The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says registered voters have up till end of January 2015 to pick up their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).
Kayode Idowu, the chief press secretary to Attahiru Jega, the chairman of INEC, told NAN that the desperation and agitation being expressed by some people over the distribution of PVCs were unnecessary.
He said that the distribution at the polling units was not the end of the exercise.
“People tend to forget that if the distribution ends today, it does not mean it is the last opportunity people have to collect their cards,” he said.
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“The opportunity remains the end of January 2015 for them to pick it up at the local government offices of the commission. Where most people must have collected at the polling units, the few that are left will now have the opportunity to pick it up at their continent. This process has in-built mechanism to cater for everybody and people should have that in mind.”
Idowu said that the commission also acknowledged the various challenges in the distribution of voter cards in some states, saying that was why the commission granted bracket extension in some states.
“If you recall, the exercise was supposed to end on Sunday but was extended to Monday in Lagos, Ogun and Kano,” he said.
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“There is now a case-by-case appraisal and that is why the exercise is already being extended till Tuesday in Mushin local government area in Lagos. This case-by-case appraisal is ongoing.”
Idowu said that the experienced challenges in the distribution of cards, including data lost, were not peculiar to any state.
He explained that the issue of data losses might arise from disk crashes or defective data losses – when less than two fingers print of a registered voter was not captured.
“We have had data losses in most states across the country and our response to data losses or defective data losses have been proactive,” he said.
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“We said that if PVC will be of any use, there is an embedded chip inside it; if somebody record does not have the finger print, there is no point of printing the card.
“At the same time, we don’t say that you don’t have opportunity to vote; what we have been doing is to say come out to reregister when we are doing Continuous Voter Registration (CVR).”
Idowu said that in Lagos, the commission had about 1,700 polling units that were affected, saying it had taken necessary steps.
He advised voters who had not collected their PVC to visit INEC local government offices to retrieve them. However, he said CVR could not be opened till the election time for logistic reasons.
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1 comments
This guy doesnt knw what he’s talking about. benue, makurdi in particular, l couldnt collect mine at the polling boot, it’s after my third attempt i got it. some persons who were not as lucky as i was, vowed they’d go collect it again. the inec staff are frustrating people. eg the first day i went, i was told my ward was scheduld to collect theirs on tues, i went there the following just to discover the office under lock and key, having enquired frm the mechanics in front of the office, i was told these dont come to office on tuesday! i went there on wed. only two of us were there at the time but the official told me my ward was yesday. i explaind my ugly experience and he reluctantly collected my tempo id, within two mins he returnd with my pv card. we think these are working in tandem with some politicians to frustrate frm collecting their pvc.