INEC Owed Nigerians Details On Election Postponement – PMB
President
Muhammadu Buhari on Monday said the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) owed Nigerians detailed explanation for its decision to delay the
general elections.
Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s
Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, said the president stated this
at the All Progressives Congress (APC) emergency caucus meeting at the party
secretariat, Abuja.
President Buhari said: ‘‘Definitely,
the reasons such incompetence manifested have to be explained to the
nation. After the elections, we have to know exactly what happened and
who is responsible.
‘‘The constitution and the laws
protect INEC but they must not take us for granted. If for example, the
National Assembly refused to approve what INEC wanted, then INEC would have
more than enough reasons why they couldn’t perform.
‘‘If the time for the constitutional
elections, four years after was not obeyed by the government and the system,
INEC will have a case. But we do not understand why this inefficiency and we
have to move into details after the election to find out who’s responsible.’’
While noting that the electoral
commission had all the time and resources it needed to conduct the polls, the
president said there was no justification ‘‘to wait for only six hours to
postpone the votes’’, in the early hours of Feb. 16.
He also used the occasion to warn
all political actors to ensure an environment free from intimidation and
violence for all eligible citizens to peacefully cast their ballot on the
Election Day.
The President announced that he has directed security agencies to contain any acts of lawlessness before, during and after the elections.
‘‘We are not going to be blamed of
trying to rig the elections. I want Nigerians to be respected. Let them vote
whoever they want across the parties. I am not afraid, I have gone to all 36
states and Abuja and I think I have enough support across the country,’’ he
said.
President Buhari urged all APC
supporters to vote peacefully in the upcoming elections.
‘‘We have so much to do and I think
we should again go back to our loyal, committed people in all constituencies.
If anything happens we have nobody to blame.
‘‘We have to tell our constituencies
that they have to be patient and act in a very responsible way by going
peacefully to vote again, and they should depend on party representatives at
each of the 176,000 polling units,’’ he said. (NAN)





