Professor Mahmood Yakubu’s grim prospects concerning
the conclusiveness or otherwise of subsequent elections, especially that
of 2019, once again brings to fore the looming contradictions inherent
in our pursuit to entrench democratic principles on one side, and the
salting of the suffrage machine on the other. For it appears whatever
effort his successor, Professor Attahiru Jega made at taking the
commission from the earth of Nigerians’ consciousness to their hearts is
being lost.
Having succeeded Maurice Iwu, the hitherto colorless umpire who
superintended over an election so base its validity was questioned even
by its most beneficiary, President Yar’adua, Prof Jega did not just go
into a helpless mood, complaining about the non-redemption of the
electoral process.
On the contrary, he saw the various challenges as an opportunity to
make a point that the nation had not completely lost it. He identified
the problems, rolled his sleeves, and made efforts to correct those whom
he was sure fell under his sphere of influence.
On his visit to the PUNCH Place, the current INEC chairman sounded
both helpless and hopeless in the face of political players' desperate
bid of wanting to maintain relevance in the democratic setting. Being a
successor of Prof Jega, what Prof Yakubu failed to tell Nigerians was
what he has been doing in INEC to build on the sterling innovations
championed by his predecessor.
Does Prof Yakubu share our sentiments of not wanting to return home
after accreditation? If he does, what is he doing in that regard? Is
Prof Yakubu ruminating on the possibility of Nigerians voting from
anywhere as against the status quo where voters only vote at the polling
booth they registered? These are few amongst the issues we expect him
to tackle, not a relapse into a mood of progressive nothingness.
Like Remi Oyeyemi wrote, “it is an abdication of responsibility for
Professor Yakubu to begin to suggest that 2019 elections would be
“inconclusive.” What would he be doing as Chairman of INEC between now
and 2019 to ensure that the election is “conclusive”? If he has the
knowledge that 2019 elections would be “inconclusive” what is he doing
to rectify the variables and do a good job for Nigeria and her
democracy? Is this not an obvious self-disqualification for this
responsibility?”
Tapping into the realities of the 21st century in terms of
technological sophistication, Mr Jega brought in the permanent voters’
card (PVC) and smart card readers to cushion the effect, if not to
totally cancel out the perennial scourge of multiple accreditations and
voting. As a testament to the fact that he had studied the psyche of
political gladiators and their penchant for ballot ruthlessness, Prof
Jega centralised the goings-on in each polling booth to the INEC
headquarters.
It was as a result of these innovations that we, for instance, got to
know about the blatant robbery that happened at the governorship
election in Rivers State where, although a little over 200,000 were
captured at Abuja to have been accredited, INEC returned Nyesom Wike
with over a million votes.
In Jega and the parody of the dark pot, I wrote:
“Jega’s handling of INEC was a never-ending battle between vision and
mission; while vision stretches over time, its counterpart works on
immediate gains. That the professor managed both is a testament to his
administrative acumen as a man of the moment. His mission to conduct
free, fair and credible elections was accomplished while his vision to
strengthening the commission to be a force to reckon with among our
national institutions was not left in abeyance.
“In 2011, the first set of national elections was cancelled due to
issues that showed the naivety of INEC which not only made Nigerians
lose confidence in his ability, but made them fume at the enormous
resources that was spent on that fruitless Saturday. Now we know that
that singular decision by Jega and his team was a calculated attempt
aimed at straightening the electoral body. That the 2015 elections was a
better exercise than 2011 is no doubt. What better way to prove one’s
worth by working to avoid previous mistakes? Election after election,
poll after poll, it seem evident that the man from Jega who wears the
name Jega puts his brain to task by wanting to make a statement that we
can get it right in Nigeria.
“With the introduction of the permanent voters’ card (PVC) and
electronic card readers, Jega succeeded in making the voting process
credible and tribunal’s job itch-free. Although he takes a bow while the
job at INEC is still far from perfection, only the blind would fail to
see that Jega left INEC better than he met it. That alone is a
consolation.”
It is in this light that Prof Yakubu’s fall into fatalism betrays the
scholarship and intellectual rigour expected of a supposedly
thorough-bred academic. While the questions Funke Phillip posed in the
concluding part of her rejoinder to Mr Oyeyemi need concrete answers in
other for us to forge ahead in our bid to correcting the ills in the
electoral process, the inability of the chairman to build on Jega’s
legacies makes Mr Oyeyemi’s criticism alluring.
Had Mr Mahmood succeeded any umpire except Jega, his excuses might
have been tenable. Until the details of the several reforms (Uwais,
Lemu, etc.) are implemented, the INEC boss will do well by thinking
beyond the box in outsmarting politicians in this game of thrones. As it
stands, the faith Nigerians had in INEC is being eroded at a fast pace,
no thanks to the reverse-pedalling of the significant gains the
commission recorded under Prof Jega.
Prof Yakubu’s fall to fatalism advances in glaring terms the vivid
disconnect between the town and gown, an unfortunate malice in our
shambolic educational system. Let someone inform him that heading INEC
is not the same as writing papers or grading examination scripts of POL
101. Can someone please tell Prof Yakubu that the reality of Nigerian
politics is that our politicians are not ready to change—at least
anytime soon?
We saw what Professor Dibu Ojerinde did with JAMB. Coming into JAMB
more or less like a palaeontologist, with Richard Leaky’s stone tools
used as test instruments, Prof Dibu, in a few years removed the board
from antiquity to the future. With Dibu, JAMB became Nigeria’s second
export behind crude oil as other nations were adapting Dibu's
innovations to their admission process.
Let the professor stop complaining and get to work. We’ve had enough
of complaints and shadowboxing in the administration of President
Buhari. Although his coming was not meant to compete with his
predecessor, the professor’s performance from Kogi down to Rivers
portrays him as a fake version and surreal imitation of his predecessor.
Professor Yakubu should go get 48 laws of power if he desires to
leave the umbra of the Bayero academic. He needs the book more than
anyone as he has without doubt transgressed law 41.
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