The Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) has said the electoral reform needed to sanitise the country's electoral
system should begin from political parties.
INEC National Commissioner, Mohammed Haruna, stated
this on Thursday in Abuja at a stakeholders’ roundtable on post-2019 general
election review with the theme: ‘Towards Electoral Reforms in Nigeria’,
organised by the Centre for Transparency Advocacy (CTA).
He said if the country really wants the needed
reform in the electoral system, the political parties must conduct free, fair
and transparent primaries.
According to him, "For me, primary election of
political parties is probably the beginning if we want to reform our electoral
system. Political parties must conduct free and fair primaries. That is where
the electoral process should start from."
Earlier, the Executive Director of CTA, Faith
Nwadishi, noted that the 2019 elections have come and ended, but critical
stakeholders must continue to review, appraise the outcomes, mistakes made, the
successes, lessons learnt and of course, rejig the processor in the forthcoming
elections, adding that the 2023 elections are about 1,199 days away.
She stated: "Political class being the overall
beneficiaries of the electoral process should actually be the one at the
forefront of making our elections better.
"So, when you have the political class who
cannot hold good party primaries, who cannot hold themselves accountable for
the rule, the constitution or there laws
that they have created for themselves, it becomes a huge problem in the outcome
of any election.
"Prior to the election, we were concerned
about the kind of language and mistrust among themselves within their party. So
we came up with our report and commended INEC for the work that it had done in
the elections."
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