The Independent National Electoral Commission said on Monday
that it had put in place security measures to protect members of the
National Youth Service Corps and other ad hoc staff that would be
deployed for the 2015 general elections.
The commission stated that a lot was also being done to address logistic problems before the next general elections.
INEC
Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, gave these assurances in his paper
titled, ‘The 2015 general elections: Conversations with Nigeria’s Female
Stakeholders.’
He delivered the paper during a workshop organised by the Nigerian Women Trust Fund at The Electoral Institute, Abuja.
Jega
said the commission had met with the NYSC management to compile the
addresses of all NYSC quarters in order to guard against a repeat of the
2011 post-electoral violence during which some corps members were
killed in Bauchi State.
Jega recalled that the corps members deployed for the 2011 elections were attacked in their various quarters.
He
therefore assured that the commission “will be providing security to
the NYSC camps before and after elections, and adequate security will be
provided for the ad hoc staff that will be deployed during the
periods.”
He said, “We give assurance that preparations by INEC
for the 2015 general elections are proceeding in earnest. Learning from
the experiences of 2011, especially regarding the need for early
preparations, the commission has undertaken the task of fundamental
restructuring of its bureaucracy, established new policies to guide its
work and embarked on far-reaching planning of its operations through a
strategic plan, an election project plan and an election management
system; these are vigorously being implemented.”
According to
Jega, INEC is at the verge of concluding preparations towards making the
2015 general elections more credible and transparent.
The INEC
chairman also said that the completion of the “consolidation and
de-duplication” of the biometric register of voters, which he said “now
has tremendous integrity, much better than the one with which 2011
elections were conducted.”
He however warned that the challenges for credible and peaceful elections should be left to INEC alone.
He
said, “All stakeholders have important roles to play, not only in the
core plans for the elections, but also in ensuring that all Nigerians,
especially women, actively participate in the democratic process.
“This will immensely enrich our democratic experience and deepen our political culture.”
He
added that the commission had also put in place plans that would
ensure increased participation of women in subsequent elections in the
country.
Jega noted that the commission was committed to ensuring
gender equity as a key aspect of propagation of sound principles of
democratic practices in Nigeria.
This, he said, INEC was going to achieve through its gender policy.
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