Alleged
lopsided appointments in the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) is presently generating ripples in the Presidency and among other
key political stakeholders, reports Remi Adelowo
In
spite of the public posturing and pronouncements of key political
figures that talks about the next general elections in 2015 is premature
and, at best uncalled for, The Nation can reveal that preparations for
the post-2015 political dispensation may have begun in earnest.
While
President Goodluck Jonathan has severally parried questions over his
speculated interest in the next presidential race, statements credited
to some of his key aides and associates point to the fact that the
president may throw his hat into the ring once again for a second term
in office.
However,
die-hard supporters of the president are also aware that he is likely
to face the stiffest opposition to his second term ambition from
politicians from the core north, who are clamouring for a power shift to
the region. This likely scenario, revealed sources, is being treated
with all the seriousness it deserves by apostles of the Jonathan 2015
project.
Against
the backdrop that the recent appointments of northerners into some key
portfolios in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is an
alleged ploy by certain powerful interests to scuttle Jonathan’s
alleged second term bid, The Nation gathered that there is disquiet
within the president’s kitchen cabinet that their principal may have
been programmed to lose long before the race for the next elections is
flagged off.
Presently,
questions are being asked why INEC, which is the primary institution
responsible for the conduct of elections in the country, is allegedly
dominated by the northerners. One of such posers is whether the
principle of federal character, which stipulates that appointments into
federal positions and distribution of socio-economic amenities must
ensure fairness and equity among the six geo-political zones in the
country, has been strictly adhered to.
In
the view of some stakeholders, the current structural imbalance in INEC
may have been deliberately skewed in favour of the north to ensure that
the region regains the control of the country’s political reins come
2015.
“Many
Nigerians may see this (North’s alleged dominance of INEC) as just a
happenstance, but the reality is that it’s all about political
calculations for 2015,” said a politician from the South-South who
prefer to remain anonymous.
A breakdown of the INEC management team and their geo-political zones will suffice:
The
National Chairman, Professor Attairu Jega hails from the North-West,
ditto the Secretary, Alhaji .A. Kaugama. The electoral body also has 15
directors, 13 of whom are from the North; two from the South-South,
while only one comes from the South-East.
These
directors include, U.F Usman, the Director of Logistics from the
North-West; M. Kuta, Internal Auditor (North-Central); A. Muhktar,
Director of Human Resources (North-West); A. A Uregi, Director of
Finance (North-Central); Alhaji .I. Biu, Director of Voter Education
(North-East); Mr. I.K Bawa, Deputy Director, Legal (North-Central); Mr.
A.A Adamu, Head of Commission Secretariat (North-Central), to name but a
few.
Investigations
also revealed that most of the INEC national commissioners who preside
over committees overseeing key departments are northerners. They are
Col. Hamanga, Chairman, Logistics Committee, who is from Adamawa State;
Dr. Nuru Yakubu, who heads the Operations Committee and hails from Yobe
State; Hajia Amina Zakari of the Political Monitoring Committee;
Ambassador Wali, head of the Procurement Committee and Professor Jega,
the National Chairman.
That
is not all. A newly-constituted INEC’s 9-man Strategic Planning
Committee is also dominated by the North. The members are M.S Mohammed,
Mustafa Kuta, Nuru Yakubu, Istianus Dalwang,Torgbo Nyitse Emanuel Akeem,
all from the North. Two other members of the committee-Okechukwu Nduche
and Mike Igini are from the South.
While
some politicians from the South are said to be raising eyebrows over
this alleged lopsided appointments, and pointing accusing fingers at
Jega for the anomaly, sources in INEC said the chairman is not in any
way responsible for postings in the commission.
According
to a source, “These northerners in INEC are career civil servants,
whose postings are handled by the office of the Head of the Civil
Service of the Federation. Besides, most of these officers have been in
INEC long before Jega came on board.”
Those
opposed to this line of argument are, however, pondering why postings
to INEC is not put under the purview of the Federal Character Commission
(FCC), headed by a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin,
Professor Abdulrahman Oba, which main responsibility is to ensure that
all federal institutions conform to the dictates of the principles of
federal character.
But
speaking to The Nation on the telephone, the Chief Press Secretary to
the INEC boss, Mr. Kayode Idowu, described the allegation as “absolutely
false and baseless,” adding, “there is nothing like that (north’s
dominance of INEC) at all.”
Expatiating
further, Idowu said, “Professor Jega got into office six months to the
2011 elections and his priority then was to conduct a credible election.
To achieve this, he needed to make use of the experienced hands he met
on ground. Yes, there is a restructuring going on in INEC, but I can
tell you authoritatively that the only posting that has been done since
he came on board is in the ICT department, which is headed by a man from
the South-East.”
Giving
a breakdown of the management structure of INEC, Idowu disclosed,
“apart from the chairman, there are 12 national commissioners,
comprising of two people from each of the six geo-political zones. Then,
we have 67 directors and 29 heads of directorates department and units.
“Of
these 29, Benue has six; Anambra, four; Imo, three; Abia, three; Niger,
two; Sokoto, one; Kebbi, one; Plateau, one; Delta, one; Enugu, one;
Bayelsa, one; Ekiti, one and Kogi, one; Yobe, one; Taraba, one, and
Adamawa, one.
“The
breakdown of the 67 directors, according to Idowu, is as follows: Benue
has nine; Anambra, nine; Imo, four; Delta, three; Cross River, three;
Plateau, three; Akwa Ibom, three; Abia, three; Kebbi, three; Edo, three;
Niger, two; Kaduna, two; Zamfara, two; Bayelsa, two; Lagos, two Bauchi,
two and Borno, two. Others are Sokoto, one; Enugu, one; Kano, one;
Kogi, one; Katsina, one; Osun, one; Gombe, one; Ogun one and Jigawa
State, one. So, the question is, does this statistics show any so-called
domination by the North,” he asked?
Absolving
his boss of any wrong doing in these postings, Idowu said, “the
statistics being bandied around are half cooked; again, these top
officials are career civil servants and all of them have been in INEC
before the chairman (Jega) came on board. And as far as INEC is
concerned, no committee is more strategic than the other. Tell me which
committee is more important than the ICT and Operations committees,
which are headed by two men from the South-East?”
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