If recent political developments
in Kano State point to the direction Nigeria is headed
when the election bell tolls again in 2019, then the country is in clear and
imminent danger. The augury is stark. The prognostication is as portentous as
it is scary.
Every election circle brings out the
beast in us as the legendary Afrobeat maestro, late Fela Anikulapo Kuti,
sang. That is true. Our democracy is a jungle where the will of the
powerful but vicious minority, who takes no prisoners, will always prevail.
But there is something particularly
telling about the Kano electoral stench. On Saturday, February 11, 2018, the
Kano State Independent Electoral Commission (KANSIEC) conducted local
government poll. A day after, the chairman of the commission, Prof. Garba
Sheka, announced that the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) won all the 44
chairmanship and 484 councillorship seats, in an election where 25 political
parties participated.
In the
context of the democracy variant maladroitly foisted on Nigeria by former President
Olusegun Obasanjo, which he impishly labelled home-grown democracy, that is the
new norm.
Today, the rule is that every party in
power, through the state independent electoral commission whose members are
handpicked by the governor organises local government poll where it usually
wins all the chairmanship and councillorship seats. Some “magnanimous”
governors may concede one or two per cent of the seats to the opposition
political parties but others who neither give a damn nor revel in the nicety of
taking prisoners go for the kill. That was what happened in Kano. It was a
zero-sum game. The winner simply took all.
But reports of underage voting sharply
contradicted the claims of the KANSIEC chairman that the poll was peaceful,
free and fair. Children barely ten years old were captured in videos casting
their ballot in the so-called free and fair election.
The instant national outrage led to
some startling confessions.
First, the
impetuous Kano State governor, Abdullahi Ganduje, dismissed the
trending photos and videos of children voting in the election, describing the
issue as “propaganda” by his political opponents.
He particularly blamed his predecessor
with whom he is now locked in a bitter political struggle, Senator Rabiu
Musa Kwankwaso, for the scandal.
“Ask the international observers who
went there, they held a press conference after they went round. All those
pictures of children are pictures of assembled children they took, so it’s not
true, it is part of the propaganda,” he claimed.
He said Kwankwaso, his estranged
political godfather, resorted to propaganda because of his failure to
participate in the election.
“Ask them, did they go back to the
state to queue up and take part in the election? They were not able to do so,
so we don’t even need to respond to such falsehood,” Ganduje boasted.
But the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) didn’t believe it was a hoax. So, it swiftly played the
biblical Pontius Pilate by washing its hands off the scandal,
laying the entire blame on the doorstep of KANSIEC.
INEC spokesperson, Oluwole Uzzi, while
acknowledging pictures of the underage voters, said “as far as we can
ascertain, they (the pictures) relate to a local government election conducted
at the weekend (in Kano).”
“While the Commission remains resolute in
our commitment to sanitise the nation’s electoral process and deliver free,
fair and credible elections, we cannot be held directly or vicariously liable
for a process outside our legal purview.”
But it was an excuse many took with the
axiomatic pinch of salt because in conducting the election, KANSIEC used INEC’s
voter register to accredit the underage voters, a fact which INEC chairman,
Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, acknowledged.
Speaking at an “Election Project Plan
Implementation Workshop” in Lagos, Yakubu described
the Kano saga as “deeply disturbing.”
“It is true that the State Independent
Electoral Commission had requested INEC for a copy of the voter register. I can
confirm also that a soft copy of the register was made available to the state.
The voter register in Kano State is the one used for the 2015
general election,” he said wondering if the register used by KANSIEC for the
controversial poll was the same.
That comment apparently
riled Kano State government which shot back, throwing a sucker
punch at INEC. Climbing down from its high horse and disclaiming its earlier
position that the story was a hoax, the state government now claimed that the
footage showing underage persons allegedly voting during the local government
poll was actually recorded during the March 30, 2015 general election conducted
by INEC.
An angry Commissioner for Information,
Muhammad Garba, who ostensibly was not impressed by INEC’s narrative said,
“What you have seen in the video clip showing underage kids voting, did not
happen now. It was recorded during the March 30, 2015 elections” for the
offices of the president and National Assembly members.
It was apparent that both INEC and
KANSIEC were being economical with the truth. Underage voting
in Kano is not only real, it is an existential threat to our
democracy that is still fledgling after almost 19 years.
Kano has suddenly become the game-changer in Nigeria’s power calculus. It wouldn’t have been a problem if
this status was merited. But it isn’t.
In the 2015 presidential poll, the
state posted 2,172,447 votes with the APC and its then presidential candidate,
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, polling a whopping 1,903,999 votes.
It is instructive that five days after
that incredulous electoral feat, the state’s Resident Electoral Commissioner
(REC), Mr. Mikaila Abdulahi, his wife, Zulaiha; and two daughters, Aisha and
Asmau, were killed in a fire incident described as ‘strange’ by neighbours.
Today, Ganduje is assuring Buhari of
five million votes in 2019.
Buoyed by the 2,677,469 votes with
which his party won the local government poll, Ganduje told the crowd that
gathered for the swearing-in ceremony that, “The overall number of votes scored
by the APC candidates is more than what President Buhari scored in 2015 general
election, that is to say that if eventually he agrees to contest 2019 general
election, I assure you, we will give him five million votes.”
When one factors in the claim by a
former INEC National Commissioner, Prof. Lai Olurode, that he almost lost his
life for refusing to allow underage voters to vote some years ago, the picture
of impunity looms large.The former INEC commissioner said, “There are certain
areas of this country where even if they know the person is a kid, they will
insist that the child must vote.”
“I
had to run for my life at one of the election centres in a part of the country
because these people said children must vote or there would be no election at
all. It is that bad.”
And he admonished Nigerians:
“The Kano State example is a bad signal and a warning that we
really have a lot to do and the voter register is key. The register must be
clean, it must not have ghost names or underage voters.”
There are no signs that anybody is
about to heed his advice that “the APC government has a responsibility to
deliver an election that will be better than the 2015 election.” As I write, underage voters are still
being registered by INEC to vote in the 2019 elections. As it was in 2015, so
will it be next year.
Where will Ganduje get his fabled five
million votes for Buhari in 2019? Your guess is as good as mine. His magic wand
is the multitude of children who have become pawns in the vicious power game,
children who are deliberately being criminalized by the Nigerian state and its
agents for selfish reasons.
In Nigeria, the end will always
justify the means when it comes to electoral contest. Come 2019, the register
will not be cleaned, underage persons will gleefully cast their
ballot, Kano will deliver five million votes or more as promised and
there won’t be as much as a whimper in the land. Dejavu!
By Ikechukwu Amaechi
*Ikechukwu Amaechi is the
Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of TheNiche Newspaper
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