The Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) on Thursday said it had received no fewer than 108 fresh applications from
associations seeking registration as political parties.
The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu, made the disclosure while speaking on ‘Citizen,
Government and Technology’ at the on-going Lagos Social Media Week.
The commission had in December 2017 registered 21
new political parties. The registration of the new parties brought the total
number of registered political parties in the country to 68.
Yakubu, who addressed the session via a video call,
said the fresh applications were being processed by the commission.
According to him, “As of Friday, we received no
fewer than 108 fresh applications from political associations seeking to be registered
as political parties. We have begun the processing and scrutinising the
applications and we will register those that meet the eligibility criteria.’’
The INEC chairman said the commission would
continue to register political associations as parties so long as they meet the
set guidelines, saying political associations which sought registration six
months before the general election would be barred from the polls.
Yakubu added that the commission decided to take
the step to ensure that parties had enough time to prepare for the elections,
saying the commission was glad that out of the 21 parties that were registered
recently, four were driven by women.
The INEC boss further added that the commission had
always been advocating gender inclusiveness in governance and electoral
process.
On the release of elections timetable for the next
36 years by INEC, Yakubu said the commission had not done anything strange, but
was only ensuring certainty in the electoral process and management.
“We released the timetable because we believe we
have reached a point where election date should not be a matter of conjecture,
it should be known. That is what obtains elsewhere.
“In Ghana, everybody knows the election date and it
has remained the same for the past six years; in Kenya, it’s August 8, and that
is known to all Kenyans.
“So the essence of the timetable is to ensure some
certainty such that every Nigerian would know the election date regardless of
the year,’’ he said.
On the move to re-order the sequence of the 2019
election, Yakubu said the INEC timetable remained sacrosanct for now.
He said there was no law yet compelling the
altering of the sequence, adding that the National Assembly’s proposal could
only be considered with the coming of a new law.
The chairman noted that the commission was working
closely with parties to promote internal democracy, and was putting checks on
political parties to ensure that they comply with election spending limits,
urging the public to support the commission in its efforts to enuure free and
fair governorship elections in Osun and Ekiti States as well as the 2019
general election.
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