The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has
expressed satisfaction with Saturday’s field-testing of card readers, planned
for use in validation of voters in the March 28 and April 11 general elections.
The electoral body said in a statement that the exercise, held
in 12 states from the six geo-political zones of the country, was successful
and will prove useful during the elections. It however acknowledged challenges
in confirming finger prints.
INEC says the cards will help combat electoral fraud.The electoral body said it achieved 100 per cent success in its
objective of verifying the authenticity of the Permanent Voter Cards presented
by voters on Saturday.
On the biometric authentication of voters, INEC conceded that
only 59 per cent of voters who turned out for the demonstration had their
fingerprints successfully authenticated.
However, the Commission allayed fears of disenfranchisement of
voters, saying provision for manual validation had long been put in place for
such cases.
“The Commission, in agreement with registered political parties,
had provided in the approved Guidelines for the conduct of the 2015 elections
that where biometric authentication of a legitimate holder of a genuine PVC
becomes challenging, there could be physical authentication of the person and
completion of an Incident Form, to allow the person to vote,” the statement by
spokesperson, Kayode Idowu, said.
However, the test-run in Ebonyi State will be repeated on
Saturday as the state recorded that highest number of cases of failed
fingerprint validation, INEC said.
Situation Room said the exercise passed integrity test and was
commendable.
“On the basis of the test and assurances of improvement,
Situation Room calls on the full use and deployment of the Card Readers and
PVCs for the 2015 Nigeria general elections,” it said.
It observed that “the card readers functioned properly with
occasional connectivity issues and the verification process of the PVC was
almost seamless…”
Although it noted there were reports of delays and challenges in
authentication of fingerprints, the group added, “however, people were asked to
fill incident forms, which did not stop them from being accredited but slowed
the process”.
Situation Room urged INEC to improve on areas where it had
challenges in the course of the Saturday’s mock election.
These areas, Situation Room said, included voter education and
civic orientation; biometric authentication process; transportation of
electoral personnel, especially in the rural areas; and “issue of discrepancies
of details on the PVC and the card reader in a way that the Card Reader can be
reconfigured in a timely manner so as to avoid disenfranchisement of any
voter.”

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