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Election

INEC to meet NCC, telcos Tuesday over poor network

 

The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Mahmood Yakubu, says the commission is set to transmit the 2023 poll results in real-time from 176,846 polling units across the country.

As such, he said the commission as part of its preparations has identified telecommunications “blind spots” in some areas and was already in touch with the Nigerian Communications Commission with a view to finding a solution to them.

According to him, the commission has conducted a successful pilot on e-transmission of poll results in real-time, adding that the agency is set to achieve a seamless transmission of poll results across the country in 2023.

Yakubu, who made this known at a strategic interactive meeting with journalists in Lagos on Friday, spoke against the backdrop of concerns in some quarters over the readiness of the country for e-transmission of poll results in real-time.

The ruling All Progressives Congress had recently raised doubts about whether the commission could transmit poll results in areas with poor network coverage and epileptic power supply.

However, the INEC chair during his speech said the commission was already in touch with the Nigerian Telecommunications Commission to address the situation around some telecommunication blind spots in the county.

Having transmitted poll results of off-cycle and bye-elections for 105 constituencies since 2020 without any hitches, Yakubu said the commission was already positioned to achieve the same feat in the 2023 general elections.

To ensure that INEC has adequate access to connectivity for the polls, Yakubu said the agency would on Tuesday meet with the NCC and the chief executives of the four Global Satellite Mobile network operators in the country.

The commission chair also explained that INEC auditors had audited the accounts of political parties for the past years, assuring that the results would be made known very soon.

On whether the agency is ready for a possible presidential poll run-off, the INEC chair said the commission had included such possibilities in its plan.

He said the Central Bank of Nigeria would still handle the ballot papers and results sheets, which the commission would print.

“They (CBN) don’t print for us. They only take custody. But the BVAS will entirely be in the hands of the commission. All the stakeholders agreed we should proceed,” Yakubu said.

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