The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed Feb. 16, 2019 for Presidential and National Assembly elections.
Similarly, Governorship, State Assembly and Federal Capital Territory Area Councils polls will hold on March 2, 2019.
Mr
Solomon Soyebi, National Commissioner of the commission in charge of
publicity, made this known on Thursday in Abuja at a news conference.
He
said that fixing of the dates was part of efforts by INEC to
standardise and ensure certainty of timetable for general elections in
the country.
Soyebi gave instances that in the US, general elections always held on the second Tuesday of November in the election year.
And,
in Ghana, according to him, it is Dec. 7 of election year, while in
other places like Mexico, Norway, Sweden, Costa Rica and Switzerland,
the dates are also known in advance.
“In
Nigeria, the Constitution provides for the elections to hold not
earlier than 150 days and not later than 30 days to the end of the
incumbent’s tenure.
“In order to
ensure certainty in our dates for elections, and to allow proper
planning by the commission, it has fixed date for national elections for
the third Saturday in February of the election year.
“This
will be followed by state elections two weeks later. Political parties,
security agencies, candidates and all stakeholders are advised to note
the dates,’’ Soyebi said.
He explained that the dates were the nearest to 100 days towards the end of the tenures of the incumbents.
He
added that for states with staggered elections, the dates for their
elections would also be determined by the expiration of tenures of the
incumbents.
On the 23 electoral officers
indicted over their roles in the Dec. 10, 2016 rerun legislative
election in Rivers, Soyebi said that the officials had been charged to
court.
He said that the commission had
also decided to apply the provisions of INEC Terms and Conditions of
Service to all those charged to court, as the alleged offences
constituted gross misconduct.
“The
penalty for this is interdiction. All the 23 electoral officers will be
placed on half salary and will not report for duty pending the
determination of their respective cases by the court,’’ he said.
The
commissioner added that the commission had also decided to defer its
decision on the EFCC report in which some of its staff members were
indicted of misconduct during the 2015 general elections.
He
said this was to enable the commission to reconcile the EFCC report
with its Disciplinary Committee report on the indicted workers as some
of them were already part of those charged to court on the Rivers
elections.
Soyebi confirmed the receipt
of applications for the registration of Advanced Peoples Democratic
Party (APDP) and other 83 political associations seeking registration as
political parties.
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