The West African Civil Society Forum (WACSOF), a regional network of civil society organizations drawn from 15 West African states, has stated that the February 25 presidential election, which produced Bola Tinubu, the All Progressives Congress presidential candidate, as the winner, was initially free and fair until counting and uploading began.
Dr Sanwo Olatunji-David, the forum’s National Executive Director, revealed this on Tuesday in Abuja while assessing the just concluded presidential and National Assembly elections.
He attributed some of the technical difficulties to insufficient training of polling unit agents on the proper use of the BVAS.
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He entrusted the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) with addressing the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) problem ahead of the March 11 governorship and State Assembly polls.
The WACSOF chairman emphasized the need of the electoral body fine-tuning and expanding data capacity, as well as meeting all other technological requirements related to the transfer of election results to its portal, as specified in the election guidelines.
“Our observation across the polling units monitored identified the following: Late arrival of INEC staff and election materials made the process drag late into the night and brought about frustration on the part of the voters, and thus a fertile ground for electoral malpractices; shortage of election consumables such as ink pads delayed voting in some polling units visited; some of the polling unit agents were seeing the BVAS for the second time after their hurriedly packaged training and couldn’t operate the device efficiently, this created hitches and voter frustration.
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“Election was free, fair and credible up to the point of counting. The situation, however, changed after counting and uploading the result was made practically impossible for presidential results. Above is at variance to the provisions of INEC regulations for this election and the Electoral Act,” he said.
He commended the aggrieved parties for seeking redress in court rather than resorting to violence.
“As a thematic group, our position is that the aggrieved parties did the right thing by approaching the Presidential Election Tribunal to address their grievances rather than heating the system.
“Nigeria cannot afford another crisis now with the tension all over the country caused by the naira crunch and the vexation emanating from the Feb. 25 elections. We believe that approaching the court will add value by enriching and deepening our democratic values,” he said.
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