The Minister of Culture and Tourism and the Supervising
Minister of Information, Chief Edem Duke, has debunked the rumour making rounds
that President Jonathan has an agenda to sack the Chairman of the Independent
National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega, illegally.
The Minister spoke during his maiden meeting with
information correspondents at Radio House, Abuja, adding however, that ‘’this
is not to say that, if it is time for INEC chairman to naturally exit his
office, then the natural course of public service rule will not take place when
he has reached age of retirement or exhausted his tenure.”
He said, “I align myself with Mr. President that he has no
plan to sack the INEC chairman. President Jonathan reaffirmed the confidence
reposed on the INEC chairman and reiterated that the administration has no plan
whatsoever to send the electoral umpire illegally packing. Bu nothing would
debar the INEC boss from proceeding on retirement when the need arises, in line
with the civil service rule and as enshrined in the constitution.’’
Although the Minister did not explain further it was
gathered that the administration was angry with Jega for introducing the Card
Reader as a means of accreditation for the general elections without briefing
the Federal Government over the issue.
‘’Jega wants to try a new system of accreditation without
briefing the Presidency over the issue. No freedom is absolute. Section 125 of
the constitution forbids electronic voting. Although the card reader can not be
used for voting, it is for checking voters.
‘’Secondly, the point Jega also missed is that Nigeria is
not a place you can introduce that type of system without trial or
experimentation. You try some of these things using local government elections
.You can start with council election, beginning with councilors, local
government chairmen in that other before you proceed to governorship and
presidential elections.
‘’But Jega is starting his experiment with the presidential
election, It is wrong even though people are playing politics with the
matter,’’ the source told Saturday Vanguard.
Meanwhile, Duke has urged media practitioners to beware of
rumour mongers and ensure that that they separate truth from propaganda that
was now the order of the day in the country due to the ongoing electioneering campaigns.
“With the elections around the corner, it is important for
every one of us to apply some sense of decorum, sense of patriotism and sense
of judgmental guide in a manner that whatever we do, especially at this
critical time of our nation’s development, we must be guided strictly by spirit
of professionalism and love of our country.
‘Those who are competing for offices in the course of these
elections are the ones feeding social media with propaganda because they have
no records to back their aspiration; they had spent a lot of resources, time
and ingenuity building social media propaganda so that by the time campaign
commenced, they were ready with propaganda against government in power.
“They embark on massive publicity campaign, recruit
electoral PR companies to sell products that do not exist and these are thrown
to the public during election. But we must realise that truth struck a thousand
times will always rise again because the eternal age of time belongs to truth.
“You can’t use social media to say 14 new universities were
not build, import bill has not dropped with marshal plan for agricultural
revolution. You cannot use the social media to blindfold Nigerians that
government has not build over 125 Almajiri schools or that 22 airports were not
remodeled or five new international airports are not being built. You can’t say
Nigeria is not the biggest economy in Africa and that inflation is not at
single digit with a growth rate that has positioned Nigeria as one of the six
fastest growing economies in the world,” he further said
No comments:
Post a Comment
Leave Your Comment Here