Indications have emerged of a strained relationship which now exists
between the presidency and the leadership of the Independent National
Electoral Commission, INEC.
This supposed face-off is said to have
been sparked by a reason given by the electoral body for postponing the
2015 general elections by six weeks.
The Chairman of INEC,
Professor Attahiru Jega, had on Saturday while announcing an adjournment
of the general elections, attributed the shift which was from February
14 and 28 to March 28 and April 11, to a letter written by the military
over its “inability” to provide security for the elections owing to its
renewed offensive against the Boko Haram insurgents.
However, over the weekend, a presidential aide squealed to TheCable that
Jega was being “clever by half” by attempting to “pass the buck” to the
military, stressing that it was a mere ploy by INEC to undermine the
Commission’s poor preparations for the elections.
According to the source, who pleaded for his name not to be
mentioned, “Jega was not sincere at all. The collection of PVCs was to
end last Saturday and 23 million cards were yet to be distributed. Why
was Jega not man enough to admit they would have bungled the elections
if the dates had remained unchanged?”
Stressing that daunting
insecurity was just one of the many factors that necessitated the
postponement; the presidential aide said, “Jega has cleverly gone to
tell the whole world that it was the security agencies that forced him
to change the dates.” He wondered why journalists failed to asked him
what he intended to do with the 23 million uncollected PVCs as well as
the ones that were stolen from the Commission.
“Jega was also
silent on the fact that the machines that would be deployed to read the
cards had not been tested and its officials had not even been trained on
how to use them, while there is yet no consolidated voter register.
Jega himself admitted to his commissioners that the election would have
ended in chaos if INEC had gone ahead. The letter written by the chief
of defence staff was the perfect excuse for him to shift the polls and
heap all the blame on security,” he said.
The insider said President Goodluck Jonathan had grown suspicious of
Jega, as a result of the “lopsidedness” which has trailed the
distribution of permanent voter cards, PVC. He added that Saturday’s
pronouncement by the INEC Chairman on what informed the postponement
must have worsened that disaffection.

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