Less than three weeks to the general elections, the European Union
(EU) said it would not send its election observers to the North-East
states because of the security challenges in the zone.
With one of the presidential candidates
This is even as the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
insisted that it stands by the peace accord signed by the 14
presidential candidates and their parties in Abuja on the general
elections.
Speaking when he led members of the mission to visit the PDP
leadership at the party's national secretariat on Monday in Abuja, Chief
Observer of the European Union Election Observer Mission in Nigeria,
Ambassador Santiago Fisas disclosed that over 90 election observers were
deployed by EU to monitor the forthcoming election in all the states.
He further revealed that EU Election Observer Mission has "been here
since mid-November for observations. We followed the primaries, election
propaganda, media and possible claims after the election."
Fisas said though they were sent to monitor the forthcoming election
in all the states, they would not cover the North-East because of the
activities of insurgents in the zone.
According to him, "for security reasons, unfortunately, we can't deploy into North-East region."
Fisas further said that though the number of EU election observers in
the country is minimal, they are the best in terms of quality.
He expressed support for the Abuja Peace Accord, but emphasised that the EU has no favoured candidates or political party.
"We apply international rules for the election; that means we must be
neutral, we don't interfere at all as a mission. I will give you an
example: it is like a football march, we are not the referee, we are
just spectators," Fisas said.
Earlier, the PDP National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo, declared
that the party stands by the peace accord despite the recent attacks on
its campaign train by suspected supporters of the All Progressives
Congress (APC).
"PDP stands on the Abuja Accord. Only yesterday there was a meeting
of National Peace Committee that was set up by eminent Nigerians and the
party attended the meeting and we resolved that the Abuja Accord is
good for this country, it is good for our future, it is good for our
economy, it is good for our image and it is good for our wellbeing," he
said.
No comments:
Post a Comment