Editorial
Card Reader: So Far, So Good, But…
The renewed campaign for and against the use of the Card Reader in the 2015 elections is avoidable, distractive, even as it questions the intentions of parties involved in the controversy.
Apart from the fact that the issue of Card Reader was canvassed more than a year ago without any opposition, the mock election in selected wards across the country has also recorded 100 per cent success in critical areas of concern.
The Card Reader is a hand electronic device that is expected to authenticate the identity of the voter during the forthcoming elections. It is also capable of exposing electoral fraud and abuses. The PVC on the other hand, is a voting card that carries an embedded chip containing biometric data of a registered voter.
It is understandable that some persons are apprehensive of the use of the Card Reader because it is a new idea, but to the extent some persons would use it as a reason to undermine the validity of the 2015 elections cannot be accepted.
Even so, to allow the fears of a few persons to subject Nigeria to doing a thing the same way and expect a different result is simply un-reasonable. The average Nigerian wants the authorities to use this election to prove to the people and the international community that Nigeria can get it right, and this must be factored in.
The Card Reader has been used in a number of countries with remarkable success. Its merits were further amplified at the just concluded mock elections where voters affirmed that its success marked the end of the over-voting and impersonation problems that had dented the credibility of the nation’s electoral process.
Officials believe that the Card Reader has the advantage of eliminating the long hours spent on queues for accreditation, removing health issues arising from long hours spent under scorching sun or rain and would eliminate multiple voting, while encouraging voters and eliminating the possibility of manipulation.
The Tide thinks that the concern now should be based on the ability of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to address identified lapses during the mock election, instead of the verbal attacks and counter accusations.
During the mock election, officials noted the failure of some of the machines to capture some finger-prints. Fears were also expressed by some stakeholders that the machines could be pre-programmed to reject some PVCs among others.
INEC should take steps to develop manpower in the use of the Card Readers, prove cynics wrong who argue that the device can be manipulated, assure Nigerians of the needed back-ups and educate the voters on what to do in the event of any hitch.
The Tide believes that the Card Reader will change the character of elections in Nigeria and make the process more participatory and credible.
The era when voters were chased away or votes allocated to political parties would come to an end with the use of the Card Reader. It is left for INEC to prove this by using all available legal methods and innovations to generate fair and credible elections which Nigerians are yearning for.
The purpose for the Card Reader is to eliminate electoral fraud and anyone that comes up with objections in the late hour of this electoral season may not mean the best for Nigeria. The people want free, fair and credible polls, this they must get. Period.
Editorial
HYPREP And The Collapsed Water Tank
Editorial
Resurgence Of Illegal Structures In PH
Editorial
Certificate Forgery, Loss Of Public Trust
-
Sports2 days agoMikel Dismisses Chelle’s ‘voodoo’ comments
-
Niger Delta1 day agoOborevwori Tasks Corps Members On Discipline, Productivity
-
News1 day ago198 UNIBEN Students Bag First Class
-
Sports1 day agoBundesliga: Oliseh Stars As Bayern Rebound To Thrash Freiburg
-
Maritime1 day agoCargo Tracking System’ II Save Nigeria N900bn In Revenue Leakages ……SEREC
-
Editorial2 days agoHYPREP And The Collapsed Water Tank
-
Niger Delta1 day agoPINL Mulls Synergize With NDLEA Against Drug Abuse
-
Sports1 day agoOgoni Nation Cup: Victory Against Amee Base Excites Coach
