• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise Here
  • Login
National Insight News
Advertisement
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
National Insight
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

Humphrey Nwosu as Compass for Electoral Reforms. By Taiwo Adisa

by NationalInsight
October 27, 2024
in Featured, Opinion
Reading Time: 5min read
0
Professor Humphrey Nwosu died at 83

Professor Humphrey Nwosu

1
SHARES
359
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsApp
ADVERTISEMENT

One of the major actors in the June 12, 1993 election debacle, Professor Humprey Nwosu, breathed his last on Thursday, October 24, in the United States of America, at the age of 83. He had served as the Chairman of the National Election Commission (NEC), now the Independent National Electoral Commission, between 1989 and 1993, his tenure terminated by the fiendish exchanges occasioned by the savage annulment of the election.

Professor Nwosu was a Professor of Political Science who was named the Chairman of the electoral body by former military leader General Ibrahim Babangida in circumstances similar to how former President Goodluck Jonathan named Professor Attahiru Jega into that same position on June 8, 2020. Both IBB and Jonathan had previously not met with the men they named as the nation’s chief electoral officers. Nwosu served creditably, even though the military denied the nation the fruits of his service as NEC Chairman.

While in office, he was the executor of Babangida’s transition as it galloped from one bumpy end to another. The man was, however, determined to get something out of the assignment. He showed he was in office and in power in his determination to improvise a model into practical life mechanically. He left no one in doubt that he was out to give back to the country of his birth from the pool of the political theories he had read and taught in the university. Working in the shadows of Babangida’s Political Bureau Report, which was the foundation of the regime’s unwinding transition programme, Nwosu applied his theoretical craft and modelled the Option A4 (Open Ballot System) and the Modified Open Ballot System. With IBB’s regime having adopted a two-party system, it seemed a perfect fit for the elections and the results turned in at different intervals to the satisfaction of Nigerians. There was the local government election, state elections and then the National Assembly elections. At a stage, the nation was treated to a Diarchy, with a full-fledged National Assembly making laws for a military ruler. Everything looked set for the June 12, 1993, presidential poll, which was to crown a tedious transition programme that started in 1986. Nwosu was upbeat that the law was on his side, despite the serpentine spirit donned by the infamous Association for Better Nigeria (ABN) of Senator Arthur Nzeribe and Abimbola Davies, lurking. Nwosu was prevented from announcing the presidential election in full, as the regime cited a midnight judgment secured by the ABN. Even at that, the whole nation was merely awaiting the official confirmation of what they already knew, Chief MKO Abiola, candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) had defeated Alhaji Bashir Tofa of the National Republican Convention (NRC). It was an election globally confirmed as the freest and fairest in the nation’s history but the Babangida junta denied Nwosu the accolades, it denied Chief Abiola the chance to savour his victory and drew back the hands of Nigeria’s democratic clock.

For years, Nwosu kept mute on the circumstances that surrounded the testy period of the annulled election but in June 2008, he spoke to TheNEWS magazine, just ahead of the public presentation of the book that chronicled his public service experience. He first told the magazine that he had a sense of history when the appointment fell on his lap and that he believed there was a need to produce a practical situation from the theories.

ALSO READ  Cook- a-thon: Chef Tope Maggie Begins 24 hours Test- run in Ogbomoso

You might also like

Jubril Dotun Sanusi Pays Glowing Tribute to Hon. Aderemi Oseni at 60

Wolekanle Congratulates Ogundoyin, Open Salawu, Others on CCII Award

VP Shettima, Governor Abiodun Declare Gateway Games 2024 Open in Abeokuta By Anabel Enahoro

Load More

He said: “I felt I had to do my best to this nation to also convince the person who appointed me that I could do my best for Nigeria and satisfy my conscience and my constituency-the university community. You know, when members of the academic community are given a public assignment; people say they’re just talking theory and that you have to blend theory with practice.”

He described the June 12, 1993 election as a special moment in the nation’s history and said: “So you’ll find that June 12 as a movement was indeed the day Nigerians opted for a democratic political order. They didn’t care, and the parties cut across ethnic, state, and regional boundaries. And Nigerians were highly mobilized and they expressed their choices freely without interference. There was no stuffing of ballot boxes, and there was no manipulation, intimidation, or harassment. Nigerians came out as a body, just like people in the United States and Britain, and voted freely. No intimidation, no one lost his life anywhere, it was God-ordained.”

Indeed, the annulment of the election, which was announced by Babangida on June 23, 1993, was like a prison sentence for Nigeria’s democratic process. Alarm bells rang across the nation. There were threats of war. Many died. Many got maimed and countless went missing as protests engulfed the nation. The nation was on tenterhooks for years. With Nigeria on the brink of disintegration, power changed hands quickly. General Sani Abacha replaced the Ernest Shonekan contraption left by a “stepping aside” General Babangida. He initially dangled the carrot before the political class but later unleashed his iron-fisted fangs. He battled the pro-democracy agitators with crude despotism. MKO Abiola, who had declared himself president, was arrested, and his wife Kudirat was killed, just as many top pro-democracy campaigners.

ALSO READ  BREAKING: Ex-INEC Chair, Prof. Humphrey Nwosu, Dies At 83

No doubt, the aftermath of the annulled June 12 was a broken regime and a fractured nation, culminating in the birth of a wobbling democracy. Democracy in its true form, having been dented with hefty blows in the series of leadership change from Babangida to Shonekan to Sani Abacha, whose death in 1998 paved the way for General Abdusalami Abubakar to midwife the current Republic within eleven months.

As stated by Nwosu above, most of the kudos for the turnout of the June 12 election were largely due to his modelling efforts. He fashioned out Option A4, which ushered in the freest poll in the annals of Nigeria’s elections. In the interview published by The NEWS, Nwosu justified the decision by the Babangida administration to adopt a two-party structure and declared that a multi-party system would not yield the desired democratic objectives. He said that mushroom political parties cannot defend democracy as they would not be able to muster the structure across the country.

With what we have seen in recent years, Nwosu was right. Though the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi, SAN, had fought for the democratisation of the political party registration process, the fact remains that the multiplicity of parties may not necessarily serve the democratic cause. These days, many political parties are there for political jobs. They either withdraw in favour of the highest bidder a few days before the election, or they are the first to address the media to endorse the outcome of elections, all for a fee.

Incidentally, Prof Nwosu had recognised such shenanigans long before his demise and had equally recommended a revisit of his electoral models. He told TheNEWS: “I feel we should revisit the electoral reforms, modified open ballot system and option A4. We should go back to the two-party structure. We may even allow a third party for those who feel they cannot be accommodated in the two. You could see in the days of SDP and NRC that you can have integrated parties that look to value consensus, parties that raise national consciousness, parties that have spread all over the country, and parties that cut across ethnic, and religious groupings. I am seriously addressing this issue because I believe in it, and I think that some Nigerians believe in it.”

ALSO READ  Pastor Josuha Iginla Gifts Yinka Alaseyori Exotic Car

In this era of troubled elections, I believe that Nwosu’s models should be revisited. His Option A4 should serve as our electoral compass going forward. The modified system and all that Nwosu brought to the table needed to be re-examined by the National Assembly, such that they could give the nation an electoral law that would work for all.

(First published in the Sunday Tribune October 27, 2024)

 

Tags: General Ibrahim BabangidaIndependent National Electoral CommissionNational Electoral CommissionProfessor Humprey NwosuTaiwo Adisa
Share12Tweet7Send
Previous Post

Kwara Govt Appoints New Oloro of Oro, Gbamoyin of Jimba Oja

Next Post

Birthday: PKOB Foundation Members Celebrate Chairman, Prince Kayode Oyetunde Bayewuwon

NationalInsight

NationalInsight

Related Posts

Featured

Jubril Dotun Sanusi Pays Glowing Tribute to Hon. Aderemi Oseni at 60

by NationalInsight
May 19, 2025
215
Featured

Wolekanle Congratulates Ogundoyin, Open Salawu, Others on CCII Award

by NationalInsight
May 19, 2025
232
Featured

VP Shettima, Governor Abiodun Declare Gateway Games 2024 Open in Abeokuta By Anabel Enahoro

by NationalInsight
May 19, 2025
229
Adebayo Faleke
Featured

The Nation In Crisis: Substance Use Among Nigerian Youth —A Ticking Time Bomb By Adebayo Faleke

by NationalInsight
May 18, 2025
237
Bukola Olopade Director General National  Sports Commission (NSC)
Featured

Gateway Games Aim to Tie Grassroots to Elite Sports — Olopade

by NationalInsight
May 18, 2025
242
Next Post
Birthday: PKOB Foundation Members Celebrates Chairman, Prince Kayode Oyetunde Bayewuwon

Birthday: PKOB Foundation Members Celebrate Chairman, Prince Kayode Oyetunde Bayewuwon

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest Post

Jubril Dotun Sanusi Pays Glowing Tribute to Hon. Aderemi Oseni at 60

May 19, 2025
215

Wolekanle Congratulates Ogundoyin, Open Salawu, Others on CCII Award

May 19, 2025
232

VP Shettima, Governor Abiodun Declare Gateway Games 2024 Open in Abeokuta By Anabel Enahoro

May 19, 2025
229
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise Here

Recent Posts

  • Jubril Dotun Sanusi Pays Glowing Tribute to Hon. Aderemi Oseni at 60
  • Wolekanle Congratulates Ogundoyin, Open Salawu, Others on CCII Award
  • Team Oyo Makes Strong Impression at Gateway Games 2024 Opening Ceremony, Clinches Early Medals By Anabel Enahoro

Copyright © 2020 National Insight News

No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • News
    • Business
    • Health
    • Tourism
  • Sports
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2020 National Insight News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com