INEC Yet To Assure Us Of Its Capacity On BVAS — TINUBU
4 min readPresidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has said the Independent National Electronic Commission, INEC, is yet to assure Nigerians of the workability of the Bimodal Voter Acreditation System, BVAS.
It came a few days after the National Chairman of the party, Senator Abdullahi Adamu expressed concern over the planned deployment of the BVAS, for next year’s general polls.
Tinubu also replied critics of his educational qualifications, mocking them for wasting their resources on a wild goose chase.
He spoke, yesterday, at Chatham House, London, where he said he was born on March 29, 1952, and that he has never disowned his biological father.
This came as the meeting moderated by the Director, Africa Programmes at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Alex Vines, was initially delayed by some Nigerians in London, who staged a #HarassTinubuOutofLondon protest at the venue.
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Meanwhile, the Atiku/Okowa Presidential Campaign Organidation, has described the outing of Tinubu at Chatham House as disgraceful.
Speaking at Chatham House, Tinubu said: “We are still building confidence in our democratic and voting system. INEC is yet to assure us during this election that electronic transmission, the technology being used for accreditation and the total vote count is reliable, dependable and assuring in our democratic process before we introduce a complicated element of ballot counting.”
It will be recalled that at a meeting with the pre-election delegation of the Commonwealth Election Observation Mission in Abuja last month, APC National Chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu had said: “Our concern is how ready we are to deploy some of these technologies as regards transmission because we are taking a major step in transmitting election results in real time.”
On his sojourn at Chicago State University, Tinubu said he is now in possession of his original certificate.
During the screening of APC presidential aspirants, an APC member from Kano State, Sagir Iyali, had in a petition dated May 17, 2022, asked the Chief John Odigie-Oyegun President Screening Committee of the party to disqualify Tinubu over alleged false documents the latter submitted to the INEC, in 1998.
Iyali said Tinubu is above the required age to contest the office of president and that while his age is not known, his identity is also shrouded in secrecy.
Tinubu, who said he would reform the almajiri system, build additional schools, employ and train teachers among others to address problems in the education sector, however, surprised his audience, when he asked some of his supporters to answer some questions thrown at him.
The event was streamed live by Arise Television.
Speaking on why he was not doing live interviews, Tinubu said: “I see myself as a marketable individual. They want to use me to make money and I said no.”
Tinubu has repeatedly shunned invitation by Arise Television for town hall meetings for presidential candidates, and has been criticised by opponents over his alleged refusal to grant live interviews like his two major opponents, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the PDP and Peter Obi of the Labour Party.
On his plan for education at Chatham House, Tinubu said his administration will give loans to Nigerian students, noting that he will reform the Almajiri system in the North and build more schools and employ/train teachers in the country.
On how his government will make Nigerian youths productive if he wins the 2023 presidential election, Tinubu said there would be student loans and conducive template for youths to develop technology.
There will be student loans (for Nigerian students). We are going to reform the Almajiri system. The youth can develop technology language on their own,” Tinubu said.
On Diaspora voting, Tinubu said: “Their rights to vote should not be abrogated,” noting that the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Chairman is the only person that can speak authoritatively on the issue.
On health, the former Lagos State governor said he would convert brain-drain to brain-gain, promising that his administration will manufacture drugs and stop importation of drugs into Nigeria, and attract the best of Nigerian doctors abroad back to the country to fix the nation’s health sector.
On his age/identity controversies, university training and job experience, Tinubu said he was born on March 29, 1952, and his records are there for people to see.
His words: “I was born March 29, 1952, that’s my family record. The record is there. The transcript is there. My record is consistent in the school, in the university, they questioned, and they now confessed that they wasted their money and their time. The record is there, the transcript is there showing March 1952. I am not claiming another father. I am Tinubu and Tinubu proper. If they want a DNA, they could as well request for one.
“One of them has even been accused of not being a Nigerian citizen and I didn’t touch that area. Equally, Chicago State University, where I graduated has attested to that and now, I can announce that I have received my original replacement degree certificate from them.
“Deloitte trained me as an accountant, Mobil Oil has attested to my outstanding record. I got to the pinnacle of my career in the private sector. Who among them can brag about that?
“Yes, you want to wrestle with the pig, you got to live with the dirt. That is what I am doing. I got into politics knowing full well that it is a muddy water.”