The national Commissioner of Independent National Electoral Commission in
charge of Oyo, Ogun and Ekiti states, Prof. Lai Olurode, has said politicians
who have either cloned or bought up the Permanent Voter Cards from registered
voters will be disappointed during the forthcoming elections.
Olurode
said this yesterday, at the INEC headquarters in Abeokuta while briefing
journalists on the preparedness of the commission.
The INEC commissioner who allayed the fears of
the electorate over the usage of card
readers during the coming elections, said the commission introduced the
machines with a view to checking counterfeiting and impersonation during the
elections. According to him, we know some people are cloning and mopping up
PVCs , we want to assure them that they will be disappointed. “What we want to
do is to screen out illegal cards because a lot of people are cloning,
purchasing and selling of the Permanent Voter Cards but it is a waste of time.
That is why we need the media presence in this election, the vigilance group.
This election requires a lot of human monitoring because it is different from
the previous elections, people must be present, parties must educate their
people and their agents”, he said .
While speaking on the level of INEC preparedness
in the three states, Prof. Olurode
claimed that all the materials for the elections had been on ground even before
the earlier scheduled date for the Presidential and national assembly
elections.
He however, said PVCs
collection in Ogun State has witnessed tremendous improvement ,
saying,it’s collection has hit 59
percent in the state. Prof. Olurode revealed that currently there are 589, 377
PVCs that are yet to be collected, while a total of 1,053,230 cards have been
distributed in the state.
Apologising for the slow pace of distribution of PVC
in the state, the national commissioner stated that it was not
deliberately caused by the commission.
He, declared that some registered voters may be disenfranchised as he explained
that all the outstanding PVCs might not be ready before the elections.
He noted
that the Commission is facing challenges with the printing of the cards.
Dismissing the claim of Ogun State government that the remaining uncollected
cards were alien cards, Prof. Olurode explained that besides the fact that some
owners of the cards had died, he cited the issue of Redeemer’s University which
has relocated to Ede, Osun State after the 2011 registration exercise. Prof. Olurode
charged the electorate and parties agents to be vigilant because all the
technology transformations were not all-problem-solving.
The commission’s
Resident Electoral Commission, Chief Timothy Ibitoye declared that there were
no fears in the state regarding the coming elections

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