Human rights activist and politician, Omoyele Sowore, has claimed that 90 per cent of federal lawmakers and other elected officials would not be elected if elections in Nigeria were conducted transparently.
READ ALSO:
#EdoDecides: Obaseki Floors Ize-Iyamu in his polling units |SEE RESULTS
Sowore made the remark while reacting to the controversy trailing the amendments to the Electoral Act, particularly provisions relating to the electronic transmission of election results.
READ ALSO:
Olawepo-Hashim Resigns From PDP, Vows To Resist One Party State -
On Tuesday, the Senate amended the Electoral Act to permit the electronic transmission of election results, a move many Nigerians had clamoured for.
READ ALSO:
How NDLEA Nabbed Drug Traffickers With N264m Worth Raps Of Cocaine In Abuja | Photos
However, the lawmakers retained a provision allowing manual collation of results in areas where internet connectivity fails - a clause many critics have described as unnecessary.
READ ALSO:
ADC Crisis: Nwosu Links INEC Decision to Jagaban Politics | READ WHY
Speaking on All Facts Newspaper's The Morning Brief on Wednesday, Sowore argued that lawmakers are reluctant to enact reforms that would strengthen electoral transparency because they believe such changes would cost them their seats.
READ ALSO:
Kleptomania's have hijacked Buhari's government - Ali Ndume Gives Details
According to him, the argument that poor network coverage justifies manual collation is merely an excuse.
READ ALSO:
Roll Call Of Nigerian Politicians That Have Visited Tinubu In London Within Two Months
"This excuse that there is no network in some states is just another balloon air on the part of these guys. They don't want transparent elections because if elections are transparent, 90 per cent of them will not make it to the National Assembly - and of course the presidency and other elected positions, they know that,ÔÇØ Sowore said.
READ ALSO:
Atalanta 1-1 AC Milan: Serie A result as Milan miss chance to close gap on Napoli, Ademola Lookman scores in seventh Atalanta draw
The former presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC) described the Senate's decision to retain manual collation of election results as "clever by half.ÔÇØ
READ ALSO:
GOOD NEWS (Southern Kaduna): Fulani, Hausa, Atyap Agree To Peace Deal
He argued that the provision was deliberately inserted to create an avenue to revert to what he called the "hardcoded way of reporting elections,ÔÇØ which, according to him, has eroded public trust in the electoral process.
READ ALSO:
Yusuf Buhari Declares Interest In House Of Representatives Seat -
Sowore further criticised the Independent National Electoral Commission's (
INEC) current IREV system, describing it as outdated. He suggested that Nigeria should adopt electronic voting, similar to the system used in India.
READ ALSO:
Nigeria: Supreme Court Set to Decide ADC Leadership Battle | SEE DATE
"I said it yesterday and I will repeat it again, I am not even a fan of all these old systems. By now, we should be doing what they are doing in India. India has 900 million registered voters and they use electronic voting as their own way of expressing the wishes of the people and those are almost foolproof.
READ ALSO:
Benue North-East: I will be running for Senate in 2027 - Suswam
"I don't think you hear a lot of tribunal sittings in India after 900 million votes and we have only 90 million here, we should be able to go for electronic voting,ÔÇØ he said.
READ ALSO:
Nigeria Budgets N135bn For 2027 Election Lawsuits -
He also questioned why Nigerians cannot vote from home electronically while they are able to carry out other confidential electronic transactions.