Police impounds lorry with ballot boxes in Ibadan
The
Oyo State police command on Wednesday impounded a lorry conveying
ballot boxes said to belong to the Independent National Electoral
Commission around 2am in the Yemetu area of Ibadan.
The ballot boxes were stored in a 40-feet container.
Sources said that the trailer was
arrested on the suspicion that it was carrying contraband items but was
later discovered that its contents were ballot boxes meant for the next
month election in Osun State.
It was learnt that the trailer and the
consignment were later released after police investigation revealed that
the boxes were being transported to Osun State by INEC.
However, the arrest created anxiety in
political circles as politicians made effort to know if the boxes were
empty or stuffed with ballot papers.
At a point, rumour spread in the city
that a certain political party had connived with INEC to bring in
thumb-printed ballot papers into Oyo State.
A source said, “A trailer carrying a
40-feet container with registration number FKJ 285 XN was actually
impounded by the police but after a thorough check, it was cleared and
released.”
The spokesman for the Oyo State Police
Command, Mr. Kayode Ajisebutu, could not confirm the incident. He said
he was outside the state and could not get through to the Commissioner
of Police.
Meanwhile, the immediate past Cross
River State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr. Mike Igini, has said
INEC will no longer be the tool for manipulation by some politicians but
a national institution committed to the conduct of free, fair and
credible elections.
Igini, who said this on Wednesday at the
unveiling of INEC Conference Hall in Calabar, also decried the lack of
internal democracy in political parties.
Igini said, “This year’s election will
be a watershed, a paradigm shift that would bring about the hope of
integrity and reliability unequalled in our electoral history. At all
times we strive to do what is right. The commission will no longer be
the tool for manipulation by some politicians.
“Our commitment to do the right thing
was initially misunderstood especially our emphasis on internal party
democracy which is still a problem today, where parties do not even have
a minimum requirement of credible register of delegates before
conducting elections.
“It is inconsiderable that INEC would
conduct elections that would be acceptable by the Nigerian people
without having a register of voters published. The foundation of any
good elections must start with the existence of a credible and reliable
register of voters,” he said.
He thanked the INEC membrs of staff for their commitment.
The REC said the Conference Hall
christened “Democracy Hall” would serve for conducting INEC activities,
especially collation of results, after 25 years of hiring venues.
The INEC chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega,
who was represented by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar,
Prof. James Epoke, said Igini had made a change for the better in INEC
both infrastructural and in entrenching the right mindset.
He said such should be the character of political leaders, who should always leave where they were better than they met it.
Jega, who inaugurated the hall, hoped the new REC would do the right thing.
The state chairman of the Inter-Party
Advisory Committee, Mr. Goddie Akpama, said under Igini’s watch the
state was a hallmark of free, fair and credible elections
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