INEC seeks peace committee’s intervention to reduce violence
INEC seeks peace committee’s intervention to reduce violence
From Romanus Ugwu, Abuja
Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, has appealed for the intervention of the General Abdulsalam Abubakar-led National Peace Committee (NPC) in mitigating electoral violence in the country.
He also pleaded with it to engage actors and stakeholders in the political space early enough to minimize incidences of electoral violence in the 2023 general election.
Yakubu made the appeal when he received a delegation from the Committee alongside representatives from the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs and Kofi Annan Foundation, led by the Head of the NPC Secretariat, Rev. Father Atta Barkindo, who represented Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, at the INEC headquarters, yesterday.
Appreciating the contribution of the Committee to peaceful elections through the Peace Accord initiative introduced in 2015, Yakubu noted: “Nations are lucky when they have moral voices, that their authority does not draw from statutory provisions, it exists purely from moral persuasion, and people listen.That is why I think it is a big plus for us as a nation to have a national peace committee and the calibre of people involved in the National Peace Committee. One of the things that the Peace Committee can help us do in terms of mitigating security challenges is early engagement with some of the actors.
“Not just signing the peace accord on the eve of elections, but imagine that some of those who perpetrate violence on election day are not necessarily candidates in the election, but are people engaged by beneficiaries of the election. So if we can engage with the actors early enough, I hope that we will be able to turn a new leaf in that respect,” he appealed.
Recalling its impact on peaceful conduct of political actors, and how the NPC started in 2015, the INEC Chairman said: “when they started in 2015, it is a very good initiative supported by not just people in Nigeria but also by people from so many countries around the world, including the late Kofi Annan himself, he was here for the signing of the peace accord in 2015.
“We thought that we should replicate it in the 2019 general election and we did. We then started a discussion to see if we can devolve the Peace Accord.”