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15/11/2025
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15/11/2025
HOW INEC FAILED NIGERIA AND THE PATH TO REGAINING TRUST
Once upon a time, Nigeria stood on the threshold of hope. Each election season came with promises of a better tomorrow — a chance for the people's voice to shape their nation. The Independent National Electoral Commission, better known as INEC, was created to guard that hope. It was meant to be the referee in Nigeria’s democratic game, ensuring fairness, transparency, and credibility.
But over the years, something went wrong.
THE FAILURE BEGINS
The story of INEC’s failure is not about one election, one leader, or one mistake. It is about a pattern — a gradual loss of public confidence born from inconsistency, corruption, and poor accountability.
During many elections, Nigerians waited in long lines under the hot sun, only to find that voting materials arrived late or never came at all. In some areas, the BVAS machines meant to bring transparency mysteriously malfunctioned. In others, results were altered, uploaded inconsistently, or delayed for suspicious reasons.
INEC had promised “free and fair elections,” yet Nigerians saw intimidation, vote-buying, and violence dominate the process. Many began to ask: if our votes don’t count, what is the point of voting at all?
The biggest failure was not just logistical — it was moral. INEC lost its role as the custodian of Nigeria’s democratic integrity and became, in the eyes of many, a tool for political manipulation.
THE PEOPLE'S DISAPPOINTMENT
The result was devastating. Young Nigerians who had registered for the first time felt betrayed. Voters who believed in reform became cynical. Faith in democracy began to fade — not because Nigerians don’t love their country, but because they could no longer trust the process that chooses their leaders.
When trust dies, democracy becomes weak. And that is where Nigeria stands today: a democracy with broken confidence in its own electoral body.
THE ROAD TO REDEMPTION:
WHAT INEC MUST DO
But failure does not have to be the end of the story. INEC can rebuild trust — if it is willing to change boldly and transparently.
Here are the steps forward:
1. Full Transparency in Result Management
INEC must ensure that all election results are uploaded in real-time to a public, verifiable platform. Every citizen should be able to trace their polling unit result to the final tally.
2. Technological Accountability
The BVAS and IReV systems must be tested, audited, and verified by independent experts before elections. If they fail, the officials responsible should face real consequences.
3. Independence from Political Pressure
INEC appointments should be made without political bias. A reformed process, perhaps involving civil society and judiciary participation, can ensure that the commission is truly independent.
4. Punishment for Electoral Offenders
Nigeria must establish a special electoral tribunal that swiftly prosecutes vote buyers, riggers, and corrupt officials. Justice delayed in elections is justice denied to democracy.
5. Civic Education and Voter Engagement
Nigerians must be educated on their electoral rights. INEC should collaborate with youth organizations, media, and schools to restore faith and participation in the process.
6. Performance and Public Accountability
After every election, INEC should publish a transparent report of its successes, failures, and lessons — not as propaganda, but as a commitment to improvement.
A SECOND CHANCE FOR DEMOCRACY
INEC’s story is not finished. A broken trust can be mended with truth, action, and humility. Nigerians are not asking for perfection — they are asking for honesty, fairness, and respect for their voices.
If INEC can rise above political influence, embrace transparency, and genuinely serve the people, it can once again become a symbol of democratic hope.
Only then can Nigerians believe that their votes truly count, and that the future of the nation rests — not in the hands of the few — but in the will of the many.
INEC Nigeria
Punch Newspapers
15/11/2025
THE OF THE PEOPLE'S DREAM:
HOW Democracy FAILED IN NIGERIA
Once upon a time, in the heart of West Africa, there stood a great nation called Nigeria — a land blessed with oil, fertile soil, brilliant minds, and vibrant cultures. After years of colonial rule and military dictatorships, the people yearned for freedom. In 1999, they rejoiced as democracy returned. The air was filled with hope — the ballot, not the bullet, would decide their future.
For a moment, it seemed the promise of democracy would shine bright. New leaders spoke of change, unity, and progress. The citizens dreamed that their votes would finally mean something. But slowly, the dream began to fade.
THE RISE OF of THE GODFATHERS
In the early years, the politicians who had money and power — the so-called godfathers — began to decide who could win elections. Votes were bought with rice, money, and false promises. The people’s will was replaced with manipulation and rigging. The ballot boxes became tools of deceit. Many ordinary citizens stopped believing their voices mattered.
CORRUPTION AND GREED
As the years passed, government offices turned into markets of corruption. Leaders stole public funds meant for hospitals, schools, and roads. Billion-dollar oil revenues vanished into private pockets while communities drank dirty water and children studied under trees. The watchdogs of democracy — the courts, police, and media — were silenced by bribery or intimidation.
ELECTIONS WITHOUT CHOICE
Elections became rituals without real meaning. Parties changed names but not character; old faces reappeared in new disguises. Those who tried to reform the system were either frustrated, threatened, or bought over. Votes were counted before elections were held. The youth — once full of fire — grew tired and turned away, saying, “All politicians are the same.”
THE PEOPLE'S SILENCE
Democracy depends on the people’s voice, but fear and poverty silenced them. Many were too hungry to protest or too hopeless to demand justice. When they spoke, the state responded with teargas and guns. The press called it “security operations,” but the people called it oppression.
THE DIGITAL AWAKENING
Then came a new generation — bold, online, and unafraid. They used phones and social media to expose lies, demand accountability, and organize peaceful protests. But even this hope was met with bullets, arrests, and bans. The EndSARS movement of 2020 reminded the world that Nigerians still had courage — yet it also revealed how fragile their democracy had become.
THE LESSON
Now, years later, many Nigerians ask themselves: Was democracy truly born here, or was it only borrowed? For democracy to live, it must rest on justice, education, and trust. Without those, it becomes only a costume — a beautiful robe worn by leaders who rule like kings.
Democracy in Nigeria did not fail overnight. It was betrayed piece by piece — by corruption, greed, silence, and the forgetting of what democracy truly means: power belongs to the people.
INEC Nigeria
Nigeria Police Force
Punch Newspapers
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15/10/2025
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