The Governor of Ogun State, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, has raised the
alarm over about 600,000 Permanent Voter Cards, brought to the state by
the INEC which the governor says do not belong to people in the state.
The Governor who belongs to Nigerian
first Islamic party, APC, raised the alarm on today after he visited
the state Resident Electoral Commissioner, Chief Timothy Ibitoye, in his
office at Magbon, Abeokuta.
The governor also lamented that only 40 per cent of the registered
voters in the state had collected their PVCs, stressing that this was
far from being encouraging.
Amosun said, “As we speak today, the cards (PVCs) they brought originally, we have two or three issues now.
“The first one is that the 1.1 million cards they brought in
November, on my honour, about 600,000 of those cards do no belong to
Ogun State, and that is the problem.
“They don’t belong to Ogun State, you will see them quoting the
polling units, the cards are not our own in Ogun State, which means,
somebody somewhere doesn’t want us to vote in Ogun State.”
“In Ogun State, we’ve just managed to collect about 40 per cent; it
was about 36 per cent before and as of today, only about 40 per cent has
been distributed.
“I have been interfacing with INEC and I have had cause to write a
letter to the Chairman of INEC on December 19, 2014, and I enumerated
all that have been happening as Ogun State is concerned in the run off
to this election.
“Unfortunately, I have been here since morning and they still have no
good story to tell us. Let me tell you, somebody somewhere, I don’t
know know, probably do not want us to vote in Ogun State, they want to
make sure that at least, 40 per cent or more than that, do not vote.”
Amosun said during the 2011 elections, the state had about 1.8
million registered voters and they later removed 500,000, alleging
double registration through post AVIS.
He said, “When they did that, they took away about 500, 000 and
reduced Ogun State to about 1.3 million and we said ‘no problem, if you
said there will be opportunities for people to re- register’, which they
did.
“When they did that, from their record, it was almost 450, 000 of the
new registration and if you add that to the 1.3 million, it takes us
back to about 1.8m, 1.9 million or thereabout of registered voters.”
Still talking about the 600,000 strange PVCs, he said residents had
gone to polling units in their areas, the names on them were not known
to them.
He said, “Our people have been going there everyday, we have
demonstrated that, we have sent our people to all the polling units.
They don’t even know those names, they don’t know who they are.
“If they said they’ve removed almost half a million. In my ward, Ward
11, in Abeokuta North, people are going there everyday and people, who
were born there, don’t find their names; they just saw fictitious names.
Those cards are not Ogun State cards.”
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