APP Warns Labour Party From Stirring Up Nigerians Against INEC Boss

INEC To Perform A ‘Mock Accreditation’ Before February Elections

by Echezona obinna
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The Independent National Electoral Commission has announced that it will undertake simulated accreditation around the country ahead of the general elections in 2023.

The announcement was made by INEC Chairman Mahmood Yakubu on Tuesday at the Chatham House in London.

Before the main elections in February, he said, the mock accreditation would be carried out across chosen polling locations to ensure the integrity of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System.

Yakubu, on the other hand, claimed that every BVAS machine distributed across the 774 local governments had been evaluated, and that the equipment’ functionality was remarkable.

He also stated that back up machines have been readily provided in case of system glitches.

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2023 Election: INEC To Deploy 176,846 BVAS Machines

He added that with all preparations on ground, the commission is really “comfortable and happy.”
Yakubu said, “We have the machines for the 2023 elections but we didn’t want to take chances. Each and every machine has been tested and confirmed functional. For the last two weeks our officials were in the 36 states of the federation testing these machines, and the functionality is simply encouraging.

“The second thing we’re going to do, and pretty soon, is to conduct mock accreditation exercise nationwide ahead of the elections. We won’t wait until the main elections come, we will test the integrity of these machines with real life voters in selected polling units across the country.

“We did so in Ekiti and Osun, it was fantastic and we’re going to do so nationwide. Increasingly our people are becoming more excited about the deployment of this technology and we’re really happy.

“Also in terms of the numbers of these BVAS machines, we always make provision in case of malfunction or glitches. There is always a back up. We have IReV technical support that will fix the machines in the unlikely event of any glitches.

“However, where it fails to function completely in a polling unit, from previous experience there were isolated polling units, the law has a remedy that the commission should re-mobilise and re-conduct elections in the affected polling units within 24 hours, so we are really, really comfortable where we are.”

 

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