The Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) and its chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, held on Monday, March 16, a INEC
Town Hall meeting at the Ya’adua Centre, Central Abuja.
During the
meeting, all political parties and citizens of Nigeria were able to ask
questions on INEC’s preparedness for the 2015 general election.
Below are the
main points covered by the INEC:
– The military will not be at the polling units rather 3
armed policemen 300M away from polling unit;
– Collection by proxy is prohibited in the INEC’s guidelines,
and there is a disciplinary process for erring staff;
– Political parties and the INEC agreed that if there’s a
malfunction of a card reader, the accreditation will be suspended and the card
reader will be replaced during the accreditation period;
– The batteries of the card readers stay between 12-14
hours. “When you use the card readers without charging it, it gives 74%
and if you charge it it gives you 100%,” the Director of ICT
said.
– The INEC removed over 4million people who registered more than once by
raning data on AFIS. “If you register more than
once, we remove the multiple data and leave one. A voter won’t be
disenfranchised because he registered twice,” Jega said.
– The INEC has produced and distributed over
67.8m PVCs and only 56m have been collected;
– The INEC moved collection to the ward level to
make it easier for voters to collect their cards;
– The INEC separated the period of accreditation
from the period of voting – just like in 2011 – to eliminate the possibility of
multiple voting. Now the accreditation period is between 8am-1pm;
– The INEC doesn’t have time or resources to
organise elections for all IDPs in Nigeria. However, all IDPs in the 3
North-East states will be able to vote;
– Card readers will be configured according to
polling units. You can only vote where you registered;
– A cloned card cannot be read by the INEC card
reader;
– No material relating to the preparation for the
2015 general election was involved in the fire incident;
– Jega isn’t going to resign. “I’ve a job to do, and it would be a disservice to Nigerians for
me to resign, i’m not under any pressure. There has been speculation about my
removal, as far as I’m concerned I have a job to do and have no reason to
resign,” he said.
– For those who have no fingers or hands, the
INEC did special registration;
– Physically challenged voters have a separate
and expedited queue to enable them vote without stress.
culled from Naij
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