The Independent and National Electoral Commission (INEC) has
disclosed that it lacks the capacity to prosecute electoral offenders.
INEC Chairman Mahmood Yakubu who spoke during a meeting with
Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) in Abuja on Tuesday December 3, said
they've worked closely with the police even though there is no timeframe for
the prosecution of electoral offenders.
Mahmood added that
even though INEC is the electoral umpire in Nigeria, it does not have the power
to arrest offenders and conduct investigation “without which successful
prosecution is impossible.”
“Over the years, we have worked closely with the Nigeria
Police. Since 2015 we have received a total of 149 case files, including 16
cases arising from the 2019 general election,” he said.
“The cases are prosecuted in the states where the alleged
offences were committed.
“Unlike pre-election and post-election cases, there is no
timeframe for the prosecution of electoral offenders. A case may go on for
several years.
“Some of the cases were dismissed for want of diligent
prosecution while in some states, the attorneys-general entered nolle prosequi
to get the alleged offenders off the hook.
“Even where the commission recorded the most successful
prosecution of electoral offenders following the violence witnessed in a
bye-election in Kano State in 2016, it is unclear how many of the 40 offenders
sentenced to prison with the option of fine actually spent time in jail.
“The fine was paid presumably by their sponsors.
“That is why we believe that the Electoral Offences
Commission and Tribunal will dispense justice dispassionately and speedily in
the same way that the Electoral Court deals with violators in other countries
such as South Africa.”
The INEC Chairman
also raised an alarm of elections for the executive positions in the country
being characterised by brazen acts of impunity. He however expressed hope of
security operatives arresting and prosecuting perpetrators of electoral
violence and their sponsors.
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