A polling unit
Widespread voter apathy marred the
local government elections held in
Lagos and Ogun states on Saturday.
Reports from different parts of the
states showed that many voters
shunned the polls for lack of interest in
the exercise, fear of electoral violence,
and lack of faith in the outcome of the
election.
In Lagos, the state independent
electoral commission conducted the
polls across the 20 local government
areas and 37 local council development
areas of the state.
In the Ifako-Ijaiye and Agege local
government areas, presiding officers
were seen waiting for eligible voters to
arrive for accreditation and voting.
A presiding officer at Ojodu Grammar
School 1, Polling Unit 017, Abel Obina,
said only seven persons had cast their
votes as of 11.15am out of 150
registered voters.
“The turnout is not good as expected. A
lot of people are still at home,” Obina
added.
The agents of the All Progressives
Congress and Peoples Democratic Party
at the polling units confirmed Obina’s
account.
Another PO at Polling Unit 006,
Dairyfarm Nursery and Primary School,
Agege; Nobei Austin, told one of our
correspondents who visited the area at
12.20pm that only 15 persons out of 99
registered voters had voted.
“We also have issues with the card
reader. We have to resort to manual
accreditation,” Austin said.
The situation was the same in the Itire/
Ikate LCDA of the Surulere Local
Government Area where most of the
eligible voters in the various councils
chose to spend the day relaxing or
indulging in recreational activities.
In most streets in the councils visited,
youths of the voting age were seen
playing street football while major
roads were empty due to the
enforcement of movement restriction.
Also, many of the polling units were
converted to relaxation spots as some
party loyalists who made up the bulk of
the voters entertained themselves with
drinks while waiting for the election to
come to an end.
There was a mild drama at Unit 008,
Ojodu Primary School, as some youths
were seen entangled in a quarrel over
sharing of cash given to them by a
politician who visited the polling unit to
cast his vote.
Trouble started after the money – wads
of N1,000 notes – was handed over to a
fairly-complexioned slim man on the
school premises. The man surrounded
by some youths, including women,
stormed into a shop opposite the polling
unit.
Afterwards, arguments ensued as they
could not reach an agreement on the
sharing formula.
In Ikosi-Isheri LCDA, traders displayed
their wares despite the restriction of
movement announced by the police.
In the Isheri area of the Kosofe Local
Government Area, electoral officers
were also seen waiting for voters to
come out.
At Community Hall, Isheri Oke II,
Polling Unit 039, it was observed that
only a few voters turned out for the
exercise.
A presiding officer, Ajayi Anthony, who
showed one of our correspondents the
list of registered voters, said, “It’s been
very slow; many people are not showing
up. We have been here since 8 am. It’s
been over three hours and just six
people have voted, so far. That has been
our issue; we had no issue with our
card reader.”
A motorcycle rider, who identified
himself as Taofeek, said he had no voter
card and wasn’t interested in the
process of enriching another politician.
While reacting to the development, the
Chairman of LASIEC, Justice Ayotunde
Philips (retd.), said, “The turnout is
very low; unfortunately that is not our
problem. It is the political parties that
are supposed to talk to their party
faithful to come out and vote. And if
they don’t work with us to sensitise
their people to come out and vote, there
is nothing we can do about it.”
The spokesperson for LASIEC, Mr Tope
Stephen, said that while the voting was
reportedly successful in most areas,
there were reports of violence in some
areas.
“There was a report of violence in
Olorunda LCDA which involved the
beating of presiding officers and
snatching of ballots; fights broke out at
Agbado Oke-Odo LCDA and also in some
units in Shomolu, while there were
transportation challenges experienced
by the commission at Alimosho LGA.
These are mere pockets of random
attacks which were ultimately curbed by
the security units,” Stephen added.
According to LASIEC law, in an election
to the office of the Chairman or
Councillor, the commission will paste at
the state or local government area or
and local council development area
officers of the commission, a notice
showing the candidates at the election
and the score and the person declared
as elected or returned at the elections.
Stephen said, “The results for today’s
(Saturday) election will be collated at
the LGAs and LCDAs and released there.
With the ease of movement and number
of voters today, the results may be out
this evening or tomorrow.”
Meanwhile, LASIEC Returning Officer,
Mr Olumide Metilelu, on Saturday
evening declared APC as the winner of
chairmanship election in Ikorodu Local
Government.
According to Metilelu, the candidate of
the PDP, Mr Hassan Rafiu, had a total
of 1497 votes, while Mr Wasiu Adesina
of the APC had 4729 votes.
Adesina was therefore declared winner
of the chairmanship election in the local
government by the returning officer.
“Having complied with the requirement
of the law and scored the majority
number of votes, Wasiu Adesina is
hereby declared elected and returned as
chairman of Ikorodu Local
Government,’ Metilelu said.
The state chapter of the Peoples
Democratic Party said it would be
foolery to expect fair and credible
results from the local government
elections held across the state.
It said many of its members in areas
like Oshodi and Shomolu, believed to be
hotbeds of violence, stayed away to
avoid being attacked by thugs.
The spokesperson for the Lagos State
chapter of the PDP, Taofik Gani, also
blamed the low turnout of voters for
the election on the fear of being
attacked or caught up in electoral
violence.
But reacting, the APC said the PDP
should be blamed for its weakness and
incompetence as an opposition party in
the state.
“If we had any apathy, it was due to
weak opposition. So, when there is
ineptitude and incompetence on the
part of the opposition, the tendency is
there that the ruling party will always
have a field day,” the spokesperson for
the APC, Oluseye Oladejo, said.
Abiodun, PDP faction trade words in
Ogun
In Ogun State, Governor Dapo Abiodun
and the PDP on Saturday traded words
over the conduct of the poll, which was
also marred by alleged rigging.
Abiodun, who cast his vote at the Ward
3, Unit 2, in Iperu, his hometown,
Ikenne Local Government Area of the
state mocked the PDP for withdrawing
from the election.
But, in his reaction, the state Chairman
of the PDP, Sikirulahi Ogundele, claimed
responsibility for what it described as
“the unimpressive turnout” of the poll
in the state.
The state chapter of the APC said it was
satisfied with the conduct of the
election.
The State Secretary of the Caretaker
Committee, Ayo Olubori, added,
“Another way of describing voter
apathy is to say the ruling party is
having an overwhelming acceptance and
dominance over others. That is another
interpretation of what anybody can call
voter apathy.”
Meanwhile, the National Consultative
Front has accused political rulers of
conspiring against constitutional
governance anchored on a just, united,
and stable country.
The Media Assistant of NCFront (Public
Affairs Bureau), Yusuf Abdullahi, said
this in a statement on behalf of its
National Secretary, Wale Okunniyi,
while reacting to the low turnout of
voters during the council elections in
Lagos and Ogun states.
According to Okunniyi, the continuous
circle of elections in the country
without the popular constitutional
consensus of the diverse peoples of
Nigeria was “a clear exercise in futility
and a time bomb for the corporate
existence of Nigeria that must be
urgently detonated by Nigerians before
it’s too late.”