Security: 19 Generals, 42 other senior officers for polls
Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh | credits: http://www.nigeriancurrent.com/ |
Despite the controversy surrounding the
need to deploy soldiers for the forthcoming elections or not, the
Independent National Electoral Commission has included 19 military
Generals and 42 other senior officers from the Armed Forces in its
428-man Inter-agency Consultative Committee on Election Security.
The ICCES was established by INEC to review, coordinate and manage security during the forthcoming elections in the country.
Other members of the ICCES, according to
INEC, are the Police Force, Department of State Security, Nigeria
Security and Civil Defence Corps, National Drug Law and Enforcement
Agency, National Youth Service Corps, National Intelligence Agency,
Nigeria Prisons, Nigeria Customs Service and Nigeria Immigration
Service.
investigation
revealed that the 428-man security committee, spread across the 36
states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja,
include a 61-member contingent of Generals and officers from the
Nigerian Army, Nigerian Navy and Nigerian Air Force.
An INEC document titled: “Information Kit for 2015 General Elections,” made available to Saturday
named the Generals to include Brig.-Gen. Lamidi Adeosun, who is
currently the General Officer Commanding, 7 Division of Nigerian Army in
Borno State, and who during the week led the military to recapture
Bama, the second largest city in Borno State; Commodore O. Odumu;
Commodore F.F. Ogu; Air Commodore E. F. Golit; Brig.-Gen J.E.K.Myam; Air
Commodore Charles Oghomiven and Brig.-Gen. J.S Malu.
Others are Brig.-Gen. A. A. Nani; Air
Vice Marshall S. N. Kudu; Brig.-Gen. A.G. Adeyemi; Brig.-Gen. Osasogie
Uzamere; Air Commodore A. A. Jekennu; and Commodore Godwin Ochai.
Maj.-Gen. Y. M. Abubakar; Commodore S. A.
Muhammed; Brig.-Gen. A.A. Momoh; and Air Commodore Omoyungbo are also
among the Generals in the INEC security committees.
The remaining 42 military officers include colonels, lt colonels, navy captains, captains and majors.
The electoral body stated in the document that the 428 members of ICCES are divided among the 36 states and the FCT.
It said ICCES in Akwa-Ibom, Benue, Cross
River, Gombe, Jigawa, Lagos, Niger, Ogun and Osun states are made up of
11 members each. Edo, Ekiti, Enugu, Kaduna, Kwara have a 10-man ICCES
respectively.
Saturday PUNCH investigation
also revealed that Abia, Adamawa, Ebonyi, Imo and Kano states have 12
members inter-agency security committee each saddled with the
responsibility of spear-heading security during the elections.
While 13-man ICCES will be deployed in
Bauchi, Kogi and Nasarawa states each; a 14-man crack committee will
handle security in each of Bayelsa, Delta, Kebbi and Ondo states.
Similarly, the security committees in Anambra (17), Plateau (17), and the FCT (16) lead the park in terms of membership.
Borno (eight), Katsina (six), Oyo (nine),
Taraba (nine), Yobe (eight), and Zamfara (nine) are in the lower rung
of the security committee membership ladder.
Speaking recently at a forum organised in
Abuja on the Role of Civil Society Organisations, the Media, and the
Police in Mitigating Election Related Violence and Conflict by the INEC
and civil society organisations under the auspices of UNDP’s Democratic
Governance for Development, INEC Chairman, Prof, Attahiru Jega,
explained that the ICCES was established to ensure a violence- free
polls and enhance voters security during the elections.
He said, “We are deploying adequate
security agencies to be able to apprehend and prosecute offenders and
the security measures we have put in place have helped to establish a
framework on definite roles of each agency to avoid a clash of
responsibilities.”
The Rivers State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mrs. Gecila Khan, who corroborated Jega in an interview with said the ICCES made up of security agencies in the state had been put in place to ensure security during the elections.
Khan, who spoke through the INEC’s Public
Relations Officer in the state, Antonia Nwobu, explained that the
commission was conscious of the importance of security during elections,
adding that security agents would contribute their personnel to the
committee to ensure the conduct of a successful exercise.
She said, “The commission is conscious of
the importance of security in conducting effective, free, fair and
credible elections, hence the formation of an ICCES.
“This body is made up of all security
agencies in the state. The agencies in this committee will contribute
their workforce together under the command and control of the state. The
commission has been visiting and soliciting their maximum cooperation
for the elections and this has been assured.”
The ICCES had, in a meeting on February
23, 2014 in Abuja, emphasised the need for a strong military presence,
particularly in the North-East during the elections. This came up even
as the All Progressives Congress and the ruling Peoples Democratic Party
have been at loggerheads over the legality of deploying soldiers for
the elections.
The Court of Appeal in Abuja, which
affirmed Governor Ayodele Fayose of the Peoples Democratic Party as the
winner of the June 21, 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State had
described the use of armed forces in the conduct of elections as a
violation of Section 217(2)(c) of the Constitution and Section 1 of the
Armed Forces Act.
It cited and relied on a judgement
delivered by Justice R. M Aikawa of the Federal High Court in Sokoto on
January 29, 2015 barring the use of the armed forces in the conduct of
elections.
But Saturday had
authoritatively reported on February 21, 2015 that President Goodluck
Jonathan would not obey the court judgement and would deploy soldiers
for elections.
The Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Prof. Rufa’i Alkali, in an interview with Saturday ,
had confirmed that military troops would be deployed to protect the
lives and property of Nigerians before, during and after the elections.
Alkali said, “Soldiers, as far back as
when Edo State Governor, Mr. Adams Oshiomhole, was being elected, were
deployed and Oshiomhole even with his radicalism swallowed his pride and
came to thank the President for supporting the elections with adequate
security.
“Now, look at what happened in Ekiti
State, when they lost they were crying but when the military was also
deployed in Osun and they won they kept quiet.
“I challenge them to say since they
didn’t want the deployment of security for elections, and soldiers were
deployed for the Osun election, I thought they were going to reject the
outcome of the Osun elections but they didn’t. What the APC is doing is
crass opportunism.”
Also, Fayose had said Jonathan would
deploy soldiers during the elections, but the APC insisted that two
courts had barred the military from being part of the exercise.
The Chief Press Secretary to the INEC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, in a recent exclusive email chat with confirmed that soldiers would play a role during the elections even though they won’t be deployed in polling units.
He acknowledged that the military would
provide peripheral security cordon such as manning entry points into
towns to check the trafficking of arms that could be used to disrupt the
elections.
“They are also positioned in covert
readiness for rapid deployment if there is a security crisis beyond the
capacity of the police to handle. The military are never near polling
units,” Idowu added.
According to him, under the platform of
the ICCES, the role of the military has been limited to providing INEC
with logistics support.
This, he said, included Air Force planes
and Navy boats that will transport election materials over hazardous or
difficult terrains across the country.
Investigation by Saturday PUNCH revealed that some of the Generals have been affected by the recent redeployment of army officers across the country.
One of them, who asked not to be named by Saturday PUNCH, confirmed that he had recently been deployed to Yola to battle the Boko Haram insurgents.
“My brother, we are in a war front here. I’m in Yola and we are battling Boko Haram here,” he said on the telephone.
But an INEC source, who craved anonymity,
said that this would not affect the position of the military on the
inter-agency committees across the federation.
“Whoever succeeds the generals in the
states they have been moved from will also replace them on the
committees,” the source said.
However, Brig.-General J.E.K Myam, a member of the ICCES in Bauchi State, told Saturday PUNCH that all Army personnel in the state are “battle-ready” to provide necessary security back-up during the elections.
Myam said, “Added to the challenges of
ensuring security during the elections, you know Bauchi is one of the
states of the North-East where we are battling the prevailing security
challenges. But we are battle-ready as far as we know.
“We are like a second tier of security
during the elections. When situation arises which the police cannot
handle alone, we will come in to quell the situation.
“We will stand by and watch as situation
unfolds. Manning the polling units is the responsibility of the police
and perhaps, the civil defence personnel. We will be there to back them
up when a situation arises which is beyond their control.”
Meanwhile, a non-governmental
organisation, Echoes of Women in Africa Initiative, on Friday, called on
the Federal Government to provide adequate security for women during
the forthcoming general elections.
The group stated this shortly after a
road walk to the Edo State Government House to commemorate the 2015
International Women’s Day celebration in Benin, the state capital.
The Executive Director, ECOWA, Louisa
Ono-Eihomun, said that Nigerian women, who were among the most
vulnerable in the society, needed a secure atmosphere to perform their
civic responsibility for national development.
While calling on the INEC to remain
committed to the March 28 and April 11 election dates, Ono-Eihomun noted
that a further postponement could lead to violence.
Security: 19 Generals, 42 other senior officers for polls
Reviewed by Adegunju Uthman
on
March 14, 2015
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