Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), on Sunday, told President Muhammadu Buhari to sack and replace his National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno and replace him with a more competent hand to forestall more attacks by hoodlums on offices of the Independent National Electoral Commission ahead of the 2023 general elections.
In a statement issued by HURIWA’s National Coordinator, Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko, he disclosed that aid it is most crucial for the Federal Government to set up a joint national security task force to protect INEC facilities from saboteurs bent on instigating political instability.
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The group said attacks on INEC facilities are a serious attack on our democracy as a country and should be treated seriously with the utmost urgency and strictness that it deserves.
HURIWA further condemned the twin attacks on INEC offices in Ogun and Osun states on Thursday where unscrupulous elements burnt the offices and destroyed 65,699 uncollected Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs), 904 ballot boxes, 29 voting cubicles, 30 megaphones, 57 election bags, and eight electric power generators.
The group described it as worrisome and concerning the rising and unending attacks on INEC offices, especially as the 2023 general elections approach, decrying the helplessness of security agencies including the Nigeria Police Force and the Prisons whose formations and posts have also been hard hit by determined criminals.
According to reports, INEC has recorded about 50 attacks on its offices and staff in three years since the 2019 general elections. Tens of thousands of smart card readers, ballot boxes, and voting cubicles, among other assets, were lost to the attacks in over 14 states, with the South-East being the worst hit.
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Also, more than 1,149 persons, including INEC employees and security officers were killed in the three elections held in 2011, 2015 and 2019. The electoral body had lost assets estimated at billions of naira to violence carried out by thugs and other hired hoodlums.
Similarly, a media Investigation showed that more than 127 police officers, soldiers and other security personnel were killed, and 25 police stations were attacked in the South-East and South-South between January and May 2021.