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INEC Seeks UN Assistance In Five Core Areas

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has sought the assistance of the United Nations in five core areas for it to achieve success in the forthcoming general elections slated for 2023.

Of the five core areas the commission identified Voter Education and Sensitisation as one  major area  it will be needing support from the United Nations in order to successfully conduct a free, fair, credible, and inclusive 2023 general elections

Addressing a delegation of the United Nations Needs Assessment Mission, led by Serge Gakwandi Kubwimana, in his office on Wednesday, INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu said given the size of the country there is a need to keep engaging citizens and stakeholders using different media platforms

He said: “The first one is Training and Capacity Building support for the staff of the Commission. The second is Voter Education and Sensitization. Given the size of the country we need to keep engaging using different media.”

Professor Yakubu who restated his Commission’s fidelity to conduct a free, fair, credible and inclusive election, identified five areas of concern that it would request the assistance of the global body.

He said: “The first one is Training and Capacity Building support for the staff of the Commission. The second is Voter Education and Sensitization. Given the size of the country we need to keep engaging using different media.”

Number three area of support as highlighted by the INEC Chairman “is election security and conflict mitigation, while the fourth area of support enumerated by Professor Yakubu is “capacity building for political parties”. Because according to him “basically what the Commission does is to conduct the secondary election. The political parties conduct the primary elections, so the candidates we put on the ballot are candidates nominated by the political parties.”

“So we need to build the capacity of the parties to nominate good candidates so that when elected they can represent the country well,” he added.

He said “We have 18 political parties. Assuming that half of them field candidates in all the constituencies, we are talking about close to 15,000 nominations which is really a huge task.”

“In 2019 we had 84 million registered voters, we are still registering voters for the 2023 general election, and in our estimation, the voter population will be at least 90 million for 2023. At 90 million, it will make our voter register in Nigeria the largest in West Africa.”

“Out of the 15 countries in West Africa, including Nigeria, the other 14 countries altogether have about 73 million registered voters. At present we have 84 million registered voters so we have 11 million more registered voters than the rest of West Africa combined. So each time we conduct an election in Nigeria it is like we are conducting an election in the whole of West Africa. So, election in Nigeria is no joke at all.”

He further hinted that the 2023 general election will involve about 1million election officials including regular and temporary or ad-hoc staff across 176,846 polling units, 8,809 Wards, and 774 Local Government Areas across the country.”

Ayomikun David

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