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  • Overview of Key Issues in the Pre-Election Period for the June 18, 2022 Ekiti State Governorship Election (Pre-Election Press Statement)

    Overview of Key Issues in the Pre-Election Period for the June 18, 2022 Ekiti State Governorship Election (Pre-Election Press Statement)

    T
    he first of two off cycle governorship elections for 2022 will be conducted by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Ekiti State, on June 18, 2022. The election is the seventh in the state since the return of the current democratic dispensation in 1999. Following a 2010 Court of Appeal verdict, which removed then Governor Segun Oni, and declared Dr. Kayode Fayemi the rightful winner of the 2007 governorship election, Ekiti became one of several states holding off cycle governorship elections. The June 18, 2022 Ekiti State gubernatorial election is the very first to be conducted under the amended Electoral Act, 2022.

    As voters in Ekiti State head to the polls for tomorrow’s governorship election, the contest is apparently shaping up to be a three horse race involving the ruling party in the state, the All Progressives Congress (APC), the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP), which has clearly emerged as a third force in the election. CDD observes that there are 16 political parties fielding candidates for the election. Only two candidates and seven deputy governorship candidates are women, just as the age range of the candidates indicate low participation of the youth.

    The CDD EAC will be closely observing the electoral process with the objective of collecting data to support evidence-based analysis of key aspects of the Ekiti State governorship election. The CDD EAC will also host a fake news hub for the purpose of tracking and countering fake news and misinformation as it affects the election.

    Pre-Election Observations

    Based on the observation of the CDD EAC in the pre-election period, the following are the key trends, which have underlined the process.

    CDD notes that the June 18, 2022 Ekiti State Governorship election is significant because it will serve as the first dress rehearsal as the INEC prepares for the 2023 general elections. The election will also be the first to be conducted under the Electoral Act, 2022, and the new INEC guidelines and regulations for conduct of elections. CDD EAC further notes that although INEC has made commitments to conduct a credible election in Ekiti State, its success in this regard would depend on its neutrality, professionalism and the level of its understanding and commitment to the new legal framework. The credibility of the process would also depend on how well INEC uses some of its new powers as derived from the extant electoral law, especially the power conferred on the Commission to delay the release of election results, if the Commission needs to take a second look.

    The CDD EAC is concerned about violence, money politics and violations of incumbency powers and the possible effects of these on the credibility of the election. CDD EAC notes that Ekiti State, has recorded several incidents of violence during previous elections. In the build up to the 2022 governorship election, pockets of election-related violence have been recorded in places like Ado Ekiti, Efon Alaiye, Oye, Ido/Osi and Oye Ekiti. Other observable issues, which would shape the credibility of the election include; how well INEC is able to effectively deploy technology, particularly the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), impartial security provisioning, the quality of results management, curtailing the role of money, incumbency and god fatherism in the election. Also critical is the need for stakeholders in the election to proactively track, and counter fake news and misinformation. Already, the pre-election period has witnessed the spread of fake news capable of undermining voter confidence and participation in the process. An example is the fake news which trended recently on a purported Appeal Court decision nullifying the primaries of one of the major political parties and, by extension, its candidate.

    In terms of some of the election risk factor, CDD notes that the ongoing strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities ( ASUU) has crippled the local economy especially in university towns in Ekiti State. This has created a threat in terms of the availability of idle youth being recruited for activities, which could undermine the credibility of the election. By grounding the local economy, the strike has also created the wrong incentives as voters are more likely to see the election as an opportunity for economic survival, thereby exacerbating the risk of vote buying. This becomes even more relevant when it is considered that Ekiti State introduced the issue of “stomach infrastructure” into the Nigerian political lexicon. CDD has also observed that based on history of past violence in elections in the state, the following Local Government Areas, constitute potential flash points in the election; Ado Ekiti, Efon Alaiye, Ido/Osi, and Oye.

    Signed:

    Professor Adele Jinadu

    Chair, CDD EAC

  • FACT CHECK: Did APGA sponsor vote-buying in Anambra?

    FACT CHECK: Did APGA sponsor vote-buying in Anambra?

    There are allegations that the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) was at the forefront of vote-buying during the March 18, 2023, governorship and state assembly elections in Anambra. 

    These claims have been widely circulated and shared across various social media platforms. 

    Verification

    Anambra did not hold a governorship election, but there was a state house of assembly election. 

    The CDD Election War Room was able to confirm, through its observer coordinator, that there was extensive vote-buying in Ihiala LGA of Anambra and other areas, which he claimed was spearheaded by APGA.

    He went on to say that the vote-buying was open and brazen, resulting in a clash between APGA and LP agents that was not resolved until security officials were invited. 

    Verdict

    The claim that there were incidences of vote-buying in Anambra is true. 

  • FACT CHECK: Did INEC officials upload manipulated result sheet on IREV?

    FACT CHECK: Did INEC officials upload manipulated result sheet on IREV?

    Supporters of the Labour Party’s governorship candidate in Lagos State accuse the All Progressives Congress (APC) of manipulating the governorship and house of assembly election results in favour of their candidate, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who is also the incumbent governor of the state. 

    It is alleged that a Tipp-Ex manipulated result sheet from Epe in Lagos state was uploaded to the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) Result Viewing Portal (IReV). 

    The result as uploaded to Twitter

     The result sheet, which was shared on social media, has been widely distributed and at the time of this report, has been viewed a combined 232,000 times.  

    Verification

    The CDD Election War Room used the IReV portal to track the alleged result. We checked the uploaded results for Lagos state, Epe local government area, and Ago Owu registration area and discovered the manipulated Tipp-Ex result under the “Ota Pry School” polling unit. 

    The result as seen on iREV
    The result on IReV Portal

    The governorship and house of assembly elections were held on March 18, 2023, and the results are still being collated. A winner is yet to be officially announced. 

    Verdict

    The claim that INEC presiding officer uploaded what appears to be a manipulated result sheet on IReV is true. 

  • FACT CHECK: Did INEC Chairman Work Under Wike As TETFUND Secretary?

    FACT CHECK: Did INEC Chairman Work Under Wike As TETFUND Secretary?

    CLAIM: INEC Chairman Work under Wike as TETUND Secretary

    VERDICT: False

    CONTEXT:  A viral tweet claims that the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, worked under Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State as Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) secretary.

    The Twitter user, @IkukuomaC, tweeted this on Saturday 18th February 2023 with the caption ‘He worked Under Wike as Tefund secretary got nominated to be INEC chairman by Nasir Rufai who is part of Bola Amoda Tinubu… Wike spearheaded the rigging in Rivers state which them to win the election…mindest was spot on’ together with the INEC chairman’s picture.

    The Twitter user implied that there exists some intimate relationship between Nyesom  Wike and Prof. Mahmood Yakubu and that the latter compromised the electoral process in Rivers State in favor of the governor.

    VERIFICATION:  In verifying this claim, CDD fact-checkers checked the TETFUND website and found that the Executive Secretary as at the time Governor Nyesom Wike was a Minister of State for Education was Prof Suleiman Elias Bogoro.

    Recall that former President Goodluck Jonathan appointed Wike as Minister of State for Education during his tenure. During the period, Nyesom Wike appointed Prof Suleiman Elias Bogoro as the Executive Secretary of TETFUND. He was the executive secretary from April 2014 to February 2016.

    CONCLUSION:  CDD fact-checkers can confirm that the current chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu was not the Executive Secretary of TETFUND at the time Nyesom Wike was Minister of State for Education; hence the claim is false.

  • FACT CHECK: Did Bola Ahmed Tinubu Blame the All Progressive Congress Chieftains for Election Results in Lagos state?

    FACT CHECK: Did Bola Ahmed Tinubu Blame the All Progressive Congress Chieftains for Election Results in Lagos state?

    CLAIM:  Bola Ahmed Tinubu Blames APC Chieftains for Election Results in Lagos

    Verdict: False

    CONTEXT:  A post on Twitter has claimed that the President-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, was captured in a video reacting to the loss of his stronghold in Lagos State in the February 25th, 2023, presidential election.

    According to the post’s author, Tinubu was “mocking his thugs” for not winning the election. The author (@Nairaexchanger) further urged Nigerians to go to the polls on March 18, 2023, and defend themselves. According to the Twitter user @Nairaexchanger, Tinubu was seen speaking in his native Yoruba language while addressing a group of people. As of the time of filing this report, the video had garnered over 14,800 views and had been retweeted 551 times.

    Recall that Tinubu lost the presidential election in his home state in Lagos to Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP). While Peter Obi polled 582,454 votes, Tinubu scored 572,606.  Further analysis of the results revealed that Obi won in nine (9) local government areas of the state, including Amuwo-Odofin, Ojo, Oshodi-Isolo, Eti-Osa and Alimosho LGAs which Tinubu complained of in the video.

    The result was described by many analysts as humbling Tinubu, a two-term former governor of the state between 1999 and 2007 and a political godfather in the state.

    VERIFICATION: Fact checkers at the Centre for Democracy & Development analyzed the video using the InVid verification tool and discovered that the clip was from 2019. In the video, Tinubu was addressing party members and supporters after the 2019 election where he commended local government areas where the All Progressive Congress (APC) won and called out LGAs where the party lost.

    Recall that in 2019, Muhammadu Buhari under the APC polled 580,814 votes to narrowly beat the then Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, who polled 448,016 votes.

    CONCLUSION: CDD fact-checkers can confirm that the video in circulation suggesting that the president-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu is expressing his disappointment over the just concluded election is old and misleading.

  • FACT CHECK: Did INEC chairman work under Wike as Amaechi claims?

    FACT CHECK: Did INEC chairman work under Wike as Amaechi claims?

    By Aishah Saleeman

    Rotimi Amaechi, the former minister for transportation, claimed on Saturday that the current INEC chairman Prof. Mahmood Yakubu worked under Wike as the executive secretary of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND).

    The claim has also been shared across multiple social media platforms, including Twitter, WhatsApp and Facebook.

    It has also been reported by news outlets around the nation.

    Verification

    CDD Election War Room confirmed that Mahmood Yakubu was indeed the executive secretary of TETFUND from August 2007 to August 2012.

    He served the Umaru Yar’Adua administration with direct reporting to five different ministers of education, including Igwe Aja Nwachukwu (June 2007 to December 2008), Jerry Agada (June 2007 to December 2008), Aishatu Jibril Dukku (June 2007 – 2010), Sam Egwu (December 2008 to March 2010) and Ruqqayat Rufai ( April 2010 to September 2013).

    Nyesom Wike, the governor of Rivers state, was appointed as interim minister to oversee the ministry of education in September 2013, upon a cabinet reschuffle by Goodluck Jonathan. At this time, Yakubu was no longer executive secretary at TETFUND.

    Wike was, however, minister of state for education to Ruqqayat Rufai from July 2011, and may have worked with Yakubu for about a year. The executive secretary of TETFUND reports to 12-person board of trustees.

    Verdict

    The current INEC chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, was executive secretary of TETFUND at the time Wike was minister of state for education, but Yakubu was answerable to the board of trustees and not exactly the minister of state.

  • FACT CHECK: Were INEC ad-hoc staff shot in Abua Odual, Rivers state?

    FACT CHECK: Were INEC ad-hoc staff shot in Abua Odual, Rivers state?

    On March 18, 2023, a piece of news went viral that two INEC ad hoc staff were shot in Rivers states. The viral message reads “Two INEC ad hoc staff shot in Abua Odual. One dead on the way to hospital”

    Claim: Were INEC ad hoc staff shot in Abua Odual, Rivers state?

    Verification

    CDD Election War Room reached out to our Rivers state coordinator who confirmed that two INEC ad hoc staff were shot in Ward 007, Abua Odual, Rivers State.

    The state coordinator added that one of them died on the way to the clinic while the other was hospitalised. 

    Verdict

    The claim that INEC ad hoc staff were shot in Abua Odual, Rivers state is TRUE.

  • FACT CHECK: Is it true that there was no violence in Lagos guber poll as Adamu Garba claims?

    FACT CHECK: Is it true that there was no violence in Lagos guber poll as Adamu Garba claims?

    Adamu Garba, a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), has claimed that there was no violence during the 2023 governorship and house of assembly elections in Lagos state.

    Garba made the statement in a tweet posted on the election day, Saturday, March 18, 2023.

    “I’m currently in Lagos & I can tell you that there is no any violence as the online mercenaries want you to believe. It was part of their plot to create chaos, but Lagosians said NO. That is why they take to online space to project what’s not happening on the ground. Ignore them!,” Garba tweeted.

    The tweet has since garnered over 424,000 views, 502 retweets, 760 quotes, and 2,460 likes as of when it was retrieved from the microblogging platform.

    Screenshot of Adamu Garba’s tweet

    Claim: There was no violence during the 2023 guber polls in Lagos state.

    Verification

    The CDD Election War Room checked and found that the claim is false.

    Multiple media outlets reported incidents of violence observed during the voting exercise in several polling units across Lagos state.

    Arise News earlier reported during live coverage of the 2023 guber polls that suspected hoodlums attacked INEC officials and disrupted the voting exercise at Waheed Akanni street, Isolo area of Lagos.

    Daily Post also reported that suspected thugs snatched ballot boxes at PU 075 in Iyana-Isashi area of Lagos.

    Channels Television also reported that suspected thugs disrupted the voting exercise at a polling unit in Ago Palace area of Lagos.

    Some hoodlums also invaded polling units in Jagun area of Lagos, where they smashed bottles on a voter’s head, as reported by the Vanguard Newspaper.

    Verdict

    The CDD Election War Room found the claim by Adamu Garba that there was no violence during the 2023 guber elections in Lagos state to be false; Multiple credible reports have shown that there were several instances of violence across the state.

  • FACT CHECK: Did OSPAC members disrupt elections in Rivers?

    FACT CHECK: Did OSPAC members disrupt elections in Rivers?

    Viral reports from the March 18, 2023 governorship and state assembly elections, claim that members of the Onelga Peace Security and Advisory Committee (OSPAC) in Rivers State were visiting polling units in Emohua where they allegedly threatened to scuttle the election if they weren’t “settled,” 

    A Twitter user shared this report. The post, which has received over 16,000 views, has been reshared on other social media platforms. 

    Verification

    CDD Election War Room spoke with the CDD state coordinator for election observers in Rivers State, who confirmed that members of OSPAC were present in Emohua local government, but that they were unable to disrupt the electoral process because security agents were invited to calm the situation. 

    He also stated that the members were present at the Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni Local Government Area, which serves as their main base or headquarters. 

    Verdict 

    The claim that OSPAC members were going around polling units is true. They, however, did not disrupt the voting process in the local government area.

  • FACT CHECK: Did 10 BVAS machine go missing in Oporoza community RAC?

    FACT CHECK: Did 10 BVAS machine go missing in Oporoza community RAC?

    Multiple posts making the rounds online claim that some Bimodal voter accreditation system (BVAS) machines were missing in Oporoza community in Warri South West Local Government Area. 

    The tweets claimed 10 BVAS were missing out of the supposed 23 that were made available for the 23 polling units in the community.

    Verification 

    CDD Election War Room spoke to officials at the INEC head office in Asaba, who explained that some BVAS machines were not at Oporoza community at the start of the exercise.

    The official said he was following the incident from the beginning, and that there were five BVAS machines sent to Oporoza which were not originally reconfigured.

    He explained that upon realisation, the Registration Area Centre (RAC) technical support staff took them away without informing the Electoral Officer (EO) to reconfigure.

    The EO on discovering that five machines were not there looked for the RAC Tech and was told he went to reconfigure the five machines. “The EO immediately went in search of the RAC Tech and both of them returned back to Oporoza,” the official said.

    Even after reconfiguration and return to Oporoza, the voters rejected the said BVAS machines.

    It took the intervention of critical stakeholders to get voters to accept the BVAS machines after their readings showed zero. Voting has since commenced in the entire LGA.

    Verdict

    According to INEC officials, the claim that 10 BVAS machines were stolen from Oporoza community is false. The machines were taken for reconfiguration, without the express permission of the electoral officer.

  • FACT CHECK: Did Hoodlums chase INEC Officials in Osun state?

    FACT CHECK: Did Hoodlums chase INEC Officials in Osun state?

    Multiple online media platforms have claimed that a group of hoodlums destabilised the voting process in Osogbo, Osun state on March 18, 2023,

    The posts claimed that the hoodlums attacked the Ataoja Ward 5 polling units 10 and 11 polling unit while voting was ongoing and started shooting sporadically, chasing away INEC officials and voters. 

    Verification: The CDD War Room checked this claim and found it to be true. Credible news agencies have confirmed the attack in a report they published on March 18, 2023.

    According to them, “the hoodlums did not cart away with the ballot box but they disrupted the process and forced both officials and electorates from the two units which are closed to one another.”

    Verdict: The claim that hoodlums chased INEC officials in Osogbo is true. Credible media agencies confirmed the incident on March 18, 2023.