Success Damian:
National Conscience Party (NCP) flag
bearer in the forthcoming gubernatorial election in Edo State, Pastor Peters
Osawaru Omoragbon, has punctured the excuse giving by Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) for delisting what it called non performing parties.
Omoragbon made the statements in a press
release titled: The Law as the Hope of the Common.
He said in 2015, INEC got 120billion Naira, and in 2019
requested and got 189.2 billion Naira, to conduct elections in those years “The
reasons it gave for the increased budget, was the rise in the numbers of
political parties. So, is INEC telling Nigerians that we cannot fund election
process in Nigeria, where a commission like the NDDC could expend 45 billion
naira in 4 months during a period where there was total lockdown
world-wide?
“Is it therefore not an absurdity for the commission to
disenfranchise millions of Nigerians just because it is too lazy to perform its
constitutional duties to the electorates? Omoragbon queried.
He told his teaming supporters to remain calm as seeks
legal solution to the issue “I appeal to our teeming supporters and independent
voters to remain law abiding and eschew violence as we trust in the Rule of
Law.
“Our campaign will continue with all fervency without let
or hindrance in accordance with section 40 of the Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria.
He said INEC defence is shameful “It is a shame to learn
from INEC’s defence against our originating summons by confessing that it was
incapable of conducting elections for large numbers of political parties in
Nigeria as a basis for preventing the NCP and myself from contesting in the Edo
State governorship election. Hear what INEC stated in its watery defence in
paragraph 17 of its affidavit to our originating summons:
“That the proliferation of political parties poses a major challenge to
electoral administration in Nigeria with most of them remaining comatose after
registration, but their presence in the register of political parties in
Nigeria only makes the jobs of INEC ALMOST impossible to perform seamlessly.
Quoting ACE
Electoral Knowledge Network, he said INEC is the second-largest government
agency in Nigeria, in terms of its staff strength; it is ranked second to the
Nigerian Police Force. As at December 2013, the Commission’s staff strength was
approximately 14,000 full time staff members across the country. The commission
also appoints ad hoc staff for election duty (about 300, 000 were recruited
during the 2011 elections).
Omoragbon said “It is worrisome for a commission that is
funded Directly by a federation account with unlimited powers and unfettered
access to fund to employ as much staff as it desires to openly make such
undermining confession about multi-party democracy and call it proliferation.
It is insulting to fathom the thinking of INEC when it was responsible in the
first place for the registration of the parties.”
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