8th
February, 2015
PRESS RELEASE:
POLL SHIFT: SECURITY FACTOR IS A MERE
SMOKESCREEN
The Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday announced the postponement of
the 2015 general elections which had been scheduled to hold on February 14th
and 28th. The presidential and national assembly elections will now
take place on 28th March 2015 while the gubernatorial and
state assembly polls will be held on 11th
April 2015.
The postponement was
informed by the position of Nigeria’s security agencies who maintain that they
could not guarantee the safety of INEC staff in the North East if the elections
were not shifted.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) is flabbergasted by this postponement. It is unnecessary because countries like Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan
which are ravaged by worse security situations have successfully conducted general
elections and did not succumb to security threat.
We strongly suspect that the security factor is a mere smokescreen.
The real raison d’etre lies in the imminent defeat of the ruling party. Having read between the lines, the ruling party
has been running from pillar to post looking for the magic wand. They turned to
litigation after the main opposition candidate’s certificate imbroglio failed. The
attempt to hoodwink the Council of State also hit the rocks. The military
option is the ace.
This postponement is therefore not about security issues.
The real casus belli is the urgent desire of the ruling party to buy time. The
idea is to keep stalling until a sinister plan matures. This can be gleaned from the understanding that the shift is for six weeks
“in the first instance”, a phrase that has surfaced in the controversy. Well,
Nigerians are waiting.
MURIC regrets the
manner the Federal Government (FG) of Nigeria and the ruling party are dragging
the military into politics. This portends great danger for democracy. Bastardisation
of the military is bound to undermine its professionalism. They appear so
desperate that rather than play the role of good sportsmen and true democrats,
they are prepared to destroy what they cannot enjoy. Resorting to the use of
security agencies after the Council of State had rejected a postponement
exposes the low level FG has sunk.
MURIC asserts that the
reason cited for the postponement of the Nigerian general elections is weak, baseless
and unfounded. It is the Nigerian army that is involved in the war against the
insurgents, not the police. Civilized countries do not involve the military in
elections. This is strictly a police constituency. This is why the use of
soldiers in earlier elections in Ekiti and Osun was roundly condemned by
Nigerians.
The whole gamut smacks
of hypocrisy. Both FG and the ruling party pretended to oppose the idea of an election
shift ab initio even though it was first muted by a top-ranking
government official in far away Britain. Yet they were mobilizing for it and they
were the first to welcome it when it was eventually announced.
MURIC cautions FG not do anything rash in the interregnum. Nigerians
should not be pushed to the wall. We warn against violent reactions by the
opposition. We remind security agencies of the need to remain
neutral and to play the game according to the rules. We charge all stakeholders
to remember that the Nigerian project is not about any individual. It is about
our survival as a corporate entity.
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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