INEC chairman says poor network hinders result upload on IREV

The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Joash Amupitan, on Thursday said poor telecommunications connectivity remains the commission’s toughest challenge in achieving real-time upload of election results from polling units across the country.

Amupitan revealed this on Thursday at the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room’s Stakeholders’ Forum on Elections in Abuja.

He said that despite technological gains, including the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV), weak network coverage continues to limit full real-time transparency, especially in remote areas.

He noted that the commission’s strategic response to the imperative of credibility has been the systemic infusion of technology, legally backed by the Electoral Act 2022, into our electoral system.

His words, “The deployment of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) has fundamentally redefined the process. It ensured that only genuinely accredited voters could cast their ballot, closing the door on over-voting and manual manipulation.

“Also, the INEC Result Viewing (IReV) Portal has opened the electoral process to the world, making results available for public scrutiny on election day. This transparency is the new baseline for trust in our process. However, technology is not a panacea.

“The nation’s telecommunications network remains a formidable obstacle. With over 176,000 Polling Units, some of which are in remote areas, achieving real-time upload of all results to the IReV remains one of our toughest operational battles. As I have stated before, a tool like the BVAS is only as good as the network it runs on.”

The INEC Chairman said the Commission has intensified engagement with the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and major network providers to improve connectivity, while exploring alternative transmission technologies and redundancy systems to reduce delays experienced during elections.

Amupitan, who spoke on the theme “Securing Nigeria’s Democracy: Building Consensus for Credible Elections and Accountable Governance,” stressed that while technology has strengthened accreditation and reduced manipulation, it cannot overcome network limitations without stronger multi-sector support.

He also expressed concern about persistent voter apathy, recalling that the 2023 general election recorded just above 27 per cent turnout.

He said recent successes, such as the sharp rise in Permanent Voter Card (PVC) collection rates in Anambra following targeted mobilisation, demonstrate what is possible when institutions and communities work together.

On the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration (CVR), Amupitan disclosed that a total of 2,685,725 registrations have been completed nationwide.

He disclosed that Osun leads with 208,357 registered voters.
He said this is closely followed by Kano (159,669), Sokoto (152,650), and Imo (145,561), adding that states like Borno (123,835) and Lagos (123,484) also reflect this impressive mobilisation of citizens.

The INEC boss also noted that preparations have begun for the February 21, 2026, Area Council election in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), adding that all necessary information has been published on the Commission’s website.

He added, “To secure democracy, technological integrity must be matched by political accountability. We recognise that vote-buying and financial inducement derail the will of the people. To combat this, we have intensified our collaboration with law enforcement agencies through the Inter-Agency Consultative Committee on Election Security (ICCES).

“The strategic deployment of security personnel and covert intelligence operations at election centres is designed to protect voters from intimidation and resist inducement.

“This is a multi-sectoral fight that requires collective resolve. Civil Society Organisations must play their part decisively to hold all stakeholders, including political parties, to account.

According to him, the Situation Room, as the leading civil society network, is indispensable in advancing this consensus by monitoring compliance, promoting civic education, and holding the Commission and all actors to the highest standards of the law and procedure.

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