top of page
Writer's pictureAdmin

INEC, ICPC must investigate Ekiti rigging tape – Soyinka


Celebrated playwright, Professor Wole Soyinka, yesterday tasked the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, ICPC, to probe the audio recording which purportedly captured some Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, chieftains directing an Army general to rig the June 21, 2014 governorship elections in Ekiti State.

Soyinka spoke in reaction to a front page advert in a national daily which was sponsored by Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose, where the Governor discredited the authenticity of the tape based on a submission by the United States that the Ekiti governorship election was transparent.

Soyinka, who is a Nobel laureate, said the issue was too weighty to be dismissed without being investigated. He added that since Fayose had referenced the U.S. report, the federal government could as well call on the U.S. to assist in investigating the tape.

The social activist maintained that no one would lose anything by investigating the tape since it was the job of law enforcement agencies to investigate matters of state.

His words, “For those who have nothing to hide, disrobing lies and forgeries and reinforcing truth is regarded as part and parcel of the obligations we owe democracy. The audio could well be one of such forgeries. We are daily inundated with allegations, evasions, distortions, image plundering and image laundering, all under the permissive canopy of electoral proceeding.

“Once in a while, however, we encounter exposure of an exceptional dimension that appears to strike at the very root of democracy, questions the validity of an entire electoral system and even erodes confidence in the integrity of the state. Such an event need not be regarded as a repudiation of the formal mechanics put in place by an electioneering agency such as INEC, but nonetheless extends the scope of its responsibilities, including its projection of looming hazards of future electoral exercises.

“This is why, in the absence of a Constitutional Court or its equivalent, one is left with no other course than to call on INEC to also take formal charge of the recorded incident of this alleged conspiracy to pervert the course of democracy. For those ‘who have nothing to hide,’ it is a call that deserves unstinting support. They should not hesitate to assist in calling on the same US expertise to assist us in exposing a forgery.

“We are speaking here of a development that implicates not only products, beneficiaries or would-be constitutional guardians of the electoral process – that is, an elected governor, a governorship aspirant, but also state agencies – the military, two serving ministers – that is, members of the Executive arm of government, one of them in charge of the nation’s defence portfolio – and others.

“In addition to the logical role of the police, the nation’s electoral commission should undertake an independent investigation and make its findings known to the nation. Is this perhaps something INEC can undertake while the nation waits out its suspended electoral sentence? It only requires repudiation – or validation – of the findings of an already advanced forensic enquiry,” Soyinka added.

4 views0 comments

Comentarios


bottom of page