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SENATE’S REJECTION OF MANDATORY ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION: A SETBACK FOR NIGERIAN DEMOCRACY.……THE ELECTORAL ACT IS NOW A MEANINGLESS RITUAL

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The Senate’s passage of the Electoral Act, 2022 (Repeal and Enactment) Bill, 2026—with amendments that largely retain the status quo—amounts to nothing more than a routine ritual devoid of substance.

While lawmakers made superficial changes, such as reducing the election notice publication timeline from 360 to 180 days, the core reforms needed to safeguard electoral integrity were deliberately sidelined.

The refusal to advance the critical amendment mandating real-time electronic transmission of polling unit results to the INEC Result Viewing (IREV) portal has stripped the entire exercise of any meaningful force.

By rejecting the proposed Clause 60(5) and clinging to the discretionary language of the 2022 Act—where transmission occurs only “in a manner as prescribed by the Commission”—the Senate has preserved the very vulnerabilities that have plagued previous elections: opportunities for manual collation interference, result alteration, and widespread mistrust.

This decision renders the amended Act toothless in guaranteeing transparency and credibility.

Without compulsory electronic uploads immediately after Form EC8A is signed and countersigned, the system remains susceptible to the same manipulations that have eroded public confidence time and again.

The other retained provisions, including reliance on physical PVCs for accreditation despite BVAS usage, further highlight a reluctance to embrace genuine technological safeguards.

Most alarmingly, this missed opportunity sends a devastating message to Nigeria’s youth—the demographic with the highest potential to drive voter turnout and democratic renewal.

Young voters, already disillusioned by repeated cycles of electoral irregularities and unfulfilled promises of reform, see no incentive to participate when the process appears rigged against integrity.

By prioritizing political expediency over bold, trust-building measures, the Senate has not only failed to encourage greater youth engagement but has actively discouraged it, perpetuating apathy and low participation that weakens our democracy at its roots.

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This is not an oversight. It is a conscious choice to keep the door wide open for result manipulation, ballot stuffing at collation centres, and the kind of midnight magic that has repeatedly stolen the people’s mandate.

The retention of discretionary transmission clauses means INEC can still be pressured, coerced, or simply choose convenience over transparency whenever it suits powerful interests.

The youth, civil society, international observers, and ordinary citizens who demanded compulsory electronic upload were not asking for the moon—they were asking for the bare minimum of modern electoral integrity.

Yet the Senate, in its arrogance and self-interest, spat in their faces.

This disgraceful act sends a clear message to every young Nigerian: your vote does not matter enough for us to protect it with the simplest, most effective technological safeguard available.

It tells the next generation that the system is designed not to reflect their will, but to frustrate and exhaust it.

It confirms the worst fears of millions who have watched election after election descend into violence, litigation, and disillusionment.

Nigeria deserves more than cosmetic tinkering; it needs courageous reforms that inspire belief in the ballot.

Until mandatory electronic transmission and other transparency-enhancing provisions are enshrined, such legislative passages will remain empty gestures, offering no real protection for the people’s will.

Chief Peter Ameh
Former National Chairman, IPAC

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Judiciary

Nigerian Judge and the Abuse of Contempt Punishment

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By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

“Minor judges have been known to abuse the contempt of court jurisdiction in an attempt to enhance their own dignity.” – David Pannick QC, Judges, 119 (1987)

Sardar Tejendrasingh lived in England but, by his own admission, was devoid of “respect for this country or its civilization or its courts.” In 1982, as plaintiff in a case for debt recovery at the Cambridge County Court, he chose to address the court sitting down. The court registrar, who took the view that this was contempt of court, decided in August 1982 to pause proceedings in Mr. Tejendrasingh’s case until he was purged of this contempt. One year later, in September 1983, Alan Garfitt, the trial judge, informed Mr. Tejendrasingh of the court’s decision to indefinitely suspend hearing of his case unless and until he provided a written undertaking to stand while addressing the court.

Mr. Tejendrasingh appealed against this to the Court of Appeal which affirmed the decision of the trial judge. In its decision in November 1985, the Court of Appeal reasoned: “if a court orders somebody to stand when addressing it or giving evidence, that order is not different from any other order of the court. It is something which has to be obeyed.”

The nature of orders that courts can give or which suitors in court are obliged to obey in such situations has varied through the ages. In his book on The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England, John Lord Campbell tells a story from the first quarter of the 17th century of a “Catholic gentleman nearly eighty years old” who was sentenced to “be fined £1000, lose his ears, stand on the pillory at Westminster and Lancaster, and suffer perpetual imprisonment, for merely presenting a respectful petition to the King, praying for inquiry into the conduct of one of the judges of assize, who had condemned to death a neighbour for entertaining a Jesuit.”

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Others have been even less lucky. In 1631, Chief Justice Richardson of the Court of Common Bench was on his way out of court after pronouncing a sentence of death upon a suspect on trial for a felony when “the prisoner found himself able to express his dissent from the sentence pronounced upon him by hurling a brickbat at the Chief Justice’s head.” For his contempt, the prisoner was reportedly “immediately hanged in the presence of the court.”

Recent events in Nigeria have extinguished any misapprehensions that these flashes of judicial savagery may have ended with the transition from the Medieval to the early modern period. In the past week, a judge of the Federal High Court, Mohammed Umar, reopened the question as to what kind of orders a judge may be at liberty to give in seeking to uphold his or her judicial authority or dignity.

The circumstance was the trial of publisher and politician, Omoyele Sowore, who is being prosecuted by the State Security Service on the charge of having called Nigeria’s president, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a criminal. At the resumed trial on Monday, 16 March 2026, contretemps reportedly erupted between the judge and the defence counsel, Marshall Abubakar, over the scheduling of a date for the defence to argue its no-case submission at the end of the prosecution’s case. The defence apparently desired a longer adjournment than the court was willing to grant.

Ordinarily, this should not have been raucous. In the midst of the exchanges over the dates, however, the judge reportedly took exception to the inflection or tone of counsel and threatened to cite him for contempt. Almost immediately, it appears, the judge thought the better of it or lost his temper “and ordered the lawyer to step forward and kneel down as punishment for what he described as contempt of court.”

In response, Marshall Abubakar is reported to have informed the court that “kneeling before a judge was unknown to Nigerian law and could not be imposed as a lawful punishment.” At this point, other lawyers present in court, fearing the onset of a judicial meltdown, reportedly rose in collective de-escalation. They eventually managed to stay the hand of His Lordship from also asking the lawyer to raise his hands over his head, close his eyes, and expose his buttocks for licks from a judicial Sjambok.

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The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), through its president, Afam Osigwe, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), took a serious view of the matter. In a statement issued the following day, the NBA president cautioned that “directing a legal practitioner or indeed any person whatsoever to kneel in court is not a recognised judicial sanction under our laws and does not align with the standards of judicial conduct expected on the Bench.”

At the heart of the objection by the NBA is the guarantee of the right to human dignity in section 34 of Nigeria’s constitution, reinforced by the prohibition of torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. The Uganda Law Society (ULS) also weighed in. Their reaction issued through its president, Isaac Ssemakadde, warned that “no judge possesses the legal power to order a legal practitioner to kneel. That directive was not discipline; it was humiliation.”

This episode raises important questions concerning both the limits of judicial power and standards of professional comportment for participants in the judicial and legal process.

For advocates of the rule of law, judicial orders are to be obeyed at all times. So, should the lawyer (not) have obeyed the order to kneel down even if he could then have appealed against it subsequently?

The pivotal question here is when is an order judicial? The exercise of the power to punish for contempt of court or to preserve the authority of the judicial office is not at large. In exercising it, a judge is not precluded from the obligations to observe the basic rules of fair hearing or respect for constitutional guarantees.

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In this case, the order to “kneel down” was a sentence issued without the opportunity of a hearing, formal conviction, or even a record. To be quite plain, there was nothing judicial about it. Even if the lawyer was minded to obey and then appeal later, the likelihood is that there would have been no record on the basis of which to appeal for, surely, the judge could not have written: “I hereby convict Mr. Abubakar and sentence him to kneel down.”

Whether or not the facts justified the judge in invoking the power of contempt is not in dispute at this time. For present purposes, that point is conceded. However, having done so, the court thereafter chose to sacrifice its power on the altar of abuse. In the circumstances, regrettably, Mr. Abubakar was well within his rights to be slow in complying with “kneel down.” Put differently, there was no order to obey.

It is not as if the judge was without options in the circumstances. He could have referred the lawyer to the Legal Practitioner’s Disciplinary Committee or, indeed, tried and convicted him for contempt before deciding what sentence to impose.

Even better, he may have been better served if he had read Brian McKenna’s famous lecture at the University of Durham in February 1969.

In the lecture, McKenna, a judge, tells the story of the conclusion of one of his earliest trials as a judge following which “a temperamental Irish lady flung her handbag in my direction after I had sentenced her delinquent brother to a period of training.” In response, he writes, “I gave her the benefit of doubt; I assumed that her target was the Clerk of the Court sitting beneath the throne, no myself.”

Mr. Justice Kneel Down may one day discover virtue in judicial forbearance.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu

 

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Opinion

Time For Nigeria to Rise Together 

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By Victor Oladokun

In the last decade, I have deliberately avoided publicly commenting on Nigeria’s often toxic political discourse.

2 reasons guided this decision.

■ Any stance invites criticism from all sides.
■ My past roles, first as Director of Communication at the #AfricanDevelopmentBankGroup; then as Senior Advisor to its then President, of which both required strict diplomatic adherence to neutrality on the affairs of member countries.

For the first time in 10 years, this rare milestone compels me to speak, as President #BolaAhmedTinubu and First Lady #OluremiTinubu receive the full pomp and pageantry of a State Visit from #KingCharles III at #WindsorCastle this week, the first by a Nigerian head of state in 37 years.

It is time to acknowledge the quiet, determined work underway. #PresidentTinubu’s administration has taken the bull by the horns with bold economic reforms. Though results are uneven and unfolding, they are creating macroeconomic stability, unlocking investments, and gaining recognition.

#TheEconomist (January 2026) described Nigeria’s economy as potentially “back from the brink,” with painful reforms showing results: sharp inflation drop (from 34.8% peak to around 15%), naira stabilization, and reserves at 7-year highs ($46 billion).

The #WorldBank has hailed Nigeria as a “global reference point” for steady, credible reform implementation and results over the past two years.

Nigeria is repositioning itself as a serious global partner with vast potential, and NOT as a perpetual supplicant.

This State Visit carries deep mutual strategic significance.

For Nigeria, it showcases a reform story and opens doors to fresh capital, technology transfer, and market access. For the #UnitedKingdom, it strengthens ties with Africa’s largest economy and most populous nation. Bilateral trade already stands at a record £8.1 billion annually.

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Yet, while the red carpet rolls out in London, some voices at home and abroad remain stuck in perpetual de-branding mode.

Don’t get me wrong. #Nigeria faces real issues and challenges. But, we have a built-in cycle of demonization that ignores progress.

Professional critics seize every headline to paint the nation as hopeless, amplifying setbacks while dismissing strides. Their endless negativity deters investors, demoralizes youth, and markets Nigeria as a risk rather than an opportunity.

Constructive criticism has its place, but weaponized cynicism is not patriotism. It is self-sabotage.

Fellow Nigerians, let us choose pride and opportunity over perpetual complaint and a sense of hopelessness.

To investors and global partners eyeing Africa’s future, the door is wide open. Come see the real Nigeria. A nation brimming with youthful innovation, determination, and ready to deliver in a stable, reforming environment.

My humble plea is simple … Let us move forward united, focused, and unapologetically proud.

God bless you & God Bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

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Opinion

FEMI FANI-KAYODE: WHEN WILL YOU STOP BEING A THUG?

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By DELE MOMODU

 

I knew Chief Babaremilekun Adetokunbo Fani-Kayode, Q.C, SAN, of blessed memory, the father of David Oluwafemi Adewunmi Abdulateef Fani-Kayode aka FFK, in Ile-Ife, long before I met his querulous, garrulous and cantankerous son.

Femi is a classic case of a wasted investment. He attended some of the best schools pedigree and/or money could purchase, but turned out an outright and incurable thug.

He went to Cambridge University, probably a 4th generation in his family, but became an enfant terrible, fighting anyone and anything, including esoteric spirits, in sight. All supplication and intercession by friends and family on his behalf have failed to cure his strange malady.

And this is the man President Bola Tinubu is about to unleash on Germany as an Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, for God’s sake.

For Femi, it is a fulfillment of a long expected appointment. We discussed it several times. And I encouraged him to be patient and prayerful. I felt his deep frustration and depression.

He was already working on Plan B, and begging a few of us to help him reach out to Alhaji Atiku Abubakar (GCON), if all hopes evaporate.

Femi without power is like fish out of water. It is such a pity that now that Tinubu has finally looked at his side, with mercy and compassion, he is still busy fighting, like a pig, instead of seeking urgent rehabilitation into the comity of sane human beings.

 

– AARE BASORUN AKINROGUN DELE MOMODU is a journalist and former Presidential candidate.

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