Ekiti people have been commended by the Nigerian Human Rights Community (NHRC) for the peaceful local government elections last Saturday. In a statement issued from its preliminary reports of the election monitoring, NHRC said the conduct of the election by the State Independent Electoral Commission (SIEC) without any incidence of violence, disruption or snatching of ballot papers remains one of the strengths and opportunities associated with the election and democracy in Nigeria. “Depsite the challenges Nigerians face, their preference is for democracy” the group said.
The NHRC, which deployed observers and monitors in many of the 177 wards and over 140 towns and villages said there was no incidence of violence adding that it was commendable that armed personnel including Amotekun were not deployed across the states to man the polling units during the elections compared with what has been seen in other states of the Nigerian federation. The statement signed by NHCR’s Assistant Secretary, Taiwo Adeleye, said “it is commendable that the state security organ, Amotekun was not dragged into local politics in this context.”
The statement further read: “We observe that voters exercised their rights without threats, violence or authority bully. There were no reports of violence, killings or snatching of ballot papers. Despite the security situation across the country, the election was hitch free, SIEC staff who moved from some communities to the other were not attacked while there were no noticeable cases of vote buying in any of the polling units monitored” The group said the capacity of states to determine their political future is not in doubt, where there are doubts, such do not suggest that the Federal Government is better placed to conduct a superior local government elections.
The added that the peaceful atmosphere of the election reflects the confidence of the people in democracy as the best alternative and also an expression of public confidence in the state’s electoral body. It commended the early arrival of voting materials and SIEC officials in majority of the polling units, the ability of SIEC to provide enough voting materials in all the units and the efficiency with which the personnel rendered their obligations adding that many states in Nigeria have a lot to learn from Ekiti State.
NHRC said the voting was orderly and organised in a way that is above the national average. It however listed some fault lines which included the following: According to it, distribution of polling units in Ekiti State does not meet the needs of many rural communities where voting units were sparsely stationed denying many voters in rural areas easy access to polling units. The group said the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) should increase the number of polling units in Ekiti North, Ekiti East and Ekiti Central especially in local communities and farm settlements in the senatorial districts before the next National Elections. It urged the affected communities, SEIC and all stakeholders in the state to lead the campaign for more polling units in Ekiti State before the next elections.
NHRC also said the turnout was low, though above the national average. The group said not a single factor is responsible for the low turnout citing among others historic lack of voters’ interests in community governance, low funding of local governments by the federal authority leading to minimal impact on the political economy by local administrators which affects public interests in local governments and also lack of community structures and effective presence of many of the registered political parties who appear to focus mainly on national elections. The NHRC said in the build up to the Ekiti council elections, while the ruling party engaged in aggressive campaigns, the other political parties appeared not to make any attempt to either campaign or mobilise their supporters to participate in the election. The group said such resignation to fate is self-defeatist and should not be encouraged by the opposition. The coalition said the vigorous campaign of the ruling party suggested that the party did not assume easy victory at the poll ab initio.