Don’t truncate electoral process, FG tells Obasanjo

Don’t truncate electoral process, FG tells Obasanjo

The federal government has urged former President Olusegun Obasanjo not to shorten the 2023 general election in a inflammatory, selfish and provocative letter about the election.

Former President Obasanjo masquerades as an unbiased and concerned senior politician, but in reality he is a well-known partisan bent on a ruse to sabotage the elections of millions of Nigerian voters. He claimed there was.

The minister expressed shock and disbelief that the former president may have launched unverified claims and intensified his wild accusations of the electoral process.

Rai Mohammed, the former president who organized perhaps the worst elections since Nigeria returned to democratic rule in 1999, advises a president determined to bring about a free, fair, credible and credible legacy. I remembered that I was the least qualified to do so. Inside and outside Nigeria.

He said: “While the entire country waits with bated breath for the results of last Saturday’s national elections, amid unnecessary tension created by professional complainers and political fools. As a soothing balm, the words and actions of self-respecting elders are expected to relieve tension and serve.

“Instead, former President Obasanjo used his unsolicited letters to hint, or perhaps even hope, for decisive elections and a descent into anarchy. Using his time to smear election officials who can’t defend themselves while trying to covertly masquerade as a private election. That’s duplicitous,” he added.

Organizing elections in Nigeria is no easy task given that the country’s electoral population of 93,469,008 is 16,742,916 more than the total number of registered voters, or 76,726,092, in 14 West African countries combined, the minister said. I reminded the former president that organizing elections in Nigeria is no easy task considering the country’s electoral population of 93,469,008 is 16,742,916 more than the total number of registered voters of 76,726,092 in 14 West African countries.

According to him, “with the deployment of more than 1,265,227 election officials, the introduction of technology to improve the election process, and the logistical nightmare of delivering election materials to our vast regions,
The country, INEC, appears to have made good use of tracking preliminary reports from ECOWAS Election Observers and Federal Observer Groups, among other groups that monitored the election.

“Thus, those who usurp the power to cancel elections and plan new elections unilaterally exercise self-restraint, ostensibly to ameliorate electoral irregularities, to ensure that the official electoral body cannot determine the results of the National Council elections. 2023.

“Then, rather than threatening fire or apocalypse, any victim must follow the prescribed court process established to resolve election disputes.”


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