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Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by treesun: 11:52am On Sep 09, 2023
Nigerians have called for a restructuring of the Judiciary, and the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, after scrutinizing the judgment of the Presidential Election Petitions Tribunal, PEPT, delivered on Wednesday. Elder statesmen, leaders, retired judges, lawyers, and activists, who spoke to Saturday Vanguard, this weekend, faulted the judgment, saying that the operators, not necessarily our laws, were the problem of democracy in the country. They expressed dissatisfaction that the PEPT did not dispense justice on the glaring issues that arose from the last presidential elections tabled before it for determination.

Restructure Nigeria — Emiaso, ex-customary court president

A former President of the Delta State Area Customary Court, Miakpo Emiaso, said: “I have always taken the position that there is nothing wrong with our laws apart from the lopsided federal system that this country operates. Unless there is restructuring of the political system such that each part of the nation is sufficiently autonomous to pursue its own goals according to its needs, this country is going nowhere. There is a fundamental flaw in the organization of this country, and unless we remove the flaw by restructuring to something similar to what we had in the First Republic, this country is going nowhere. In terms of the electoral system, the problem we need to solve is the people who operate the system. The politicians and electoral umpire must change their attitude and they cannot change their attitude because what propels them is the faulty federal system that we are operating in Nigeria. We have established it without argument that we cannot function together the way we are trying to force ourselves together. I am not advocating the dismemberment of Nigeria; Nigeria must remain Nigeria, but we must give the federating units greater autonomy. There is too much power concentrated at the federal and there is too much power concentrated on the person who becomes President. This country will not move like this. There is no problem with our electoral system; it is the dramatis personae that we need to talk to, to change their ways because the faulty federal system that we operate foists that attitude on them.

INEC breached electoral laws — Nwoko, SAN

Former Attorney General of Akwa Ibom State and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Uwem Edimo Nwoko, said, “My position built on my experience, over the years, both as a lawyer and participant in the electoral process would be that human beings are the architects of the unfortunate democratic experience we are having. Why do I say so? The laws we have today, particularly the Electoral Act 2022, can engineer a perfect electoral process, but the problems lie with those executing and implementing the law. For example, globally, the management of the 2023 General Elections, particularly the presidential election, was highly flawed. If you read through the reports of all the observers, both local and international, you see that every observer with integrity and dispassionate evaluation came up with the conclusion that INEC did not follow the Electoral Act, especially in the deployment and use of the BVAS machines. They did not follow the provision concerning real-time transmission of results from the Polling Unit to the INEC server. People complained that the INEC server suddenly shut down during the presidential election. The irony is that the same machines that transmitted the National Assembly results could not transmit the presidential results at the same time. The INEC Chairman was announcing the results of the Presidential election when collation was still going on. Since he said the machines did not transmit the results, how did he get the figures he was declaring? Until today, INEC has not explained to Nigerians why that happened. Unless we get people of integrity to supervise our electoral process, we will make no progress, so the problem is not with our laws.”

Reform judiciary — Onuesoke, ex- guber aspirant

Former Delta State governorship aspirant and chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Chief Sunny Onuesoke, said: “The electoral laws are very okay. The major problem we have is the judiciary. What happened on Wednesday was a rape of Nigeria voters’ rights. Nothing is wrong with the Electoral Act. The judiciary is responsible, for example, there is a constitutional clause that you need to have 25 percent of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT. It is in the laws but they just came out and started reading if Abuja people are better than the people in other states That contradicts the law. We should blame the judiciary, not INEC. The way forward is to reorganize the judiciary.”

Unfashionable to ignore BVAS, IREV – Okah, lawyer

A legal practitioner in Bayelsa State, Jonah Okah, asserted, “The judgment on the presidential election has exposed certain salient issues in the Electoral Act. The much-celebrated reform provided in the 2022 Electoral Act has teeth, but cannot bite in the face of the judgment that the Tribunal delivered.

Granting autonomy to state legislature, judiciary, an infringement — Gusa
“We need to make specific provisions to address the issues of electronic transfer of results, the legal validity of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System, BVAS, and IReV, INEC Result Viewing Portal, IReV, as well as curtailing the latitude conferred on the electoral empire, as highlighted by the issues arising from the judgment. It is anachronistic in this Information and Communication Technology, ICT, age when electronic transmission cannot be used as a legal process in the conduct of election as stated in the judgment.”

We‘re diminishing — Evison, Community leader

National President of the Sagbama Federated Community, Ebi Evinson, said: “From the judgment, we seem to retrogress our electoral system. Introducing BVAS and the electronic transmission of results was a remarkable improvement in our elections. But now that the judgment says that collation and electronic transmission of results by INEC is optional, then the gains we made on our electoral system would have eroded and future elections shall be terrible in terms of credibility. We will slide back to our old ways of manual collation with its attendant challenges. I think that the only way we can make progress in our elections and democracy is to ensure that we conclude election cases before swearing in so that there will be minimal influence. The confidence with which President Bola Tinubu jetted out of the country, on the eve of his crucial election case that was due for judgment, when the conference still had a few days ahead to begin, simply shows the effective application of the Nigerian factor in the entire scenario.”

Hope lost – Clarkson, attorney

A legal practitioner and former spokesperson of the Movement for the Survival of Izon Ethnicity Nationality in the Niger Delta, MOSIEND, Amaebi Clarkson, said: “We are in the ICT age, and expectantly, our electoral process would have been driven by technology, particularly with the introduction of card reader and BVAS. Unfortunately, the 2023 general election has clearly shown that we are not ripe for digitalized elections possibly because of our value placement as a people. I am of the firm opinion that we go back to our indigenous Option A4 introduced by Prof Nwosu in the conduct of our elections.”

We need a fearless judiciary, competent INEC – Odi, community leader

A retired Bayelsa senior civil servant and community leader, Chris Odi, suggested, “Strengthening INEC to be able to fund its operations, and equip workforce to function optimally with near-perfect logistics to deliver credible elections, and working with a fair and fearless judiciary to prosecute culprits of electoral offenses. Also, the electoral umpire must work hard to ensure there are no cases of voter suppression (disenfranchisement). The government must adequately equip the police to check electoral violence before, during, and after elections. There should be proper orientation and reorientation by the relevant government agency (NOA), and media outlets on the need to shun ethnic and religious politics for Nigeria to have the benefit of the best candidates. They should revisit the problem of voter apathy through voter education. For instance, the 2019 election recorded 34.75 percent voter turnout, while in 2019, only a meager 28.6 million voters cast their votes out of 82 million eligible voters. The above suggestions will go a long way in improving Nigeria’s electoral system.”

Electronic voting, solution toNigeria’selectoral turbulence — Chima Nnaji

On his part, Lagos-based legal practitioner and Rights activist, Chief Chima Nnaji, strongly advocated the evolution of electronic voting as a permanent solution to Nigeria’s hydra-headed electoral system.

He regretted that those who benefit from the current flawed system are reluctant to embrace innovations that could help eliminate fraud in the system. According to him, “Electronic voting is the way to go but the drag by those in power is causing the delay. See how the last ditch effort in the 2022 Electoral Act was messed up at the tribunal on Wednesday. It was consigned to the waste bin, and it looks as if they dumped all the money budgeted for those gadgets in the lagoon. So, the first is to show sincerity of purpose by leadership that must look beyond today. They must look beyond their narrow interest and be statemanly in their perception of realities such that even if they are being selfish, such selfish interest should as far as possible, be situated within the national interest. And the only way to do that is to commit to electronic voting system that will de-personalise human interventions in such a drastic manner that it is done at the whims and caprice of whoever is the National Chairman of INEC. It should be made in a way that it becomes absolutely difficult to game the system. There might be glitches which have to be battled and upgraded as in the banks. Although the electronic system has not prevented fraud, it has reduced it to the barest minimum. We need something that is de-personalised, we de- personalise to improve effectiveness. The process has been dragging because of human interest. If you eliminate human interest, the court will be removed from the electoral process. The court is not supposed to be the final arbiter in the electoral process. That’s not the intendment of the philosophers who propounded democracy. We were taught in those days that the ballot boxes were the most painless killers. If you are under- performing as a politician, the people go to the ballot box and kill you silently, and you go home and lick your wounds. I’m sure those who philosophised democracy will be turning in their graves the way democracy is murdered in this country. At this stage, we expect that judges should be more circumspect. When you are 60 years and above, you don’t need to be corrupt “.

Comprehensive verdict – Edokpolo, UPAN facilitator

However, the National Facilitator, United Patriots Assembly of Nigeria, UPAN, Ambassador Ayamekhue Edokpolo, told Saturday Vanguard in Edo State, “First, the pronouncement of the judges has further broadened the huge confidence reposed on the judiciary in Nigeria. The reason is that the judgment was comprehensive, and every point was lucid, deliberately explained in detail that an illiterate can assimilate or comprehend the issues. We can strongly improve our electoral system when the judiciary stands its ground to ensure that lawyers do not bring frivolous cases to tribunals hearing such cases. Another way we can improve our electoral system is what I call the agility of the electorate. If the electorate insists on good governance and capacity and rejects bribes or favors from the candidates or the political parties, they will invest fundamental sacrifices for the strengthening of our electoral system because the greatest threat to our electoral system is monetization. It is highly monetized, which is why those who have the capacity to perform well feel intimidated to step forward. For instance, you will need private jets to run a presidential election in Nigeria. If you want to run for a governorship election, you are going to need bulletproof vehicles. Therefore, if the followers deliberately refuse inducement and are firm on capacity, it will greatly improve our electoral system. We must sensitize institutions like INEC, police, and army that play good roles in the election to maintain greater impartiality and remove their personal interests from the electoral system.

Electoral laws shouldn’t be incongruous — Benjamin, IYC

National spokesperson, Ijaw Youth Council, IYC, Bedford Benjamin, stated: “The country’s electoral laws must be definite and devoid of contradictions and contradicting sections of the law, ranging from electronic transmission of results, and management of pieces of evidence of electoral malpractices.”

https://www.vanguardngr.com/2023/09/amend-constitution-reform-judiciary-inec-nigerians/

12 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Hikana: 11:53am On Sep 09, 2023
Not until we are ready for a country we all can be proud of among the committee of Nations. I believe the government in power will want to make history towards the end of the tenor

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by TemplarLandry: 11:53am On Sep 09, 2023
cool

29 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Kingosytex(m): 11:54am On Sep 09, 2023
TemplarLandry:
cool

Time to spew another gibberish.

30 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Ladyclara002(f): 11:54am On Sep 09, 2023
Well done my fellow readers!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by popesco123: 11:57am On Sep 09, 2023
Wishing you and your family current nigeria. Amen

quote author=Kingosytex post=125680956]

Time to spew another gibberish. [/quote]

4 Likes

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by mrvitalis(m): 12:01pm On Sep 09, 2023
The elections have improved and least now they have to rig like brainless mofos to be able to get in

Make snapping of results and uploading at the polling unit compulsory

If a polling unit results is not uploaded 3 hours after the last bvas capture that polling unit should be cancelled

21 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by helinues: 12:02pm On Sep 09, 2023
Nothing was wrong with Nigeria judiciary when Peter Obi won at the Supreme court

47 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by BombAttack(f): 12:03pm On Sep 09, 2023
Yorubas will say the Nigerians are Igbos grin

Out of 371 tribes in Nigeria grin

29 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by CilicMarin: 12:10pm On Sep 09, 2023
Which yeye Nigerians? Chima and okon that you interviewed in Asaba? grin grin

26 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Kingosytex(m): 12:15pm On Sep 09, 2023
popesco123:
Wishing you and your family current nigeria. Amen

quote author=Kingosytex post=125680956]

Time to spew another gibberish.

I wish you and your family worse than Nigeria is experiencing. In fact, I wish you all the worse in this life... Amen!
It seems sense is alien to you.
I quoted a guy who is known to spew gibberish all over and you dare mention me to type trash.

2 Likes

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Christistruth03: 12:18pm On Sep 09, 2023
Look

Even the US Constitution is under Constant Review and amendment

25 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Jax1: 12:36pm On Sep 09, 2023
The point is, after Supreme court judgement, nobody should cry foul when same judgement of today will be used against those who supported it now in future.

Life is a circle. grin grin

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by slivertongue: 12:44pm On Sep 09, 2023
another circus. ain't we tired of amendments that is not implemented to the latter.
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Nobody: 12:56pm On Sep 09, 2023
How could PEPT say electronic transmission of election results in realtime that would prevent rigging was not mandatory?This is what the PEPT used to dismissed Obi's case.Inec even uploaded blurry results into it presidential election portal to hide the commission 's rigging plan.This is not a democracy at all.
They are now saying obi and Atiku didn't have evidence.Meanwhile,it was INEC who deliberately denied the petitioners access to voting materials to challenge tinubu's illegitimate victory.

26 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Babaflenjor: 1:35pm On Sep 09, 2023
Ok
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Ddeliverer007(m): 1:36pm On Sep 09, 2023
Nigeria is a failed state.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by olisaEze(m): 1:36pm On Sep 09, 2023
How many times will you amend a tattered dress before you realize you have to yourself get a new one? undecided

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by 81pro: 1:36pm On Sep 09, 2023
Jax1:
The point is, after Supreme court judgement, nobody should cry foul when same judgement of today will used against those who supported it now in future.

Life is a circle. grin grin
grin

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by ShoeWorld1(m): 1:37pm On Sep 09, 2023
INEC needs to be transparent and all the after-vote courts will be gone like magic.

There's no need have thousands of voting centers with a lack of technology to monitor the votes.
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by GeneralPula: 1:37pm On Sep 09, 2023
We should just go back to regionalism..

52 Likes

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by money121(m): 1:37pm On Sep 09, 2023
Ok
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by SpecialAdviser(m): 1:37pm On Sep 09, 2023
Nigeria can never move forward as long as we are not building a nation. Those who have ears let them hear.

A goat lying down is lying on its skin surely.
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by aestake: 1:38pm On Sep 09, 2023
helinues:
Nothing was wrong with Nigeria judiciary when Peter Obi won at the Supreme court
grin Why is doing the right things a problem?

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Sharpsharp00123: 1:38pm On Sep 09, 2023
Which useless constitution n judicial reform?

Igbos want to impose their osu caste system on us whereby some people will b more important than others

Those hypocrites don’t know what’s up

When obi won in d court then all is fair but when he lost then Nigeria must blow

The same people who used ipob to frustrate uzodinma cos he won in d court now want court winning now

Bunch of hypocrites

Only God knows what they want
Today it’s presidency
Tomorrow it’s Biafra
Next restructuring
Next judicial reform

They want this now cos they believe it doesn’t pay them, if we yield to their request now one day once it doesn’t pay them again they will want us to go back

Same people who stopped regionalism n supported federalism now want restructuring

Same people who opposed referendum been added to d constitution now want to leave by fire by thunder

So myopic people

Don’t quote me cos I won’t reply u

15 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by casualobserver: 1:38pm On Sep 09, 2023
It is neither INEc nor our laws nor the judic that needs reform, it is Nigerians that need reform. You didn’t win an election but you claim you won, you went to court you did not provide any evidence you won, instead you start to attack the umpire and the court.

How anyone can think because I live in Abuja, my vote is more important than the vote of the man in Ibadan or Auchi is befuddling. How you can say you won, did not show where your votes were stolen and expect to be declared winner is befuddling. You say I stole your property but provide no evidence of me in possession of your property or evidence that your property is even missing and you say I must be declared the person who stole your property. How you can split your base and expect to win is befuddling. How you can base your case on things that the constitution say have a time limit and are outside the time limit and expect to win is befuddling.

13 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Creamz(m): 1:38pm On Sep 09, 2023
Needed
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by Offpoint1: 1:38pm On Sep 09, 2023
Vz
Re: Amend Constitution, Reform Judiciary, INEC — Nigerians by cjudy(m): 1:39pm On Sep 09, 2023
FG please don’t listen to them. They’re bunch of Lazy Youth.
Let the country remain this way. Let the corruption and manipulation continue. When the citizens are tired, they will do the needful to the old, fools politicians they selected in Power.
Infact the Police and DSS should track anyone who’s asking for amendments of any constitution.
We must get sense by force in this corntree.
Let Tribal and Religion continue to select leadership in Nigeria.
Those in Nigeria are enjoying the corntree like this. Infact the last selection was the best in the history of Nigeria and to wrap it up, the Judisharia gave their best judgement of selection by EYEneck so I wonder why you people want amendment again.

FG should as a matter of urgency, arrest and persecute anyone who want to bring chaos to this corntree.

2 Likes 1 Share

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