The group also pointed out that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) brazenly violated the Electoral Act of 2022, violated its own guidelines, and lied to the Nigerian people when it promised on national television that it must transmit the election results from the polling units to the servers in real time, but failed to do so. The group called for the arrest and prosecution of its Chairman, Professor Mahmoud Yakubu and all the officials found to have participated in the fraudulent elections.
The communiqué also stressed: “That the Nigerian Supreme Court, the Nigerian Government, and all of its security agencies including DSS, refrain from hastily swearing in or facilitating the swearing-in of any of the 2023 presidential candidates until their exhaustion of all available remedies, including any appeals to a Sub-Regional, Regional, and\ or applicable international entities. This includes the ECOWAS, AU, and UN entities.
“Alternatively, given the widespread discontent and rejection of electoral process by Nigerians at home and abroad, the Nigeria Supreme Court is urged to rely on the ‘political question doctrine’, to restrain itself from the polarising nature of its decision regarding the 2023 Presidential Elections, and order INEC to conduct a fresh election, which complies with the requirement of the Nigerian Constitution, the 2022 Electoral Act as amended, and INEC’s own guidelines.”
The communiqué urged the US to withhold any recognition of an incoming Nigerian government until the Supreme Court has thoroughly and transparently examined the 2023 election process and ruled definitively on the results of the elections in the same manner as the U.S. Government did with the 2022 elections in Kenya.
It further noted that the Nigerian police must be unbundled and decentralised in order to effectively maintain law and order across the entire country. A single police system, it emphasised, “has become archaic and inadequate to effectively and adequately police a country as populous as Nigeria and with an expansive land mass. There should be a four-tier police system in Nigeria, namely, zonal, or regional police, state police.”
It urged Nigerians to put aside partisan, ethnic, and religious divisions and work jointly in the struggle to achieve the rule of law and good governance for the good of all the people of Nigeria.
Source: Twitter.
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