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INEC, EFCC partner against selling of votes in today’s poll

By Msugh Ityokura, Abuja
22 September 2018   |   4:19 am
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has warned prospective vote buyers in today's Osun State governorship election, saying defaulters risk arrest and prosecution.

EFCC

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has warned prospective vote buyers in today’s Osun State governorship election, saying defaulters risk arrest and prosecution.

Rising from its meeting with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) at the latter’s new headquarters in Abuja, INEC said plans had been perfected to get defaulters.

INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmud Yakubu, who led a team of National Commissioners to the meeting, said the commission was worried about the issue of vote-buying and selling phenomenon and had already taken a number of steps to address the menace.

He explained that while the incidence of ballot box snatching and kidnapping of INEC officials had reduced significantly due to a number of strong reforms the electoral body had put in place to strengthen the electoral process, the vote-buying and selling phenomenon was posing another worrisome challenge.

Yakubu stated: “We are here as part of our consultations with critical agencies connected to the electoral process. We have undertaken a number of innovations to strengthen the electoral system and these days, you hear less of ballot-box snatching and kidnapping of INEC officials. But as we solve one problem, another one is coming up.

“Of immediate concern is the election we are holding in Osun State and it is going to be the last major election before the 2019 general elections. We have taken steps, as a Commission, but we need the support of the EFCC in this respect.

“Vote buying and selling is earning a bad reputation for our democracy, for our elections and we thought we should visit national institutions, like the EFCC, because you have the powers under the law to arrest, to investigate, to prosecute and to help us, so we can stem this ugly tide of vote-buying and selling.”

The INEC chairman regretted that the Commission had also recently observed increasing inducement through electronic transfers, whereby money is transferred into the accounts of some voters to influence their decisions on election day, adding: “We believe that you (EFCC) have both the law and the capacity on your side to help us in this respect.”

Yakubu maintained that only the votes of the people should determine who wins or looses in an election and not through open inducement using cash at polling units.

He implored the EFCC to also monitor campaign finances of political parties and their candidates, saying: “As we go into the elections proper in 2019, we also need your support in the area of campaign finance and spending by candidates.

“The law has prescribed limits as to what candidates can spend in elections, but we need the enforcement of these laws. We don’t want the moneybags to determine our democracy; we want the votes of the people to determine who wins in our elections.”

In response, EFCC Acting Chairman, Ibrahim Magu, said: “There’s indeed a lot of concern about vote-buying and selling.

“There’s also a lot of concern about the possibility of moneybags trying to derail our democracy and democratic process.

“We have the mandate to monitor money transfers and we are collaborating with the banks. We have the mandate to arrest, investigate and prosecute and we are going to use the Osun governorship election as a test case.”

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