Politics

Atiku Vs Buhari: Why INEC Is Hiding E-Collated Results And Refusing To Call Witnesses

The news today, Monday 29th July, 2019, that the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC, failed to call witnesses to counter claims of misdemeanour against the commission by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its presidential candidate in the February 23 presidential poll Atiku Abubakar, must have come as a rude shock to all Nigerians seeking to know the truth in the ServerGate controversy.

The electoral body who is the first Respondent was supposed to call its witnesses, Monday 29th but rather announced to the court that the commission does not have any witness/evidence to present and would rather rely on the proceedings at the tribunal as its defence. In what looks like a dramatic turnaround, INEC chickened out at the hearing of the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal (PEPT).

Now, INEC is the main culprit, they announced Buhari as winner and yet have no witnesses, no forms nor backend data to tender? Is this not curious?

Glaringly, the commission has no one to confirm its denial of the existence of a backend server used in its electronic collation of results. This is an obvious sign that the commission is overwhelmed by the convincing evidence/testimonies of witnesses presented by Atiku and the PDP.

INEC should be meant to understand that opting to respond to the allegations and issues raised and established by the petitioners just by written addresses simply to avoid cross examination, is at best being clever by half and the PEPT should not allow this because it’s not only dubious, it is equally criminal as the people of Nigeria deserve to know what transpired and how INEC arrived at the decision to announce Buhari as winner of the poll.

The public is aware that contrary to what INEC would want Nigerians believe, data forensic experts at the PEPT were able to successfully establish that figures being bandied around by the commission for the February presidential poll defies mathematical and statistical logic mostly in the southern region of the country due to electoral manipulation.

The data shows that the election was heavily manipulated in the Southern part of Nigeria. A turnout ratio that is less than 29.5 percent for the Southern part of Nigeria is not statistically possible. Even the North East that is battling with insurgencies and humanitarian crisis has a turnout that is above 60 percent. So whosoever orchestrated the manipulation of the election results actually did it clinically to confuse future investigation.

From the INEC data as obtained from the commission’s server, the PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar won in the South with a margin of 3.2 million. The winning margin would have been more if votes from Rivers state were available. In the North we had (Atiku-9.23 m, Buhari-10.68) showing that President Buhari won in the North with a margin of 1.45 million votes.

Total accreditation for the presidential election was 37.6 million; Total voided votes were 1.23 million and; Total votes cast – 36.4 million.

A total of 8.68 million votes were depleted from the votes of both Buhari and Atiku nationwide but with Atiku Abubakar being the NETT loser of 7.09 million votes.

The unlawful depletion of votes is the reason why the election conducted by INEC defies statistical and mathematical rationality.

Probing the entire Southwest, Southeast, and South south presidential results, it was glaring from the INEC data that while PVC collection went up by 34.4 percent (24.18m – 32.49m), total votes in the Southern part of Nigeria declined by 23.4 percent (from 12m to 9.19m). On the other hand, the e-collated result shows a positive relationship between PVC collection and total votes in the Southern part of Nigeria. PVC collection went up by 34.4 percent and total votes in the Southern part of Nigeria grew by 26.6 percent (from 12m to 15.2m).

For the 19 northern states and FCT, while PVC collection went up by 25.6 percent (32m – 40.2m), total votes in the region increased marginally by 6 percent (from 16.2m to 17.2m). On the other hand, the e-collated result shows a positive relationship between PVC collection and total votes in the Northern part of Nigeria. PVC collection went up by 25.6 percent and total votes in the region grew by 22.7 percent (from 16.22m to 19.91m).

Statistics for the entire nation (36 states and FCT) show that PVC collection went up by 29 percent while changes in marginal votes went down by 2.8 percent (manual collation) and for electronic collation, changes in marginal votes increased up by 23.8 percent.

Logically, a significant increase in PVC collection ought to translate into an increase in voters’ turnout or total votes cast. Therefore, the e-collated result proves a fact that the 2019 election was manipulated.

The authentic result that should have been declared by INEC would have had Atiku/PDP with 18.35 million votes as the winner while President Buhari/APC with 16.7 million votes as the first runner up. The other presidential candidates cumulatively garnered 1.3 million votes.

It is now understandable why some people love to argue that the Nigerian constitution does not recognise e-voting. They are only trying to be clever by half because it is only someone with dubious intentions that would prefer the manually collated result without audit re-confirmation.

Yes the constitution does not recognise e-voting but e-collation and e-transmission are simply known as process automation. An organisation does not need constitutional amendments to automate their tasks, procedures and processes.

So it is very clear that the February 23, 2019 Nigerian Presidential poll was rigged. The PDP candidate Atiku Abubakar clearly won the election but INEC has continued to deny him the stolen mandate but there is no level of intimidation or propaganda overdrive that can deny the obvious. God bless Nigeria!

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