Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Mahmood Yakubu, has refuted reports claiming that persons registered by the commission can vote in the 2023 election without presenting their Permanent Voters Cards (PVC) to accreditation officers at their polling units.
Yakubu said the reports
that started trending last week are misleading and contradict provisions of the
Electoral Act 2022.
His reaction came
against the backdrop of arguments that Nigerians should be allowed to vote
without their PVCs since the newly introduced Bimodal Voter Accreditation
System (BVAS) machines can validate voters without them presenting their cards
physically at polling units.
The INEC boss made the clarification at the ongoing induction retreat held for the commission’s Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) in Lagos.
“Let me also seize this opportunity to comment
on two issues. The first is the misleading statement that voters can vote on Election
Day without voters’ cards. It has been trending since last week. This is
absolutely incorrect.
“For any person to vote,
he or she must be a registered voter issued with the Permanent Voters Cards
(PVC). The commission has consistently maintained the policy of ‘No PVC, No
Voting’ (and) nothing has changed. It is a legal requirement and doing
otherwise will be a violation of the law. I urge Nigerians to ignore any
suggestion that a person can vote on election day without a PVC.”
Professor Yakubu
stressed that Section 47, subsection 1 of the Electoral Act 2022 leaves no room
for ambiguity on the requirement that all voters must present their PVCs for
accreditation and voting on election day.
The section reads, “A
person intending to vote in an election shall present himself with his voter’s
card to a Presiding officer for accreditation at the polling unit in the
constituency in which his name is registered.”
The INEC chairman added
that “nobody can vote in an election without a voter’s card. The position of
the law is therefore clear, the PVC remains a mandatory requirement for
voting.”




0 Comments