INEC Concludes Planning of 2019 Elections, Says Yakubu

Ogheneuvede Ohwovoriole in Abuja

The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, has met with heads of security agencies, logistics experts, transport unions and other stakeholders to guarantee smooth deployment of elections materials and personnel in 2019 general election.
The electoral body organised the “Conference on Logistics for the 2019 General Elections’’ in conjunction with the European Centre for Electoral Support (ECES) and supported by the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES), aimed at enhancing timely delivery of materials and personnel to polling units.

Declaring the conference open, the INEC boss said that Nigerians would expect polling units to be opened at 8.00a.m on election days – February 16, 2019, and March 2, 2019, saying if INEC doesn’t open the polling units at 8.00a.m, it means it has not started well.

Explaining how INEC can open polling units at 8.00a.m, he said it requires biggest and big time logistics operations.

According to him, “We have been required to deliver personnel and electoral materials at 119, 973 locations nationwide, and they must all open simultaneously. Electoral logistics is key to the successful opening of polling units at the time we have promised Nigerians we are going to do so.
“If we open all the polling units or a substantial majority by 8.00a.m., we have achieved a considerable part of our responsibility in election management; other things will fall in place.’’
He added that if there are hiccups, people from different sections will complain, adding that some polling units were hard to reach and would require use of boats.

Prof. Yakubu noted that the 2019 Elections remained 232 days, saying that the exercise would be a huge undertaking with several obstacles, some preventable and others unexpected.

The chairman said that the exercise would require careful planning, adding that deployment and retrieval of personnel and materials for elections would call for huge logistics, explaining that any flop in logistics will be termed as an attempt to disenfranchise the citizens, hence, the need to plan adequately with logistics operators and security agencies.

He added, “Logistics is basically public service. Some citizens may understand if we don’t open polling units at 8.00a.m., others will see it as incompetence of the electoral commission. The work is sensitive; so, we are determined as the election management body to ensure that polling units open at 8.00a.m as promised.

“To be able to do so, we need contributions, support, suggestions and inputs of those who have been handling these as a matter of their respective constitutional duties.”

He said that the conference was marking the last stage of planning for the elections before moving to the implementation, saying that ‘’the management of the electoral process is not left for the commission; it is a Nigerian project, it is not an INEC project.’’

“We thought we should mobilise all our national assets from the security agencies, officials of the commission, private sector, transport unions to put our heads together so that we can better deliver this service to the nation in 2019.’’

In his keynote address, Mr David Le Notre, Project Director, ECES said that election is a time-bound event, which requires precision and exactitude in the deployment of sensitive and non-sensitive materials, saying for a vast geographical country like Nigeria with pockets of difficult terrains, the importance of putting in place efficient and effective logistics for deployment of personnel and election materials to service about 1,558 constituencies cannot be over- emphasised.

Le Notre said that the conference sought to examine challenges related to the deployment of electoral personnel and materials countrywide.

On his part, Mr Seeray Jay, the representative of IFES, said that the body was committed to advancing good governance and democratic rights by providing technical assistance to ensure electoral integrity.
According to Jay, “A national election is one of the country’s biggest logistics events. Personnel and materials must get to the polling units at the right time, quantity and in good shape for elections to take place as scheduled.

“To do this, INEC has to rely on capable and professional transport providers – public or private, ones that know, think and act like INEC.”

He urged all stakeholders to support INEC in ensuring that deployment and retrieval of materials and personnel would be timely during the elections.

Key players in the logistics industry such as the military, police, private logistics companies and bulk transporters, among others, were at the conference, including the Inspector-General of Police, Mr Ibrahim Idris, the army, air force, navy, Federal Road Safety and Department of State Security.

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