Prof. Attahiru Jega, a former INEC chairman, has encouraged the election umpire to defy pressure from politicians opposed to the implementation of the Bimodal Voter Registration System (BVAS) for the 2023 elections.
Jega asserted that politicians’ desperation increases as election season approaches in his appearance on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Wednesday, October 12, 2022. In light of the fact that they now have legal support, he encouraged INEC to “not allow the parties to block them from using the BVAS or the electronic transmission of results.”
“I think what is most important is the capacity of the election management body to resist that pressure and having recognised that using technology will add more value to the election, they should just remain focused,” said the former INEC boss.
There have been recent claims that politicians opposed to BVAS are trying to use the legal system to prevent INEC from using the system in the elections next year, but the electoral body has repeatedly reaffirmed its commitment and intent to adopt the system for the general elections in 2023.
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The Electoral Act of 2022 makes reference to the BVAS, a technical system that enables voter accreditation through biometric data collection and the uploading of results, among other things.
Many people have hailed it as an improvement over the smartcard reader used in the most recent general elections, which had some positive effects on the nation’s voting system.
The Coalition of United Political Groups (CUPP), which represents Nigeria’s opposition political parties, claimed on Wednesday that there are purported schemes to prevent the electronic transmission of the election results for 2023 and disconnect the BVAS from the INEC server.
Jega responded to CUPP’s assertions by saying, “While I am not lending any credibility to what has been alleged, frankly from my own experience, we saw how close to the election, some politician became afraid that using the card reader was going to stop rigging the election using their own methods, so they came out and at a point even started demanding publicly for me to either resign or go on what they called terminal leave so that I didn’t have to supervise the conduct of the 2015 general elections.”