Jega was accused of having ethnic agenda with the commission’s recent creation of additional 30,000 polling units in the country.
The chairman of the
commission had defended the creation, saying that the action was meant to bring
the total polling units in the country to 150,000 and that it would decongest
the polling units ahead of the 2015 general elections.
Jega on Wednesday said he
would not resign his position but would conduct the 2015 general elections with
the best intention and in national interest.
But the Southern Nigeria
Peoples Assembly on Wednesday disagreed.
Leaders of the group, which
included former Vice President, Chief Alex Ekwueme; a former Federal Minister
of Information, Chief Edwin Clark; and Senator Femi Okurounmu, said the action
was not justifiable.
They stated this after the
group’s meeting, which was held in Abuja on Wednesday.
It was also the opinion of
the group that President Goodluck Jonathan should immediately re-organise the
composition and the structure of the commission immediately.
According to a communique
issued at the end of the group’s meeting, the southern leaders said it was
wrong for Jega to have done what he did.
The communique said, “Jega
cannot exculpate himself from being a proponent of ethic agenda; we are the
least surprised that he has been recruited to perfect the ploy of some persons
from parts of this country to truncate our nascent democracy.
“With the indefensible
employment of proportional representation and equality as parameters, Jega
decided not to equilibrate but to marginalize the entire southern Nigeria by
arbitrarily and capriciously allocating 21,615 polling units to the North as
against 8,412 polling units to southern Nigeria.
“Whereas we have clearly
argued the lack of need for any additional polling unit given the reduced
number of registered voters consequent upon the Automated Fingers Identification
System.
“Creating a phantom 30,000
polling units and whimsically allocating them to favour the North is the height
of insult to the people of southern Nigeria.”
But while speaking at a
press conference held in the commission’s headquarters in Abuja on Wednesday,
Jega insisted that the commission would not rescind its decision on the new
PUs.
He said, “I am not an
ethnic or religious jingoist. My antecedents are there; I have been accused of
many things. Those who don’t want progress resort to sponsoring fictitious
groups to pull us down.
“These critics are mischief
makers who hang everything on ethnic or religious context. That is not the case
as far as INEC is concerned, there is nothing we can do. We believe that all
rational thinking people in those groups will later see reason with us. This is
not the first time people are calling for my resignation or being fired. I will
be there in 2015.”
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