The President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists
President and Council Members of the NIPR
The Executive Director of the International Press Centre
Media Executives and Heads of Various Media Organisations
Editors and Senior Journalists
National Commissioners of INEC
Other Senior Officials of the Commission
The Chairman and Members of the INEC Press Corps
Ladies and Gentlemen
1. On behalf of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), it is my pleasure to welcome you all to our first regular quarterly consultative meeting for the year 2025. It is therefore appropriate to start by wishing you a happy new year.
2. On this happy note, let me also welcome the new President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists, Comrade Alhassan Yahaya. Your election at the 8th Triennial National Delegates Conference held in Owerri on 27th November 2024 came about four weeks after our last consultative meeting with the media held on Friday 1st November 2024. As I welcome you to this meeting, I would like to pay tribute to your immediate predecessor, Comrade Chris Isiguzo, not only for his able leadership of the Union but for his proven commitment to the electoral and democratic process in Nigeria. We are confident that under your leadership, you will continue to extend the same support to the Commission.
3. For our part, I would like to assure you that our partnership with the Union in particular, and the media as a critical stakeholder in the electoral process in general, will be sustained in the best interest of our electoral democracy as has been demonstrated time and again. You may recall that 114 accredited media organisations deployed 721 personnel to cover the recent off-cycle Governorship Election in Edo State while 112 organisations deployed over 700 staff for the Ondo State Governorship Election. We look forward to the same partnership and support in all our forthcoming elections and electoral activities.
4. Already, the Commission has released the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for the Anambra State Governorship election to be held on 8th November 2025. Party primaries begin next month. Political parties interested in fielding candidates for the election shall commence their primaries on 20th March 2025 and end three weeks later on 10th April 2025. At the appropriate time, the Commission will release the details for interested media organisations to apply for accreditation through the online portal which all of you are now familiar with. The Commission’s preparations for the election is on the agenda for this meeting. Meanwhile, hardcopies of the Timetable and Schedule of Activities are included in your folders for this meeting. The softcopy has been uploaded to our website.
5. Similarly, the Commission has released the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for the Area Council election in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) holding on 21st February 2026. However, most of the major activities for the election will be held this year, including party primaries and the nomination of candidates for the 68 constituencies made up of six Area Council Chairmen and 62 Councillors scheduled to hold from 9th – 30th June 2025. Our preparations for the election is on the agenda for this meeting. Hardcopies of the Timetable and Schedule of Activities as well as the list of constituencies are included in your folders while the softcopies have been uploaded to our website.
6. In addition to the end-of-tenure elections, there is an increasing number of bye-elections to be conducted. In the last three weeks alone, vacancies have occurred in one Federal Constituency and two State Constituencies caused by the death of serving members. In another State Constituency, the State Assembly declared the seat vacant as a result of absenteeism, following the prolonged absence of the member from sittings of the House in violation of Section 109(1)[f] of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended). The matter of pending bye-elections is also on the agenda for this meeting.
7. I want to reassure you of our commitment to continuously improve on the electoral process. Every election or electoral activity presents its own unique challenge and an opportunity to learn lessons for improvement. The recent Ondo State Governorship election has been widely acknowledged to be an improvement especially in the management of logistics and performance of election technology. We will strive harder to ensure the continuous improvement of our elections. However, being a multi-stakeholder responsibility, we appeal for the continuous support of all and sundry, especially in critical areas of reform.
8. One of these areas of reform is the prosecution of electoral offenders. Judicial and legislative action in the last few days underscore our effort to deal with offences involving officials of the Commission assigned to carry out designated responsibilities. However, it also highlights the challenges we face in dealing with electoral offences. The recent successful prosecution of a Returning Officer in Akwa Ibom State is a case in point. The Commission has been diligently pursuing the case which arose from the 2019 General Election. In this particular case, it took nearly six years to achieve the successful prosecution at the trial court. Through our collaboration with the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) cases involving 774 alleged offenders from the 2023 General Election are being prosecuted. So far, successful prosecutions have been recorded in Kebbi and Kogi States while our collaboration with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on vote-buying has yielded similar results in Lagos, Kwara and Gombe States. Yet, many cases are still pending.
9. A major obstacle to the speedy dispensation of justice in this regard is that electoral offences are not time-bound as is the case with post-election offences through the tribunals. Furthermore, they are solely prosecuted by the Magistrate and State High Courts in the jurisdiction where the alleged offences are committed. No priority attention is given to such cases as the courts deal with a variety of other cases. Consequently, electoral offences are carried over from one General Election to another which may sometimes affect the diligent prosecution of the cases. It is therefore imperative to renew our call for the creation of the Electoral Offences Tribunal that have a specific jurisdiction and limited timeframe for the speedy dispensation of cases. I urge the media to join in this patriotic advocacy for the good of our electoral democracy.
10. Once again, I welcome you to this meeting. I thank you and God bless.