Saturday, November 22, 2014

2015 Elections Should Be Postponed- Tunde Bakare

A strong call has been made especially to those in power of authority for the postponement of the forthcoming general elections in 2015 to avert a possible aggravation of chaos an disorderliness in the polity.

The call was made by former vice presidential candidate of the CPC and preacher of the Latter Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare.

The eloquent pastor and fierce critic of the Nigerian government and its leadership, made the critical assertion at a live broadcast staged to mark his 60th birthday.

"At this sensitive period in our polity when the nation seems to be tottering on the edge of a precipice, is a general election the solution to our crises or will elections aggravate the problem? As strange as the question may seem, there could be nothing more pragmatic than providing honest answers to these posers at this crucial juncture in our national existence.

"With parts of the North under the siege of Boko Haram in the form of outright territorial control in some cases and guerrilla styled terror attacks in others and with the government failing to bring the situation under control, what is the guarantee that there will indeed be general elections in 2015? Even if elections are held successfully in some parts of the country, would results be conclusive without elections in the troubled parts? How would displaced persons cast their votes or are they automatically disenfranchised? How safe would massive campaign rallies be? With politicians and their militant cronies on both sides facing up to one another ahead of the elections and sounding the drum beats of war should the elections not go in their respective interests, what would be the aftermath of a general election? We may argue that elections have been successfully held in some states under heavy military presence but let us not forget that we do not hold staggered elections in Nigeria. We are talking about general elections." He said.

Bakare further questioned rhetorically, the ability of the Nigerian military to handle the possible outcome of such an inevitability should it occur.

"If one were to ignore the atmosphere of intimidation and the warlike environment that such massive military deployment across the nation at the same time would create, do we even have sufficient security/military personnel for such a mission? What would be the impact of such a thin spread of our military on the safety of terror-stricken areas? In whatever way the results of the general elections go - North or South - are we prepared for the reactions that could ensue?

"Against the structural and systemic backdrop of the chaotic state of the nation, what is the wisdom in holding elections without dealing with these foundational problems? If the politicians ignore these salient questions and go ahead to juggle for power in the midst of chaos, then that would seem to lend credence to the allegation that the politicians do know what the Nigerian people do not know and are behind the crises in our nation, competing among themselves to see who can best manipulate the situation for political gains, not caring how many lives are lost in the process as long as personal ambition is achieved." He added.



Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device from MTN

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