4th February, 2015
PRESS RELEASE:
DELAY
OF INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS:
FG IS
PLAYING HANKY-PANKY
The kick-off of the 2015
Nigerian general elections is just ten days away. Reports trending indicate
that international observers are yet to arrive in the country. Stakeholders
have already started expressing their worries over this delay.
The Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC) joins other well-meaning groups and patriotic individuals in raising
the alarm about the absence of foreign observers.
International observers take position in countries preparing for elections
several weeks before the commencement of the exercise. This is the accepted
international standard and Nigeria should not fall short of this practice.
With attempts being made
to scuttle the 2015 elections and allegations going round that the Federal
Government (FG) is behind these sinister maneuvers, we have every reason to believe
that FG is deliberately procrastinating. In connivance with the ruling party,
FG is trying to buy more time for its damage-control gimmicks to work.
MURIC rejects this
hanky-panky. We assert that mandate-stealing begins with time-stealing. The future of this country
remains dicey if Aso Rock does not change its happy-go-lucky mentality. We
cannot continue this foot-dragging for the next four years.
The deliberate delay of the arrival
of international observers exposes FG’s hidden agenda. This administration
comes across as one that never intended to allow a smooth and democratic
transition through a free and fair election.
FG must tell Nigerians why
its embassies abroad have not commenced issuing visas to foreign journalists
and observers. We nurse a strong suspicion that FG has more than one skeleton
in its cupboard. Those who organize elections must be transparent in
the same way that those who come to equity must come with clean hands. A higgledy-piggledy
arrangement can only be calculated towards thwarting one man one vote.
MURIC charges FG to
immediately and unconditionally allow international observers to enter Nigeria.
This will be a bold step towards becoming democracy-compliant. A regime which
claims to be embarking on transformation cannot afford to fall short of
international best practices.
Finally, we appeal to the
African Union (AU) to beam its floodlight on Nigeria at this crucial moment. In
view of Nigeria’s population size and the implications of a humanitarian crisis
in the country for the whole of Africa, the continental body should not wait
any longer. The time for AU’s presence and diplomatic intervention is now.
By the same token, we
extend this appeal to the United Nations Organisation (UNO) as well as the
European Union (EU). The world has become a global village and whatever affects
Africa may not necessarily remain Africa’s problem alone.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
No comments:
Post a Comment