News
Electoral Reform Must Follow Readiness, Not Rhetoric As Connectivity Is Still Very Low In Rural Areas -ADSC Boss, Oluwafemi
- /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 27
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/IMG_3390-1000x600.jpg&description=Electoral Reform Must Follow Readiness, Not Rhetoric As Connectivity Is Still Very Low In Rural Areas -ADSC Boss, Oluwafemi', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
- Share
- Tweet /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 72
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/IMG_3390-1000x600.jpg&description=Electoral Reform Must Follow Readiness, Not Rhetoric As Connectivity Is Still Very Low In Rural Areas -ADSC Boss, Oluwafemi', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
…insists Nigeria is not yet structurally ready for real time result transmission
President and Chief Executive
Africa Development Studies Centre (ADSC) and Member, Harvard Business Review Advisory Council, Sir Victor Oluwafemi has said Electoral Reforms must follow readiness, not rhetoric as connectivity is still very low in rural areas of Nigeria.
The ADSC president made this assertion in a statement on Monday declaring that:
“The Office of the President and Chief Executive of the Africa Development Studies Centre (ADSC) issues this statement as an expert governance and public policy advisory on the ongoing national discourse surrounding electronic voting and real time transmission of election results in Nigeria.
“This intervention is not political. It is institutional, evidence based, and grounded in systems thinking drawn from comparative governance practice and digital transformation experience.
He insisted that Nigeria is not yet structurally ready for real time result transmission as Nigeria’s democratic aspiration must be matched by infrastructural reality.
“At present, the push for real time electronic transmission of election results risks prioritising speed over integrity, and visibility over verifiability.
“Nigeria still conducts elections through manual voting, manual counting, and physical documentation at polling units.
“Every valid result begins with paper processes, human procedures, and environmental dependencies that technology alone cannot correct.
“Without stable electricity, universal telecom coverage, cyber resilient systems, uniform training, and legal clarity, real time transmission remains aspirational rather than operational.
Oluwafemi explained that: “Attempting to enforce it nationwide under current conditions risks three serious outcomes:
• Disenfranchisement, particularly in rural and low connectivity communities
• Expanded cyber vulnerability, where perception of compromise alone can delegitimise outcomes
• Increased post election litigation, due to conflicting evidentiary standards
“Even advanced democracies do not prioritise instant transmission over auditability. They retain paper as the legal anchor while using technology to support verification, reconciliation, and transparency.
“The Issue Is Not Technology. It Is Sequencing.
“Electoral reform must be engineered as national infrastructure, not introduced as an election season feature.
“From a governance systems perspective, Nigeria requires a phased and platform based approach to electoral modernisation.
“This is where Policy as a Platform (PaaP) and Results as a Service (RaaS) provide practical, non partisan pathways forward.
What Policy as a Platform (PaaP) Offers INEC
“PaaP reframes electoral reform as a continuous, standards driven governance system.
Applied to the electoral process, PaaP would:
• Establish minimum national readiness thresholds for power, connectivity, cybersecurity, and device integrity
• Enable gradual, geographically sequenced deployment rather than a risky nationwide switch
• Align law, operations, technology, and dispute resolution into one coherent electoral platform
• Institutionalise transparency and auditability as design features, not post election explanations
“Under PaaP, elections are treated as engineered systems, not improvised events.
What Results as a Service (RaaS) Delivers
“RaaS shifts national focus away from how quickly results appear, towards how credibly they are produced.
For electoral administration, RaaS would:
• Treat each polling unit result as a verified service output with defined checks and validation stages
• Prioritise reconciliation, traceability, and audit trails before public visibility
• Reduce disputes by strengthening confidence in process rather than accelerating announcements
• Measure success by acceptance and legitimacy, not by transmission speed
In democratic governance, trust is built on proof, not on immediacy.
ADSC Advisory Position
“Nigeria does not need to abandon electoral technology. It needs to respect the order of reform.
“Infrastructure must come before automation. Verification must come before visibility. Trust must come before speed.
“Until foundational gaps in power, connectivity, cybersecurity, operational discipline, and legal coherence are addressed, real time electronic transmission of results should remain a medium term objective, not an immediate mandate.
“Electoral reform must be deliberate, inclusive, and system ready.
“That is how democracies endure, he added.
News
Senator Wadada promises to deepen legislative ties, stop inactivity
The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Inter-Parliamentary Affairs, Senator Aliyu Wadada has promised to revive the committee’s activities after acknowledging concerns over its prolonged inactivity.
Wadada spoke on Thursday at the end of the committee’s meeting in Abuja.
Specifically, the chairman admitted that the committee had been underutilised, noting that it had met only once in the last three years.
He, however, said issues responsible for the situation had been identified during a closed-door session and would be addressed.
“Of course I feel concerned about it, but when we got into the details in a closed-door meeting, we got to know where the problems are, and they will all be taken care of. The committee will be as active as it should always be,” he said.
Commenting further, the chairman said the committee would focus on its core mandate of promoting and strengthening legislative relations between Nigeria’s National Assembly and parliamentary bodies across the world.
According to him, the committee will deepen engagement with regional and international legislative institutions, including the ECOWAS Parliament, the Pan-African Parliament, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), and other parliamentary organisations.
He disclosed that a new work plan had already been developed to guide the committee’s activities.
He added: “The direction is basically around the responsibilities of the committee, which is to promote and deepen legislative relationship within Nigeria and with other legislative bodies around the world”.
The chairman added that the committee’s first major activity would be a courtesy visit to the Speaker of the ECOWAS Parliament in Nigeria as part of efforts to strengthen inter-parliamentary cooperation.
SINL NIgeria Online reports that Senator Wadada assured that the public would be kept informed of the committee’s activities as the new work plan is implemented.
News
Just in: FG jerks up salaries soldiers to N100k monthly
The Minister of Defence, Christopher Musa, has revealed that the minimum monthly salary of Nigerian soldiers has increased to N100,000 after the Federal Government reviewed their welfare package.
Musa made the disclosure during an interview with News Central ahead of his appearance on the NC Exclusive programme.
He said the adjustment was part of efforts by the government to improve the living conditions of military personnel.
Executive Branch
The former Chief of Defence Staff, however, said the country’s defence sector still requires more funding despite the improvement in soldiers’ earnings and welfare.
He stated that the current defence budget remains inadequate, adding that more resources are needed to effectively support the armed forces and their operations.
Musa explained that soldiers who previously earned about N49,000 monthly now receive at least N100,000 following the salary review carried out by the government.
The minister also called for tougher punishment for kidnappers, saying stronger measures are needed to reduce the increasing cases of abduction across Nigeria.
News
DAY 22 of Projects Commissioning in the FCT
Remodelled Abuja City Gate To Be Commissioned Today, Thursday, July 9
#ProjectsFCT2026
#FCT31DaysCommissioning
-
News21 hours ago‘Serial liar’, Presidency debunks Obi’s death threat claim
-
News21 hours agoDefence minister orders troops to shoot bandits on sight
-
News21 hours agoSenate approves customs’ N11.07tn 2026 revenue target
-
News21 hours agoEFCC Arraigns Ex-Port Harcourt Refinery MD over Money-laundering Allegations
-
News21 hours agoInsecurity: NGF inaugurates Northern Nigerian Security Trust Fund
-
News21 hours agoNSCDC deploys 1,300 personnel for Edo LG poll
-
Economy21 hours ago2024 Bid Round: NUPRC hands oil prospecting licences to 12 firms
-
News21 hours agoGroup Urges FG To Probe Alleged Threats To Peter Obi’s Life
