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2019: Details Of Gen Abdusalam Abubakar’s Peace Committee Discussions With INEC

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Peace Committee Wants Contestants To Sign MOU On Peaceful Elections

Few weeks to the 2019 election, the Gen. Abdusalam Abubakar-led National Peace Committee has expressed concern over the security situation in Rivers, the Northeast and other parts of the country.

The committee will be meeting with chairmen and secretaries of parties today to design a memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to be signed by their presidential candidates as part of efforts to ensure peace before, during and after the elections.

Briefing newsmen after the committee’s meeting with some stakeholders led by  Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, stressed the importance of peace in nation building.

Abubakar noted that from briefing, the commission is 100 per cent ready for the election, notwithstanding that its budget is yet to be signed.

He said: “We have invited the chairman of INEC and he has come here with his high-power delegation. For the last one hour or so, he has briefed us on the preparation for the elections, his challenges and what he is going to do in order to make sure they are successful, free and fair.

“We have taken note of flash areas in the states where he wants the committee to intervene in order to bring peace so that elections will be conducted. On our part, we will do the best that we can in order to help sanitise the political arena.”

Concerning the troubled Northeast, Gen. Abdusalam said, “All of us are worried about the security situation in the Northeast and it is necessary that we try to contain it in order for INEC to go there and conduct elections. You should know that INEC will not send people to endanger their lives in order to conduct elections. And in actual fact, no agent or political party will endanger the lives of its people in any conflict areas and we will try to contain that violence in order to conduct elections.”

“I believe that you are Nigerians, you are the people who tell us where there are crisis. You should know all these things. Well since you asked me a question I will answer. In particular, we have problems in Rivers state, and some other areas where problems are emerging. So we will try to see how we can nip the problem in the bud. And you help us also in giving us information, where you think we should intervene. It is not only the INEC that the responsibility lays on, every Nigerian has a role to play.” he added.

On other challenges the former Head of state identified imposition of candidates by parties. He said: “well mainly on the activities of the political parties. You have seen during the primaries either direct or indirect, or whatever it is, we have seen the report from you the media people where there are impositions of candidates so these are part of the challenges.

On the campaign so far, he said: “Well, all we can do is to sanitise the polity to make sure that there is no hate speech, to make sure that it is a decent campaign during elections where there will be no name calling and undesired utterances,” he said.

The committee’s advice to INEC, he said “like all Nigerians, we pray and hope and we got assurances that INEC will do the right thing. Each Nigerian has a role to play and I hope they will play their part.

Abubakar went on: “As far as INEC is concerned from the briefing we received, they are ready pending of course what the parties do. So now the ball is in the court of the political parties to get their acts together.

“The next stage is that we are going to meet with chairmen and secretaries of political parties tomorrow (today) in order to discuss and listen to them and to see how we can make progress. After the meeting with the political parties, we are going to draw a memorandum of understanding for peace and tranquility and this we hope will be signed by all the presidential candidates and the chairmen of all the registered political parties,” he said.

He urged the press to “properly informthe general public, sayingYou members of the press have also a role and a duty to educate our people and the politicians so that when they go on campaign, they campaign on issues and there should be politics without bitterness and rancor. You also help us educate our citizens so that they avoid been used as tugs during campaign and during elections. You also help us to educate Nigerians on their citizen’s right to ensure that they check that they receive their permanent voters card (PVCs) and ensure that their names are properly registered, to avoid ballot snatching and all types of hooliganism during the elections.

“Our people should realise that peace is very paramount in any society. There must be peace before we conduct elections, there must be peace before we have a country. So I implore you, all of you here, you know what people see, what people read, they have the tendency to believe it in total, so please make sure you educate our people, help in voter education and all the necessary things that needed to be done so that we have a peace election.”

Yakubu said the meeting would be part of a regular dialogue with the committee ahead of the elections.

It is a continuation of the briefing that INEC is going to be invited to give to the Committee. Remember that this is the second briefing on our preparation for the elections and we have told them everything that we have been doing to ensure free and fair elections including the registration of voters, making the PVCs available for collection well ahead of elections. And some of the issues and challenges that we are facing in which we have sought the support of the committee.

“Basically this is a routine meeting with the national peace committee and more of these interactions are planned ahead of the signing of national peace accord involving the presidential candidates and the chairmen of political parties. And we will also continue with this kind of interactions with all the stakeholders across the country as the elections approach. We have exactly 79 days to the elections and this kind of interaction will continue,” he said.