Why Ndi-Anambra should ignore IPOB
Anambra,
the Light of the Nation, is set to witness the election of a new governor come
next Saturday, November 18, 2017. The Independent National Electoral Commission
had on February 23 this year published the timetable for this looming election.
The 10 months advance notice is now down to 72 hours before the D-Day. Such is life;
it’s a day that is not set that does not come.
What
will happen on Saturday? Will the over two million Anambra registered voters
heed the call of Indigenous People of Biafra and boycott the election or will
they turn out en-masse? Will the incumbent Governor Willie Obiano retain his
coveted seat as the number one citizen in the state or will he be dethroned?
Will the election be concluded on the first ballot or will it be inconclusive?
Will the poll be peaceful and credible or will there be violence and electoral
heist? I am not Nostradamus, the man who saw tomorrow. However, I will appeal
to the good people of Anambra to allow for peaceful, credible and successful
election that will be exemplary.
Anambra
is allegedly the state with the highest number of Billionaires. A state renowned
for its commerce and industry is also the home state of political heavyweights
like the first President of Nigeria, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, former Vice President
Alex Ekwueme, First Senate President of Nigeria Nwafor Orizu. Leader of Biafra,
Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the home state of literary icons like Prof.
Chinua Achebe, Cyprian Ekwensi , Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche, Philip Emegwali,
Prof. Dora Akunyili and Prof. Chike Obi; the
home of former Secretary General of
Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, the state of business mogul, Sir Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu who was the first Nigerian millionaire and
first president of the Nigerian Stock Exchange. It is also the state of ace highlife musician, Chief Osita Osadebe.
According
to INEC, Anambra State is made up
of 21 Local Government Areas, 326 Registration
Areas (Wards), 4,608 Polling Units, while
2, 158, 171 registered voters are expected to participate in the election. About
23,000 ad-hoc staff will be deployed to conduct the election while the Nigerian
Police is deploying about 26,000 personnel to maintain law and order during the
poll. Since the announcement of the
election date on February 23, a lot of activities have been undertaken by
different stakeholders.
On
the part of INEC, the commission has conducted voter education, recruitment and training of
poll workers, monitoring of the conduct of political party primaries, conduct
of Continuous Voter Registration Exercise, spearheading the meeting of Inter-Agency
Consultative Committee on Election Security, accreditation of election
observers, party agents, and
journalists, meeting with different stakeholders like the political
parties, civil society organisations and the media as well as procurement of
both sensitive and non-sensitive election materials. The CSOs working on
election have observed the CVR exercise including distribution of Permanent
Voters Card and transfer of voters registration details on request by voters.
CSOs have also been grossly involved in the conduct of Security Threat
Assessment, Voter Education as well as recruitment and registration of election
observers with INEC. They have also
partnered with the media to conduct debate for some of the frontline candidates
in the election. On the part of security agencies, they have been doing mapping
of flashpoints and hotspots, profiling and deployment of personnel for election
security.
Now,
all seems set for a hitch free gubernatorial election in Anambra State come
next Saturday. Unfortunately, IPOB over the weekend has been issuing
conflicting orders to the people of Anambra State. The first was to threaten
anyone who comes out to vote on Saturday with death. This initial hardline
stance was later moderated to call for total boycott by the voters. This
development is very disheartening. It is heart-rending because in the last two
gubernatorial elections in the state, voters turnout had not been impressive.
In 2010, the turnout was a mere 17 per cent of the total registered voters while
in 2013 when the last governorship poll was held, the voters turnout was 24 per cent. That happened when there was no
subtle threat by IPOB. What will now happen with the IPOB’s order of mass
boycott?
It
is important for Ndi-Anambra to know that, in as much as voting is not
compulsory in Nigeria; it is their inalienable right to exercise their
franchise. They should stop being arm-chair critics. This is the time to either
reward the incumbent governor with a second term in office, if he had governed
well or vote him out of power, if he has misruled them. Interestingly, Anambra
is making history next Saturday by fielding the highest number of candidates in
any election since Nigeria started electoral democracy in 1922. There are 37
candidates vying for the governorship position. Of that number, five political
parties are fielding female governorship candidates while eight other political
parties are having female deputy governorship candidates. In truth, these 37 candidates are made up of contenders
and pretenders. In actual fact, going by popularity, visibility and campaign
expenditure, there are just about five
serious contenders in the election and these were the ones that featured in the
CSO led political debate moderated by
Channels Television last Sunday, November 12. They are the candidates of All
Progressives Grand Alliance, All Progressives Congress, United Progressive Party,
Peoples Democratic Party, and the Progressives Peoples Alliance.
As
the Election Day approaches and campaign ends tomorrow, political parties and
candidates contesting the election should eschew malicious and unfounded rumor
peddling. The fake news peddled by one of the party chairmen last week that two
lorry loads of sensitive election materials were moved to a hotel in Awka
should be disregarded and withdrawn by the person who made the unsubstantiated
allegation. INEC needs the support of
all the election stakeholders to guarantee and deliver peaceful and credible
election. Poll workers must resist the temptation of being financially induced
to perpetrate electoral fraud by politicians. Contestants and their supporters
must also eschew violence before, during and after the elections. Security
agents on election duty must be very professional. They should stick to their
duty of providing election security. Political parties must join INEC and CSOs
to mobilise voters to come out and vote. The electorate too must conduct
themselves in orderly manner at the Polling Units. Those who have no PVC or not
willing to vote should not bother coming to the precinct of the PU. Party
agents too must ensure orderly behavior at their Polling Units while accredited
journalists should be factual and embrace conflict sensitive reportage. May the
best candidate win!
Follow
me on twitter @jideojong
Comments
Post a Comment