How Nigeria’s INEC Disenfranchised 77.4m Nigerians Of Voting Age Ahead Of 2023 Presidential Poll
…Destroyed 18.1m (68%) of the 27.4m 2022 Voter Registrations and Flooded Voters’ Register with 15m Ghost Names, Minors And Migrants
It remains the firm position of the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety) that Nigeria’s INEC has caused “industrial scale” damages to the country’s crucial Presidential Election fixed for 25th Feb 2023, to the extent that whopping 77.4m citizens of voting age have been discriminatorily disenfranchised and excluded from participation and voting. It is also shocking that while the whopping 77.4m Nigerian citizens of voting age were disenfranchised from participating and voting in the 2023 General Elections, the Commission has turned around and allowed estimated 15m ghost names, minors and migrants to be smuggled into the country’s National Register of Voters as “registered voters” till date.
The disenfranchised 77.4m prospective voters include 30m denied registration in the 2021/2022 Continuous Voters’ Registration (CVR), 29.3m registered voters still denied PVCs since 2019 and 31st July 2022 and 18.1m of the 27.4m new registrations disenfranchised and destroyed by the Commission.
As it stands today, these 77.4m citizens of voting age cannot participate and vote in Nigeria’s General Elections of 2023 especially in the 2023 Presidential Poll.
This is more so when participation and voting in Nigerian Elections are not all comers affair. To participate and vote, voters must bear validated INEC-issued PVCs.
Contents
120 Million Citizens Of Voting Age Exist In Nigeria
According to the current United Nations population statistics including the Worldometer (world’s live statistics on population, economy and so on), Nigeria’s estimated population as at Friday 14th Oct 2022 is 217.8m, out of which 55% or more than 120m represent those in 18 years and above or citizens of voting age.
By INEC’s recent official statistics tracked in several print and online media, “the total registered voters in the country as at Feb 2019 was 84m and 96m as at 31st July 2022”.
INEC also announced that “12m (now 9.3m) citizens were registered as voters between 28th June 2021 and 31st July 2022 and more than 20m Permanent Voters’ Cards (PVCs) had not been given to their owners since 2019 or before the commencement of 2021/2022 CVR on 28th June 2021”; out of which, it has been independently estimated that many belong to Southern and Northern Christians.
30m Citizens Of Voting Age Never Registered In 2021/2022 CVR
From several investigations carried out by Intersociety, while no fewer than 15m of the 96m roguishly registered voters in the country are illegitimately and unlawfully registered by INEC as “voters” including independently estimated 10m illegal aliens and under-age children and 5m registered fictitious or ghost names recently exposed by CUPP; there are independently estimated 30m citizens of voting age never captured or registered by INEC during the 2021/2022 Continuous Voters’ Registration (CVR) exercise.
The number had involved persons of voting age that have never been captured as registered voters since their birth and attainment of 18 years and above as stipulated in Section 12 of the 2022 Electoral Act as amended.
The no fewer than 30m independently estimated unregistered citizens of voting age did not include 18.1m recent registrations destroyed by INEC including 11m successful online registrants that were destroyed by the Commission due to the Commission’s failure to capture their physical biometrics at designated registration centers across the country after they have successfully registered online.
INEC Destroyed 68% Or 18.1m Of 27.4m 2022 New Voters’ Registrations
Total of 18.1m of total 27.4m new (2022) registrations involving citizens of voting age were deliberately destroyed by INEC during CVR held between 28th June 2021 and 31st July 2022; leaving only 9.3m or 32% validated.
They had included 7m-11m successful online registrants shut out and massively disenfranchised by the Commission over its failure to capture their physical biometrics at designated registration centers across the country before the closure of the CVR exercise on 31st July 2022, 1.12m destroyed by INEC between 28th June 2021 and 12th Jan 2022; 1.85m destroyed by the Commission between 1st Jan and 28th June 2022; 1.1m destroyed by the Commission in Jan 2022 and 2.7m destroyed from 31st July to 12th Oct 2022.
These are according to INEC’s publicly released official statistics and did not include 19.1m online applicants recorded by the Commission during recent CVR exercise including those who attempted registering online but discontinued owing to one reason or the other.
29.3m Registered Voters Still Denied PVCs In Nigeria
Total of 29.3m registered voters are still denied PVCs by INEC and as it stands today, they are ineligible to participate and vote in any election in Nigeria or any part thereof; whether bye-election, legislative, governorship, local government or presidential.
By INEC’s official records evaluated by Intersociety, there are no fewer than 29.3m affected citizens or those denied PVCs till date and they include 20m registered voters denied PVCs since 2019 or before commencement of the 2021/2022 CVR exercise and 9.3m newly registered voters (formerly put at 12m by INEC but now reduced to 9.3m owing to recent destruction by the Commission of 2.7m of the 12m), captured by INEC between 28th June 2021 and 31st July 2022 and yet to be issued with PVCs.
It is further strongly suspected that many of them belong to citizens of Christian Faith and non Muslim others. With INEC’s unchecked discriminatory policy, gross incompetence and nonchalant attitudes, it is strongly estimated that not more than 20% or 6m of the 29.3m registered voters presently without PVCs will be issued PVCs in the end or between Sept and Dec 2022.
Signed
For: International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety)
Principal Officers:
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Criminologist/Researcher and Board Chair
Chinwe Umeche Esquire, LL.B, BL
Head, Democracy and Good Governance Program
Chidinma Udegbunam Esquire, LL.B, BL
Head, Campaign and Publicity Department
Contacts:
Mobile/WhatsApp: +2348174090052
Email: info@intersociety-ng.org
Website: https://intersociety-ng.org
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