going back to
any state to campaign after flagging off the
campaign. There is no reason for him to go back to
Ekiti. He is a supporter of Governor Oni as a PDP
member and will wish that the former governor wins
the election and comes back but it is not in his
hand, it is for the people of Ekiti to determine who
governs them come Saturday.
“The President is a fair-minded man even though he
is a PDP man and would wish that Oni returns to
Government House, which he has been campaigning for;
it is the wish of the Ekiti people that will prevail
at the end of the day.
The Presidential Spokesman said the police were
capable of taking care of the situation there and
that everybody would be safe come Saturday.
“I believe the situation is being handled by the
police and the Inspector General is on top of it.
There are all kinds of reports as to fears that
there could be breakdown of law and order but
whatever the situation I think they will be contain
it,” he added.
Meanwhile, INEC Chairman Maurice Iwu has said
politicians in the state will be held responsible
should there be any breakdown of law and order
during the rerun.
Iwu, who was addressing a stakeholders’ meeting in
Ado-Ekiti ahead of the poll, said it would be wrong
for the people to blame INEC if some people resorted
to violence at the poll.
The INEC boss also announced that the electoral
officers of the 10 local government areas where the
election would take place had been relieved of the
positions, pending the time the election would be
conducted
Iwu said electoral officers from states, which he
did not disclose, would conduct the election and
that they would arrive the state 48 hours to the
poll, adding that the commission would not use ad
hoc staff in the election.
He said he could not speak on whether the soldiers
would be deployed to monitor the election based on
apprehension from certain quarters, saying that is
the duty of the President, who is the
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed forces.
Those at the stakeholders’ meeting included the
chairmen and secretaries of the two main political
parties in the state, AC and PDP, as well as Oni.
Also present were the security operatives,
monitoring gro-ups, civil and human right
organizations, market men and women as well as the
staff of the National Orientation Agency (NOA).
Iwu said the commission or its head could not take
responsibility for any electoral offences except the
one that came from it.
He condemned the AC and PDP in the state for
unnecessarily submerging the state in violence in
their electioneering, reminding them that the state
is much more than the two parties.
The INEC chairman advised politicians and other well
meaning indigenes of the state to take their
destinies in their own hands and refrain from taking
directives from outsiders, whom he said were the
ones interfering and fanning the ember of discord.
On the resolve of the electorate to vote and stay
behind to protect their votes, Iwu disagreed with
such a plan, saying it was capable of igniting
crisis that could truncate the conduct of the
election
He said to demonstrate neutrality in the coming
election, three resident electoral commissioners
from Jigawa, Imo and Federal Capital Territory had
been deployed by INEC to conduct the election.
According to him, the three national commissioners
are to compliment the efforts of the resident
electoral commissioner in the state, Mrs. Ayoka
Olusola Adebayo.
Opposition parties endorse Fayemi Coalition of
opposition political parties under the umbrella of
Pan African Alliance (PAN) yesterday rose to endorse
Fayemi for the election, claiming that he is a
better candidate than Oni.
The Coordinator of the group, Max Okwu, said the
group had assessed Oni’s two years in office before
his election was annulled and also viewed Fayemi’s
political pedigree and studied his eight-point
agenda for change and found him a better candidate.
The parties that endorsed Fayemi included Action
Alli-ance (AA), African Liberation Party (ALP),
Action Party of Nigeria (APN), Citizens Popular
Party (CPP), Liberal Democratic Party of Nigeria (LDPN),
Hope Democratic Party (HDP), Movement for Democ-racy
and Justice (MDJ), Masses Movement of Nigeria (MMN),
Nigeria Peoples Congress (NPC), New Nigeria Peoples
Party (NNPP), New Democrats (ND), National
Solidarity Democratic Party (NSDP) and Peoples
Mandate Party (PMP).
AC, PDP Express Shock at Calls for Troop Deployment
The Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP)
and AC have expressed shock and disappointment over
the reported request by INEC that soldiers be
deployed for the rerun.
They called on the government to resist the
temptation to send troops to the state.
CNPP National Publicity Secretary Osita Okechukwu
told THISDAY that the call for troops was "out to
intimidate the electorate and pave way for PDP to
rig."
AC National Publicity Secretary Lai Mohammed said
there was no plausible reason for INEC to make such
a demand, since the state remains largely peaceful
ahead of the poll.
“Ekiti will remain peaceful even on election day,
for as long as a level playing field is provided for
the conduct of the re-run. Only an attempt to rig
can pitch the determined Ekiti people against the
riggers,’’ he said. |