The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has dismissed rumours that the commission met with Adamawa government officials to rig the supplementary governorship election in the state.
The denial followed a claim that INEC officials assigned to oversee the Adamawa State supplemental governorship election paid a midnight visit to the state government house with the apparent intention of rigging the results in favour of Governor Ahmadu Fintiri.
Festus Okoye, National Commissioner and Chairman of the Information and Voter Education Committee, denied it in a statement on Thursday.
Okoye said: “The attention of the commission has been drawn to a press statement by a candidate in the recently concluded Adamawa State governorship election in which officials deployed for legitimate duty in the state were alleged to have undermined the electoral process after a discreet ‘nocturnal’ visit to the Government House and ostensibly met with one of the candidates in the election who gave them a list of ‘collation and returning officers’ deployed for the election.
“Ordinarily, the commission does not take issues with partisan actors, particularly where no evidence has been provided.
“To set the record straight, no such visit or meeting took place let alone the compilation of any purported list of collation and returning officers. Such a meeting would have been contrary to the oath of neutrality that we all swore to.
“Moreover, every conscientious observer would have noticed that the commission appointed and retained only one Returning Officer for the governorship election who also doubled as the state Collation Officer for the presidential election. Like all Returning Officers nationwide, he was issued with a letter of appointment by the commission and the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Adamawa State was duly informed.
“The list of Collation Officers was also forwarded to the state with every page of the list personally endorsed by the chairman of the commission well ahead of the arrival of the National Commissioners.”
He added: “Nothing can be further from the truth. For the record, it has been the standard policy and practice of the commission to deploy National Commissioners, RECs and other staff from the headquarters or neighbouring states for supplementary or off-cycle elections where doing so is considered necessary.”
“In the case of Adamawa State where supplementary governorship election was held in 69 polling units, two National Commissioners were deployed while for Kebbi State, involving 142 polling units, three National Commissioners were deployed. Similarly, one National Commissioner each was deployed to Sokoto, Zamfara, Imo, Rivers, Ekiti and Ogun states.
“This has been the standard practice of the commission of which all RECs are informed in advance. Therefore, Adamawa State was not specifically targeted. In all other states, the RECs worked cooperatively with the National Commissioners except in Adamawa State for reasons that are now obvious to all.
“The public is advised to discountenance these insinuations as nothing more than a claptrap. We also advise those behind the mischief to desist forthwith as such fabrications have endangered the lives of our officials (both ad hoc and regular) engaged in legitimate election duties. We expect well-meaning citizens to act within the bounds of propriety and decency.”