Saturday's elections in
Nigeria for governors and state assemblies have been postponed by a week, with
officials citing pending legal cases in the presidential vote.
Nigeria's opposition
parties have filed lawsuits to examine ballot papers and voting machines in the
February 25 presidential polls, alleging that the vote was rigged. Nigeria's
electoral commission declared the ruling All Progressives Congress candidate,
Bola Tinubu, the winner and next president.
The Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) announced Wednesday night the new date of
March 18 for local voting after an executive meeting.
The meeting was held
shortly after a federal appeals court ruling that favored applications by the
opposition People's Democratic Party (PDP) and Labor Party to inspect
materials, including ballot papers and result sheets used in the February 25
presidential and parliamentary elections.
INEC had filed a
countersuit saying it needed to reconfigure the voting machines, known as the
Bimodal Voter Accreditation Systems (BVAS), ahead of the gubernatorial
elections that had been planned for this Saturday.
But the court directed
INEC to upload information in the BVAS into a secure server for opposition
parties to review.
INEC said the ruling
less than 72 hours before the polls came far too late for the commission to
adequately prepare for the elections.
Festus Okoye, a
national commissioner at INEC, did not take calls for comment.
An official of the
Labor Party presidential campaign team, Toochukwu Ezeoke, said seven days might
be too little time for an inspection and configuration of voting machines.
"By that ruling
yesterday, they would start the backup. Two days is impossible for them to have
done that [and] understanding the system,” Ezeoke said. "I dare say that one
week will be enough to do that. For the Labor Party, we would keep close eye
and watch what is happening within the INEC and BVAS."
More than 176,000 BVAS
units were used nationwide during the February 25 presidential and
parliamentary elections to accredit votes.
But the election results
have been opposed by the PDP and Labor Party. Both parties claim they won the
election in which INEC declared ruling APC candidate Bola Ahmed Tinubu the
winner.
Observers say
widespread delays and technical difficulties with the BVAS hindered prompt
result uploads and raised concerns about the transparency of the election.
Joe-Kyari Gadzama,
legal counsel to the PDP, spoke to journalists after a court hearing Wednesday.
"They have to
comply with the orders of court and allow us access and we need just seven days
to have all that we need,” Gadzama said. "Because without exercising our right
to have access to all these devices, backends and also to have access to the
clouds, all the storage in the cloud, that simply means that our petition is
indirectly being affected."
But Tanimu Inuwa, a
lawyer who represented INEC at the court appeal, said the inspection opposition
parties seek could jeopardize the confidentiality of voters.
"What the court
ordered was that they can have access to the election materials such as the
ballot papers, results sheets and any other materials used for the election,
not that they'll have access to our cloud or database,” Inuwa said. "They want
to have access to our cloud, which has biometrics data of all voters. If you
match the ballot papers, the forensic analysis of our cloud, it'll definitely
show you how a voter voted."
While many wait to see
what happens, opposition parties threaten to protest if denied access.
VOA
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