CSOs protest against delayed assent to electoral bill

Buhari. Photo/twitter/NGRPresident

• PDP alleges plot to extend APC rule

A Coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) is protesting in Abuja to compel President Muhammadu Buhari to sign the reworked Electoral Act Amendment Bill.

The placard-wielding protesters converged at the Unity Fountain in their numbers chanting anti-government songs.
Some of the inscriptions on their placards read: ‘Buhari Sign Electoral Bill Now, Prevent Elections Rigging’, ‘The Bill Protects the Voting Rights of PWDS’, ‘Buhari Save Our Democracy’ among others.

Armed policemen were deployed to the Unity Fountain, while the convoy of joint task force was sighted at the Eagle Square mobilising for operation.


Speaking briefly before the protesters processed towards the National Assembly, Convener of Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room, Ene Obi, alleged that the delay by the present administration in assenting to the bill was a conspiracy against the Nigerian people and a plot to rig coming elections.

Obi appealed to the president, as the father of the nation, to sign the bill, as more than 400 members of the National Assembly put in effort to pass the bill.

Executive Director, Yiaga Africa, Samson Itodo, said the bill “is important for several reasons” because it would help in guaranteeing an inclusive and credible electoral process.

According to Itodo, if the reworked bill is signed into law, INEC will have all the money it requires for the conduct of elections.

Executive Director, Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) and Chair, Transition Monitoring Group (TMG), Auwal Rafsanjani, said that Nigerians were tired of electoral manipulations.

Rafsanjani added that Nigerians were also tired of the absence of electoral integrity; hence they wanted electoral inclusion of women.

He noted that all these would be made possible by the assent to the Electoral Amendment Bill 2022. Executive Director of Inclusive Friends Association (IFA), Grace Jerry, said the new electoral bill would give the more than 30 million community of Persons With Disabilities (PWDs) access to the electoral process.


The coalition, therefore, recommended that Buhari should sign the bill into law on or before March 1, 2022.
FOR the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), President Buhari and his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), are delaying the signing of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill to frustrate the 2023 general elections.

The opposition party claimed that “the current anti-people scheme against the Electoral Act Amendment Bill by the APC administration is heightening apprehensions across the country of furtive plots by APC leaders to orchestrate a constitutional impasse that can railroad our democracy into an emergency tenure elongation, induced election postponement, self-succession or worst still an interim government situation.”

National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Debo Ologunagba, at a press briefing in Abuja, yesterday, noted that the growing tension concerning the Electoral Act Amendment Bill “calls for concern, as it has the capacity to spawn widespread restiveness” with consequential violence, bloodletting and humanitarian crisis in the country that may affect the entire West Africa, Europe, America and other parts of the world, if not addressed.

“Our party also has information about how some selfish unelected cabinet ministers, advisers and other top government functionaries with ambitions for presidential, governorship and other elective positions are mounting pressure on Buhari not to sign the bill to enable them remain longer in office, so as to continue to use public funds to corruptly pursue their personal political interests,” he further alleged.

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