The Independent National Electoral
Commission is not leaving anything to chance as it has beefed up
security around the smart card readers to be used during the March 28
and April 11 elections. The adoption of the card readers for the general
election has attracted a lot of controversies.
On March 14, there was a fire incident
at the warehouse of the electoral body in Abuja which lasted for two
hours. Non-sensitive materials such as envelopes, voter education
materials and bags for
conveying electoral materials to registration
areas were completely burnt.
This has raised fears in many quarters
about the safety of the card readers with six days left to the March 28
presidential election.
The Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, Mr. Kayode Idowu, said that measures had been put in place to secure the card readers.
He said, “They are very secure from arson, stealing, vandalism or any other effort to disrupt the elections.
“It is not only card readers we are
using for these elections. We are using a lot of other materials. We are
also using ballot boxes, cubicles, etc. Those are all election
materials and they are secured and are well protected. Where they are
now, they are safe.
“INEC deploys these materials along the
lines of the structures. We deploy from the national headquarters to the
state offices. The state offices deploy to the council offices. The
council offices deploy to the registration area centres, which in turn
deploy to the polling units. They cannot be intercepted on the way; they
are not sent by post.”
Checks by our correspondents around the
36 states and Abuja showed that the card readers had already been
deployed to the states.
However, the actual location of these
cards is only known to the Resident Electoral Commissioners and a few
trusted staff of the commission under whose watch the cards are.
This development, according to some of
the RECs, is born out of anticipated threats such as theft and arson
against the safety of the card readers.
The Ondo State REC, Olusegun Agbaje,
told one of our correspondents that only he, the administrative
secretary, who is his deputy, and the head of Information and
Communications Technology knew where the card readers were being kept.
He said, “It is not necessary for
everybody to know where the card readers are kept. The important thing
is that they are safe and secure. I know that you are concerned about
the safety of the card readers, but we are even more concerned and have
taken measures to ensure that they are safe. Armed security men are
watching over them.”
In confirmation of the secrecy
surrounding the location of the card readers, the REC in Delta State,
Mr. Anidi Ikowak, refused to disclose to our correspondent where they
were kept in his domain.
Ikowak said the card readers were safe.
He said, “I can’t tell you where the card readers are but I want to say
that they are safe. The card readers for the elections cannot function
until the March 28. There are so many features that make it to function
only on the 28th. And after 28, it will not function again until you
reconfigure it for another election, April 11.”
The Kogi State REC, Mr. Hussain Pai, in a
telephone interview with one of our correspondents, also said the
location of the card readers were not known to the public.
Pai said, “The card readers are kept in a secret and special place such that the public are not aware of the place.”
Pai, who spoke through the state INEC
spokesperson, Mr. Matthew Ameh, stated that the commission had made
adequate security arrangements to ensure the safety of the card readers
and other materials.
He added, “We have been meeting with all
heads of security agencies through the platform of Inter-Agency
Committee on Election Security. So far, security is not one of our
challenges. We have a committee made of the Army, Navy, Police,
Immigration, Civil Defence and others. We have really gone far with them
and everything is okay. We have appropriate measure against fire
disasters; if there is any disaster, the inferno will be put off.”
His Kwara State counterpart, Dr.
Emmanuel Onucheyo, in a telephone interview with one of our
correspondents through the spokesperson of the commission in the state,
Mr. Jacob Ayanda, said the location of the card readers was
confidential.
Onucheyo said, “Only the head of the
store section and the Head of ICT have access to the place where the
card readers are kept. The card readers are kept in a special place. The
place where they are kept is not known to the public. We have doubled
the security coverage of these materials and the security is adequate,”
he added.
Similarly, the REC in Akwa Ibom State,
Mr. Austin Okojie, said the card readers were kept in air conditioned
buildings spread all over the 31 local governments could only be
accessed by the staff of the ICT unit.
The REC in Ekiti State, Mr. Sam
Olumekun, also guaranteed the safety of the card readers, saying they
were being kept in a secured environment.
He also said the card readers had been configured for each voting point to avoid manipulation or electoral fraud.
The Delta State REC, Mr. Anidi Ikowak,
would not say where the cards are being kept for safety and security. He
simply acknowledged that the cards had been received and configured for
their respective polling units.
The Benue State REC, Prof. Istifanus
Dafwang, said the 5,000 card readers he took delivery of were kept in a
safe building and that the place is guarded by the police, Department of
State Security, the civil defence as well as INEC’s internal security.
In Bayelsa State , the Public Relations
Officer, Mr. Timidi Wariowei, said on Friday that, “They are very
secured. When we begin to move them to local governments, we are going
with security agents to protect lives and materials.”
The Administrative Secretary, INEC, Ogun
State, Mr. Dickson Atiba, confirmed to one of our correspondents that
adequate security had been provided to prevent the card readers from
being stolen or burnt.
He said, “We have provided adequate
security for the card readers. They are being specially kept in a safe
place to prevent them from being stolen or form any act of arson. Even
if anyone tries to steal it, the person might not be able to use it,
because each one has its (special) code.”
In Abia, the state REC, Professor Selina Oko, said water-tight security arrangement had been put in place to safeguard the card.
Oko, who was not specific on the number
of the card readers, admitted that the state took delivery of a sizable
quantity of the device.
She also did not disclose where the card
readers were kept but she affirmed that enough security measures had
been taken to ensure their safety.
In Plateau, the Deputy Director, Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Osaretin imahieyereobo, said the card readers were safe.
Imahieyereobo said, “Everything is going
on course. We don’t anticipate any hitch and if there is any, adequate
measures have been put in place to meet such problems. The cards are
safe where they are from theft or fire and they are being well guarded.”
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