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Atiku Knocks Senate For Rejecting Electronic Transmission Of Election Results

By Sunday Etuka

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, has berated the Nigerian Senate for rejecting the real-time electronic transmission of election results.

Atiku, in a post on his X handle on Thursday, described the Senate decision as a deliberate assault on electoral transparency.

Noting that the ill-advised action represents a grave setback for electoral reform and a calculated blow against transparency, credibility, and public trust in Nigeria’s democratic process.

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The Ex-VP said at a time when democracies across the world are strengthening their electoral systems through technology, the Nigerian Senate has chosen to cling to opacity, protect loopholes, and preserve a system that has historically enabled manipulation, tampering, and post-election disputes.

He averred that real-time electronic transmission of results is not a partisan demand but a democratic safeguard which reduces human interference, limits result manipulation, and ensures that the will of the voter, expressed at the polling unit, is faithfully reflected in the final outcome.

“To reject it, and adopt what is obviously a face-saving provision of the 2022 Act on electronic transmission of results is to signal an unwillingness to submit elections to public scrutiny.

“This decision raises troubling questions about the commitment of the ruling political establishment to free, fair, and credible elections in 2027.

“Nigerians cannot ignore the pattern: every reform that strengthens transparency is resisted, while every ambiguity that benefits incumbency is preserved,” the Politician submitted.

He said he has consistently maintained that democracy must evolve with time, technology, and the legitimate expectations of the people.

Adding: “elections must be decided by voters, not by manual delays, backroom alterations, procedural excuses or even by the courts, which section is shamelessly standing on the mandate of the incumbent.”

He called on Nigerians, civil society organizations, the media, and the international community to take note of this regression and to continue demanding an electoral system that reflects modern democratic standards.

“Nigeria deserves elections that are transparent, verifiable, and beyond manipulation. Anything less is an injustice to the electorate and a betrayal of democracy,” he concluded.

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