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| INEC Chairman, Prof Attahiru Jega |
Professor Jega made the promise, yesterday, in Abuja at the National Broadcasting Commission, NBC/INEC forum with broadcast operators on media coverage of elections.
Jega said INEC had learnt its lessons from Anambra election conducted last year, which was dogged by logistic lapses, but was quick to say that INEC would not allow a repeat of such mistakes in the coming elections.
On the preparations for the 2015 general elections and release of time-table, Jega said: “The countdown towards those dates has begun in earnest. I am aware that the dates we announced have been challenged by some politicians. INEC choice of dates was informed by purely rational and logical considerations.
“We have scheduled the elections for February 2015 to allow ample time for litigations, which are inevitable in our Nigerian context, before the commencement of new tenures on May 29 2015.”
He debunked the allegation that INEC changed the sequence of elections in 2015, when compared with 2011, and advised those calling for one-day elections to have a re-think.
Jega insisted that the challenge of holding one-day elections were too daunting for Nigeria’s nascent democracy at this time.
Challenges
He said it was not possible to predict all the challenges that could face the management of an election, but pointed out that INEC had learnt from the past challenges and introduced measures to prevent their recurrence, while anticipating new ones and devising measures to contain them.
Among four major challenges identified by the INEC boss are: insecurity, funding, attitude of the political class and inactive citizenry, which, he said, could be surmounted if every stakeholder performed his duty as stipulated by the law.
Besides the key challenges identified, Jega also listed pending amendment to the legal framework; review of electoral constituencies and prosecution of electoral offenders as residual challenges facing the electoral body.
Media
He said the media had a crucial role to play in enlightening the electorate and sustainability of democracy and charged Nigerian media to be thorough, fair, non-sensational and balanced in their reporting of the coming elections.
“Our democracy in Nigeria is hard won, after repeated intrusions by the military in governance and long years of authoritarian rule that resulted. Despite the relative stability that we have enjoyed since the advent of the present Fourth Republic, we are still in the process of weaning our political culture away from authoritarian tendencies fostered by decades of military rule.
While calling on the media to discourage such tendencies, the INEC boss advised the political actors to always play by the rule of the game to safe-guide the nascent democracy.
In his address, the Minister of Information, Mr. Labaran Maku said, election has been a problem in Nigeria since independence in 1960, saying that there is need for Nigeria to conduct free and fair elections in 2015 better than the previous editions to prove to the world that they can do it.
The Minister said the Present administration is committed to free and fair elections, as demonstrated in the 2011 general elections, which was declared as the most freest and fairest in the history of the country.
“Since 2007, this country has been committed to free and fair elections. Since the advent of this administration, there has been a commitment to free and fair election. 2011 elections were adjudged the freest in the history of Nigeria and litigation cases came down to 50 per cent,” Maku said.
The Minister also said that the President had freed the media by signing the Freedom of Information bill into law and as such, the media should reciprocate the gesture by ensuring free and fair election in the forthcoming elections by making sure that their reports are balanced, credible and accurate.
Earlier in his address, the Chairman of the occasion and former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Muhammadu Uwais underscored the importance of the media in a democratic setting.
He stated that the role of the media is so critical in facilitating the participation of citizens in public discourse and if properly employed, would contribute to the development of a consensus on national issues.
Justice Uwais charged NBC to ensure strict compliance on the broadcast code by all broadcasters, as it aims to achieve fairness in their coverage of political parties and prevent programmes that could undermine the free and fair democratic elections.
Source:Vanguard

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