Sanitizing the Electoral Process in Nigeria (1)
How to purge our electoral process in Nigeria of the structural flaws
that have prevented it from achieving credibility is a great concern in
the polity today. From 1959 to 2007, general elections in Nigeria have
been characterized by malpractices and controversies. For this reason,
early in his administration, President Umar Yar’Adua set up the
Electoral Reform Committee (ERC) led by retired Chief Justice of
Nigeria, Muhammed Uwais. The ERC has been going round the country in the
last few weeks collecting ideas on the way forward.
Through it’s public sittings, the ERC seeks to pool ideas and strategies
aimed at breaking the vicious cycle of electoral disorder, to produce an
electoral framework that will result in elections that are free of
violence, bigotry, rigging, corruption and all other vices that are
stultifying the growth of our nascent democracy, and possibly, to
initiate a better and more profound legislation that will fast-track
electoral best practices in our country. The envisioned reforms are
targeted at strengthening our institutional capacity for conducting
transparent elections inorder to restore intergrity to the process.
In this onerous duty, the Committee will need to identify the
fundamental defects in the existing electoral legislations which provide
the axis on which the vicious cycle of electoral delinquency revolves.
The first, for me, is that electoral offenders are not punished in this
country. Although the Electoral Act 2006 makes ample provisions for
punishment of electoral offenders in its various parts and particularly
in Part VIII Section 124-138, our experience in practice is that the
civil dimension of electoral petitions are emphasized to the diminution
of the criminal aspects. Incidentally, the root of this problem is
embedded in the Act. Whereas the Electoral Act 2006 in its First
Schedule provides rules of procedure for election petitions in their
civil nature, the criminal aspect without which the civil may not have
arisen in the first place is left open ended. For one, the Act vests all
prosecutorial powers under the Act on INEC by specifying in S.158 (2)
that “prosecution under this Act shall be undertaken by legal officers of the
Commission or any legal practitioner appointed by it”. For another, the
Act vests the critical duty of determining whether to and who should be
arraigned for electoral offences on INEC and the Tribunals and makes
prosecution of electoral offenders mandatory by providing in Part X,
S.157 that INEC “shall consider any recommendation made to it by a
tribunal with respect to the prosecution by it of any person for an
offense disclosed in an election petition.” And, who makes this
recommendation? By virtue of the 6th schedule of the 1999 Constitution
which expressly provides that the chairman and members of Election
Tribunals shall be serving judges, it is their lordships that will
recommend to INEC! Does INEC act on the recommendation? The fact is that
they do not! And the reason is obvious.
By it’s impractical provisions, the Electoral Act 2006 creates a lacuna,
a window for electoral offenders to evade justice. As if to provide more
cover for perpetrators of electoral infractions, the Act goes further in
S.41(1) (2) (3) and (4) to stipulate that a certificate of indemnity be
provided to any witness at an Election Petition Tribunal seen to have
exhibited a level of honesty. The purpose of this immunity is to prevent
the testimony of such witness from being used in evidence against him or
her in all criminal prosecutions for electoral offences except perjury
in respect of the testimony. Such a certificate acts as ground for the
court to stay proceeding against such a person or even to award costs to
him!
But there is an even more curious twist to the hypothetical provisions
in the Act: many of the technical offences listed as electoral offences
under the Act can only be committed by staff of INEC or persons engaged
as officials by the commission for the purpose of elections. S.130 (1) –
(6) contain offences in this category: breach of official duty, failure
to report promptly at polling stations on election day without lawful
excuse, failure to discharge his lawful duties at his polling station,
announcement and publication of election result knowing same to be false
or at variance with the signed certificate of return, delivery of false
certificate of return, and release of false results to the news media.
Thus, although S. 144(2) of the Act allows a petitioner to complain
about the conduct of an Electoral Officer, a Presiding Officer, a
Returning Officer or any other person who took part in the conduct of an
election in his official capacity as an agent of the commission and provides that such a person may be joined in the election
petition in his or her official capacity as a necessary party, what
happens where the petition succeeds and the conduct of the officer or
agent provides sufficient grounds for his or her prosecution for
electoral offences?
In such a case, what we have under the Electoral Act 2006 given it’s
provision in S.158 (2) earlier cited is a situation where the indictor
and the indictee are one and the same person: INEC! Can INEC honestly
prosecute INEC? That is unlikely to happen; more so, because the
capacity of the legal officer of INEC to prosecute electoral offenders
is limited in practice. Generally, where a statute specifies a special
prosecutor as the Electoral Act 2006 has done, it is only the
Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) that can validly institute
criminal proceeding in respect of a violation of the provisions of such
statute because the authority of the AGF “to institute, take over and
continue, or discontinue criminal proceedings” derives from the
constitution. A legal officer in INEC, therefore, cannot institute
criminal proceedings without the express authority of the AGF. And the
AGF is too busy trying to take over EFCC cases to bother about electoral
offences. Do you still wonder why electoral offenders are never prosecuted?
By making provisions that make it hard to bring electoral offenders to
book, the Act perpetuates electoral misconduct because transgressions
thrive whenever or wherever offenders are allowed to go unpunished. Any
meaningful electoral reform, therefore, should accommodate the
establishment of an Electoral Offences Tribunal and, if necessary, the
establishment of an Electoral Offences Commission independent of INEC
with powers to monitor, investigate and to prosecute electoral
offenders. In any case, critical review of the Electoral Act is required
to expunge the sections that hamstring the procedure for prosecuting
offenders as well as those sections that reward offenders with statutory
protection and unearned immunity. Unless the Act enables us to go beyond
the essential but purely civil matter of restitution of stolen mandates
to sanction monitoring and punishment of offenders, the cycle of
electoral disorder and impunity may never be broken.
By Uche Ohia
uchebush@yahoo.com;
0805 1090 050