
The Oyo State Resident Electoral Commissioner
(REC), Mr. Mutiu Agboke, on Thursday lamented that out of the 2,934, 107
registered voters in the state, only 1, 958, 069 have collected their Permanent
Voter Cards (PVCs), leaving 1, 004, 577 cards uncollected.
He also said the final list of governorship and
House of Assembly candidates that will reflect the withdrawal, replacement and
substitution of candidates done by the various political parties in the state
will be published on January 31.
The REC said this at the inaugural meeting of
Inter-Agency Consultative Committee on Election Security (ICCES), stating that
the final list of presidential and National Assembly election candidates will
also be made public on January 17.
Agboke called on the owners of the unclaimed PVCs
to utilise the available window for collection and visit INEC office in the
local government areas and other designated areas.
The REC, who said the commission was ready for the
elections, charged the heads of security
agencies in the committee to ensure adequate security for all ad hoc staff,
INEC offices and election materials as well as provide peaceful atmosphere for
voting.
While tasking the security agencies to identify
flashpoints and sponsors of electoral violence, he urged them to be committed
to “securing the registration centres where corps members recruited to serve as
presiding officers and assistant presiding officers will be camped overnight.”
He assured stakeholders that smart card readers, which
he said had been upgraded for better performance and efficiency, would be
deployed for voter’s verification and authentication during the election.
He promised to engage traditional rulers and
religious leaders as part of efforts to step up voter mobilisation and sensitisation.
On his part, the state Commissioner of Police, Mr.
Abiodun Odude, who co-chairs the committee with the REC, assured the public that
the security agencies would deal with any threat that might happen before,
during and after the election.
On how big a threat the skirmishes in some parts of
Ibadan were to the elections, he said: “I don’t see them as a big threat. They
could be some threat, but we are working on them.
“We have mapped out strategies with which we are
going to deal with them. The skirmishes that happened can’t directly now be
linked with anything political. They are just thugs in the areas."
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