2023 Election

Bode George urges INEC Chair, Yakubu not to succumb to pressure

A former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Bode George, has urged the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu, not to succumb to any pressure.

Speaking at a press conference in Lagos on Monday, Bode George said Yakubu should not allow people to force him to alternate the results from the polling units. He said history would judge the Chairman of the electoral body, who swore to an oath to ensure a free, fair and credible electoral process if he alters the election results.

Bode George said in the event of being pressured to alternate results of the election, the INEC chairman should raise his voice for Nigerians to hear or step down from his position. He insisted that the transmission of the ongoing collation for the Presidential and National Assembly election results must be transmitted electronically as enunciated by INEC.

The leader of PDP in Lagos State said the chairman of INEC should sack the director of the commission’s information and technology directorate over its failure to transmit the election results from polling units.

He said, “I want to state unequivocally that it is disheartening to learn that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has expressed the position that the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), meant for the seamless transmission of election results electronically into the commission’s server is failing, and thus necessitating the reversal to the manual system.

“This is against the standard for the election and it is not acceptable at all, as we are being taken back to the period of misery when election results were manipulated between the polling units and the collation centres.

“It is the most despicable shameful act, after the certification of the veracity of the BVAS, for the transmission process of results, which was attested to, by the mock process successfully embarked on by INEC before the election, coupled by the successful deployment of the system for the Ekiti, Anambra and Osun governorship elections.

“How on earth can INEC turn around at this critical period, to discredit the system? I hope they are not trying to foster the dismal APC government on Nigerians, who have expressed their determination to do away with this retrogressive party through the poll last Saturday. For instance, Tinubu, was said to have secured 50,000 votes cast in Ikorodu, how can we accept this?

“I make bold to say, this is a big embarrassment to Nigerians and the international community, whose hopes were raised that the giant of Africa and the most populated black nation has finally got it right and found a permanent solution to her intractable electoral quagmire of several years. Alas, we are being drawn back to our disgraceful past, which to me is also dealing a severe blow to the effort of developed countries like the United States (US), who made a huge financial and material commitments to our electoral process, expected to chart a new course and place Nigeria in her rightful place among the comity of nations.

“How can we accept this uncivilised abuse against an established electoral reform already gazetted and entrenched as Electoral Act in our constitution? This is nothing but a reversal of our political fortunes by several millions of backward steps. I am concerned that the international community which has invested several millions of dollars in financial and material resources would be most bemused by this most unthinkable madness, being demonstrated by the Nigerian electoral umpire.

 “A nation is not about narrow irredentist fixation. It is larger. It is about common goals and shared values. It is about common destinies and common verities. Anything is a conglomeration of indifferent, wobbling and wavering entities. It is a deviation from the normative patterns of a nation-state. This is hardly the path to building an enduring nation. Great nations are built upon accommodating largeness where everyone must have a sense of belonging. A fair society insists on merit, frowns upon nepotism, encourages participatory inclusiveness, and creates equal opportunity for everyone to actualize themselves.

“I am hereby calling on the international community, who have their observers on the ground, monitoring this election, to rise and condemn this most self-destructive and annihilating political malfeasance being perpetrated by our INEC. In my humble opinion, INEC’s reservation on BVAS is a despicable act, which is condemnable, most uncivilised, and capable of consigning Nigeria to the permanent stature of a pariah nation among the comity of civilised nations.”

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