You’re incompetent,
EU slams Iwu
By IKE NNAMDI, The Sun Reporter Washington DC
Thursday, December 20, 2007
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Prof. Maurice
Iwu, |
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The European Union has thrown away diplomatic niceties by
pointedly accusing Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) Chairman, Prof. Maurice Iwu, of incompetence and using
the organization as an excuse to cover up his inability to
conduct free and fair polls.
The EU is angry over allegations by Iwu that his agency turned
down several million Euros from the organization leading up
to the controversial election which has resulted in the international
community calling for his resignation and the voiding of the
election.
Iwu was in Washington in continuation of efforts to present
the official report of the election. “INEC rejected
an offer of 10 million euros from the European Union (UN)
based on principles. The offer was increased to 20 and later
40 million euros, but it was rejected. The animosity with
EU began when INEC rejected their request to sit in the Commission’s
meetings and to have a copy of voters tabulated electronically,”
Iwu said.
But an EU official denied the claim and accused the INEC chairman
of deliberately frustrating the mission of the observers to
achieve a desired end.
“We were invited by the Commission in line with internationally
accepted standards, but when we asked for proof to determine
its preparedness for a free and fair polls, the INEC refused
to grant our request,” a top official stated. The official
said the grant to INEC was in line with a commitment to ensure
it has enough resources to get the job done.
“Former President Olusegun Obasanjo requested for our
assistance and the grant was not intended to influence the
agency as is being speculated by Iwu,” the official
stated. The agency said it was suspending further funding
of all elections in Nigeria until the country provides a detailed
breakdown of earlier funds to train and educate poll workers
and officials.
“The INEC chairman should be worried that the election
under his watch has been rated the worst in the nation’s
history by both local and international observers and not
hold the EU responsible for his poor performance,” the
official said. He also announced that the EU is reviewing
further assistance to Nigeria for as long as Iwu remains the
INEC boss.
But for the EU and others pushing for the resignation of Prof.
Iwu, they may have to forget it as the INEC boss has ruled
out that option.
“Some people have called for my resignation. These are
partisan people who wanted to be in power at all cost. Some
people are partisan; they have media; they shout and they
shout loudest. I just made a presentation and you can see
the support of Nigerians who have now had the facts,”
he said.
Iwu gave his agency a pass mark on the conduct of the election.
“One thing is a fact. The fact is that the election
was a triumphant movement on the part of Nigerians from one
civilian elected government to another. That is something
that nobody can remove from Nigeria,” he said.
Explaining the rationale behind INEC’s presentations
abroad, he said it would afford Nigerians in the Diaspora
the opportunity to hear the facts in order to make judgments
themselves. “In terms of public opinion, we are trying
to capture our people, as many as possible, in terms of their
knowing what happened at the elections and then be able to
form their own opinion,” he remarked. |