Ban on smart phones: Secondus accuses INEC of alleged rigging plans

The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP) Prince Uche Secondus, has condemned the decision of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ban the use of smart phones at polling booths, saying that the commission is allegedly perfecting rigging formular for the ruling All Progressives, APC.
Secondus, who spoke during an interactive session with the party’s leaders in Bayelsa State on Tuesday, said that Nigerians must rise up to frustrate all the rigging strategies being perfected between INEC and the APC.
The National Chairman said that the INEC decision on the use of smart phone, is a deliberate plan to kill means of gathering evidence against rigging arrangements which is being fine tuned and tested in Ekiti and Osun states.
According to a statement from Secondus media office and signed by Ike Abonyi, the PDP National Chairman said that the regime of APC is killing Nigeria and its citizens .
Secondus said, “They have borrowed over N11 trillion yet there is nothing to show, hunger is ravaging the land and people are dying daily across the country”.
He added that critical stakeholders and the international community are worried at the debt profile of the present administration which has risen to such astronomical level amidst huge corruption in the system.
He said, ” I crave your indulgence to stand up against all the evil plots of the APC by collecting your PVC and using it judiciously to vote them out in all elections in 2019.”
Secondus said that the country is under siege with the APC government harassing and intimidating critical organs of the government, the Judiciary, the Legislature and individuals in its mission to cow and suppress dissenting voices to their undemocratic activities.
The PDP national chairman, who was accompanied to the interactive meeting by the state Governor Seriake Dickson and the South South Vice Chairman of the party, finally commended the people for their commitment to the party and urged them to conduct themselves in the most civilized manner as demanded by the rules of democracy.