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INEC pushes back as opposition rejects S’West voter figures

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Two opposition political parties, the African Democratic Congress and the Labour Party have queried the authenticity of the claim by the Independent National Electoral Commission that the South-West accounted for the highest percentage of the pre-registration numbers in its ongoing Continuous Voter Registration exercise.

The electoral umpire, however, dismissed the claims as unfounded, noting it was based on a lack of historical understanding of past voter registration trends.

The ADC in a statement issued on Thursday by its Acting National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, had questioned the registration process in the South West, stressing that the figures from Osun State in particular contradict both historical trends and demographic realities.

According to INEC’s figures, Osun State recorded nearly 400,000 new registered voters, a claim faulted by the ADC which called for a forensic audit of the figures.

“The African Democratic Congress has viewed the first set of data released by the Independent National Electoral Commission on new Continuous Voter registrations with great concern.

“According to INEC’s figures, Osun State alone recorded 393,269 pre-registrations in just one week. To put this in context, Osun added only 275,815 new voters between 2019 and 2023, a period of four years. In other words, Osun has now supposedly registered more people in seven days than it managed to do in an entire electoral cycle of four years.

“Even at its highest point of political mobilisation in 2022, Osun has never produced more than 823,124 votes cast in the Governorship Election. Now, by some miracle, nearly 20 percent of all eligible adults in the state have rushed to register. This is not just unusual, it is statistically implausible.

“The anomalies become even more glaring when viewed in the context of the overall registration report. Across the six geopolitical zones, the South West alone accounts for 848,359 pre-registrations, an astonishing 67 per cent of the national total. By contrast, the entire South East recorded just 1,998 pre-registrations.

“To further illustrate, three states Osun, Lagos, and Ogun make up 54.2 per cent of all pre-registrations in Nigeria, while five states combined Ebonyi, Imo, Enugu, Abia, and Adamawa barely recorded 4,153, or 0.2 per cent, while the entire North East recorded just 6.1 per cent,” the ADC statement read in part.

Speaking in a telephone interview with The PUNCH, the Interim National Publicity Secretary of the Labour Party, Tony Akeni urged Nigerians to be vigilant, saying the claim by INEC should not be taken lightly.

He said, “We are tired of INEC’s shenanigans. Even their claims of having registered prison inmates is an open fraud. They are just giving us advance notice that the forthcoming elections would be as fraudulent or more fraudulent than the past. Nigerians should be vigilant as they go out to register so that we will not see names like Michael Jackson and Donald Trump in our voter register in 2027.”

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But  the All Progressives Grand Alliance dismissed ADC’s reaction to the South-West figures, noting that the David Mark-led party was simply being alarmist.

Speaking with our correspondent, the National Publicity Secretary of the party, Ejimofor Opara said the credibility of INEC is not in doubt.

He said, “Figures don’t lie. To what extent has the ADC gone to mobilise their members to register across the states of the federation? If the data is showing that there are more newly registered voters  in the South-West than any other geo-political zone, the much we can say is that we don’t have the data with us.

“If we see the data, we can interrogate it. If the body responsible for the registration exercise is saying based on the data available to them, the South-West has more voters in the CVR going on, then, that is what it is. There is a need for circumspection.

“INEC credibility is not in doubt. We believe they will do the right thing by carrying everyone along and capturing them in the process. ADC is just being alarmist. We are mobilising our members to go and register. At the end of the day, the data will speak for itself.”

Reacting to the PVC  figure, the Osun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party said it could be an indication of the people’s readiness for the coming governorship poll in the state.

The All Progressives Congress on the other hand noted that only the Independent National Electoral Commission could explain how it came about the figures recorded by the state.

The two parties stated these in separate responses to the alarm raised by the ADC regarding Osun’s figures in the CVR exercise.

The Osun APC spokesperson, Mr Kola Olabisi, said since no other organisation can be responsible for the voter registration, the party should not have been asked questions about the figures.

“I want to believe that another person cannot be doing INEC’s work. If there is a proper query, let it be brought up so that people will know that some people are not acting as meddlesome interlopers,” Olabisi said.

Also in reaction to ADC, Osun PDP spokesperson, Oladele Bamiji, said the party would investigate the figures.

He said, “We are all alarmed like any other political party and persons on how INEC came up with the figure, but what we can only say is that the people of Osun are really up for the election. But that is not to say that the figure is not alarming. We are also putting heads together to see what happened.

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“We have our ways of monitoring our people who have not registered before but are registering now. Those who are of voting age and our supporters who are now registering.”

Meanwhile, INEC in a statement issued Thursday by the Chief Press Secretary to the INEC Chairman, Rotimi Oyekanmi, stated, “The attention of the Independent National Electoral Commission  has been drawn to a press statement attributed to the spokesperson of a political party on the data published by the Commission on the online pre-registration of voters.

“In particular, the statement claimed that the number of pre-registrants in Osun State defies “historical patterns and demographic realities.” Nothing can be further from the truth,” the statement read.

INEC reiterated that its online pre-registration portal was launched on August 18, 2025, with in-person registration following on August 25.

Within the first week, 1,379,342 Nigerians had pre-registered online. Osun State recorded the highest number of registrants at 393,269, followed by Lagos State with 222,205, and the Federal Capital Territory with 107,682.

According to Oyekanmi, the current figures are consistent with data from INEC’s 2021 online registration exercise. He noted that within the first 24 hours of the portal’s launch on June 28, 2021, over 59,000 accounts were created.

‘’By the second week, Osun had 154,893 pre-registrants. That figure grew to 232,880 by the third week and 402,619 by the eleventh week. As of April 18, 2022, Osun led all states with 708,782 completed pre-registrations.

“With regard to Osun State, the pattern is similar to what occurred in June 2021 when the Commission launched the online pre-registration for the first time. Within the first 24 hours of launching the portal on 28th June 2021, 59,331 accounts were created.

“By the second week on 12th July 2021, a total of 456,909 accounts were active. Interestingly, Osun state led with 154,893 pre-registrations at the time. In the third week, 752,011 persons had pre-registered and Osun State was at the front with 232,880.

“By the eighth week on 23rd August 2021, 2,215,832 persons had pre-registered with Osun State still leading with 365,412. In the 11th week of the exercise on 13th September 2021, 2,953,094 individuals had pre-registered, with Osun State still in the lead with 402,619. By 18th April 2022, a total of 8,271,647 Nigerians had pre-registered, and Osun was ahead of all States with 708,782 registrations.

“If the party were proactive enough, a simple search of past records already in the public domain would have revealed these facts. The Commission was upfront during the last CVR exercise by releasing the data on a weekly basis, until it was concluded in 2022. Besides, all persons who pre-registered online were required to physically visit a designated centre to complete their registration process during which their biometrics were captured,” Oyekanmi explained.

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He stressed that INEC has always maintained transparency by publishing weekly updates throughout the 2021/2022 Continuous Voter Registration exercise.

The CPS also clarified that online registrants are still required to complete their registration in person, where biometric data is collected to verify identity and prevent double registration.

“Throughout the last CVR exercise which lasted over four quarters, the commission paused after each quarter to display the preliminary voters’ register for claims and objections, to enable citizens draw attention to any individual not qualified to be on the register.

“At the same time, the Commission applied its robust Automated Biometric Identification System to detect and isolate double registrants,” the statement added.

Oyekanmi highlighted that after the due diligence carried out in the 2019 and 2023 general elections, over 14 million and 9.4 million new voters were added to the National Register, respectively — bringing the total number of registered voters in 2023 to 93,469,008.

“Throughout the last CVR exercise which lasted over four quarters, the Commission paused after each quarter to display the preliminary voters’ register for claims and objections, to enable citizens draw attention to any individual not qualified to be on the register.

“At the same time, the Commission applied its robust Automated Biometric Identification System to detect and isolate double registrants.

“After all the processes and due diligence, over 14 million Nigerians were added to the National Register of Voters for the 2019 General Election, pushing the figure from almost 70 million to 84,004,084 voters. In the same manner, after the 2021/2022 CVR, over 9.4 million new voters were added to the Register, totalling 93,469,008 for the 2023 General Election,” he noted,” the statement read.

INEC assured the public that it will continue to publish timely updates on the ongoing voter registration process and advised against the spread of misinformation.

The CPS added, “While it is not in the commission’s place to develop conjectures on why any state has more registrants than others on our CVR portal, our duty as a commission, which we take seriously, is to ensure that only real persons, who meet the criteria stipulated in the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Electoral Act 2022 are allowed to register.

“The commission will continue to make information available to the public on the progress of the current online and in-person CVR.

“We appeal to all well-meaning citizens to be circumspect in going public with information based on sheer conjecture when they can rely on authentic and verifiable data available from our official repositories for both ongoing and historical record of our activities.”

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‘Revenue doubled, debt hit N200tn’ — Peter Obi demands answers from Tinubu govt

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Mr Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress, NDC, and former governor of Anambra State, has questioned the Federal Government’s borrowing pattern, arguing that the sharp increase in national revenue under President Bola Tinubu’s administration has not translated into improved living conditions for Nigerians.

The remarks were contained in a statement posted on Obi’s official page while reacting to the President’s recent account of his administration’s performance after three years in office.

According to Obi, President Tinubu listed the increase in government revenue from N16.8 trillion in 2022 to N35 trillion in 2025 as one of the administration’s major achievements.

Obi argued that despite the reported increase in revenue, the country’s debt profile had continued to rise.

“Shockingly, while Nigerians expected a reduction in borrowing with the exponential increase in revenue, the opposite is the case,” Obi stated.

According to him, Nigeria’s total public debt has risen to about N200 trillion, representing an increase of over N100 trillion within the last three years.

Obi also argued that the country earned more than projected budget revenues during the period due to global and regional economic developments that affected commodity prices and government earnings.

Obi also alleged that key socio-economic indicators had worsened during the same period.

“Alarmingly, even with the astronomical increase in both revenue and debt, almost all key socio-economic and governance indicators are worse than in 2023,” he said.

Obi cited rising multidimensional poverty, unemployment and a decline in gross domestic product, GDP, per capita as areas of concern.

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According to him, multidimensional poverty increased from about 87 million people in 2023 to more than 140 million people in 2025.

“The question Nigerians and even the international community are asking is, ‘Where did all the money go?’” Obi stated.

He called for greater transparency and accountability in the management of public resources, urging the government to provide Nigerians with a detailed explanation of how revenues and borrowed funds have been utilised since 2023.

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Tinubu approves N10bn funding for emergency response to Ebola

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President Bola Tinubu has established a Presidential Task Force on Ebola Virus Disease Preparedness and approved the immediate release of N10bn in emergency intervention funding.

This follows the rapidly expanding outbreak that has already killed at least 349 people across the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, with the World Health Organisation declaring it a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, said the task force would be chaired by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, with membership drawn from relevant ministries, departments and agencies and state representatives.

The N10bn, Onanuga said, will strengthen the operational preparedness of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention and support critical national public health emergency response activities.

The task force was constituted following a stakeholder meeting convened by Gbajabiamila to review Nigeria’s preparedness.

It was attended by representatives from the Ministry of Interior, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, the Nigeria Immigration Service, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority and the Lagos State Government, among others.

According to Onanuga, Tinubu directed the “intensification of passenger screening at all international airports, including enhanced temperature checks and crowd-control protocols, and enhanced monitoring of passengers arriving on high-risk airline routes, including Air Uganda, RwandAir, Air Tanzania, Air Angola, Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airlines, all carriers with direct or connecting services from the affected region.”

He ordered the immediate activation of referral and isolation centres at Lagos and Abuja international airports, with other airports to follow, and the mandatory activation of QR code-based pre-arrival health declaration systems for passengers originating from or transiting through designated high-risk countries.

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The President also directed the disinfection of departure halls, cargo areas, baggage sections and airport facilities as precautionary environmental measures.

Tinubu directed the task force to designate specific airports or terminals for high-risk flights to enable controlled screening and isolation procedures, and to consider adjusting flight timings to minimise interaction between high-risk passengers and other travellers.

He also mandated the group to consult with security, diplomatic and aviation bodies on the possibility of regulating flights from affected and high-risk countries.

The President directed all states hosting international airports and international border corridors, as well as relevant MDAs, to immediately submit their plans, funding requirements and intervention needs for coordinated implementation.

The current outbreak, caused by the Bundibugyo virus, a species of Ebola, was first confirmed in DRC’s Ituri Province on May 15, 2026, and rapidly spread to Uganda after a case was confirmed in Kampala.

As of June 7, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control reported 515 confirmed cases and 91 confirmed deaths, with 283 individuals in isolation.

By May 29, the total suspected case count had risen to 1,037 with 349 deaths.

Unlike earlier-known Ebola strains, there is no licensed vaccine or specific therapeutic agent against the Bundibugyo virus, though early supportive care has been shown to be lifesaving.

Case fatality rates in previous Bundibugyo outbreaks ranged from 30 to 50 per cent.

In 2014, during the West African Ebola epidemic, Nigeria recorded 20 confirmed cases and eight deaths after a Liberian-American diplomat, Patrick Sawyer, arrived at Lagos’s Murtala Muhammed International Airport infected.

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June 12: Atiku backed rotational presidency deal, insists Akume

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The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, has said former Vice President Atiku Abubakar was among political leaders who supported the adoption of rotational presidency in Nigeria following the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election.

Atiku Abubakar
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar

According to the SGF, the annulment of the June 12 election, won by the late Chief MKO Abiola, prompted political leaders to take difficult decisions aimed at preserving national unity and strengthening democracy.

A statement by his Media Aide, Yomi Odunuga, said Akume made the clarification on Tuesday while responding to questions at a World Press Conference in Abuja, as part of activities marking Nigeria’s 27th Democracy Day anniversary.

He recalled that leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party met in Kaduna under the leadership of the late Chief Solomon Lar and Alhaji Adamu Ciroma to deliberate on the country’s political future, with the issue of power rotation featuring prominently.

“It was a tough argument before the issue of rotational presidency was agreed on. At the end, we had to concede. We must do this.

“June 12 annulment had complicated the whole thing. It was finally agreed that we’ll be alternating between North and South.

“Atiku was one of the leaders at that meeting, which was convened by Chief Solomon Lar. He was part of that agreement,” Akume was quoted as saying.

The SGF explained that the decision to alternate presidential power between the North and South was designed to address the political consequences of the annulled election and promote inclusiveness and national cohesion.

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Akume’s remarks come amid ongoing political debates over power rotation ahead of the 2027 general election.

Atiku, a northerner and the presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress for the 2027 election, is expected to challenge incumbent President Bola Tinubu, who is seeking a second term in office.

Tinubu, a southerner, was elected President in 2023 following the completion of the constitutionally permitted two-term tenure of the late President Muhammadu Buhari, a northerner.

Atiku has been criticised by political rivals and the Presidency for running for the highest office and maintaining future presidential ambitions during election cycles when political consensus favours power rotation to the South.

Reflecting on the significance of June 12, the SGF described the annulment as a painful setback to the democratic aspirations of Nigerians.

“Abiola won that election round and square. That election was annulled by the military government. It was very painful because the people spoke, and they spoke freely. They made their own choice,” he said.

According to him, one of the major lessons from the June 12 experience is the supremacy of the people’s will in a democratic system.

“The first lesson is that the voice of the people must always be supreme; it must be sacrosanct. That’s the beauty of democracy. We prefer the ballot to bullets,” he stated.

Akume expressed confidence in Nigeria’s democratic institutions, particularly the Independent National Electoral Commission, saying the country had learned from the events of 1993 and would never allow a repeat of such an annulment.

“If an election is conducted very fairly, and one wins, no problem. The actors at the Independent National Electoral Commission are not young people; they were adults when this thing happened.

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“If we were to take a poll at that time, over two-thirds of Nigerians would have condemned that act of annulment,” he said.

The SGF further commended INEC officials, describing them as men and women of integrity committed to protecting the nation’s democratic process.

“Fortunately for us, those at INEC are men of honour and integrity. They are well-read, patriotic Nigerians, and they are determined to make a difference. Never again would such happen in this country.

“You win, you win. When you lose, go back and prepare for another election. Look at the American example. President Trump lost to Joe Biden. He didn’t bring America down. He went back, prepared and came back and won. That’s the beauty of democracy,” Akume said.

He noted that Nigeria’s 27 years of uninterrupted democratic rule reflected the country’s commitment to democratic governance and freedom.

“We have decided to embrace democracy. That is why, for 27 unbroken years, we have been enjoying this freedom in a democratic setting. We love the values and the morals of democracy, and there is no system that is as beautiful as democracy,” he said.

Akume also highlighted freedom of expression as one of the key benefits of democratic rule.

“It is under a democratic system that you can insult your president and insult anybody and still go to bed, and you don’t receive a midnight knock on your door. Try it under a totalitarian regime,” he stated.

The SGF urged political actors to embrace democratic principles, respect electoral outcomes and continue to strengthen the nation’s democratic culture.

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He added that Nigeria’s 27 years of uninterrupted democracy underscored its commitment to the rule of law, freedom of expression and peaceful political participation.

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