Despite growing controversy and calls that the Resident Electoral Commissioner,REC, in Imo State, Prof SYLVIA AGU, be removed, the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has insisted that there is no reason to remove the official.

The Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, Prof MAHMOOD YAKUBU, ROTIMI OYEKANMI said there was no reason to remove the REC, adding that complaints against AGU were based on suspicion, saying the commission has no evidence that implicate her or prove any allegation that is being alleged at this time.

OYEKANMI stated that the Commission takes its responsibility seriously and do not joke with the conduct of elections, and when there are complaints against our officers, we also don’t joke with complaints but you must provide evidence that our officers are culpable.

The spokesperson for the INEC chairman said the electoral body took disciplinary actions against its RECs in Abia, Sokoto and Adamawa states during the general elections earlier in the year when they acted outside the provisions of the commission.

Last Sunday, the Inspector General of Police , KAYODE EGBETOKUN, redeployed MOHAMMED BARDE as the Commissioner of Police in Imo State for neutrality sake , following demands by there Organised Labour that BAEDE was complicit in the attack on the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, JOE AJAERO.

The candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, SAMUEL ANYANWU, and Labour Party,LP, ATHAN ACHONU, on Tuesday, staged a walkout at a stakeholders’ meeting organised by INEC, after they demanded the redeployment of AGU just as the police redeployed BARDE.

OYEKANMI said as far as the Commission is concerned, there has not ben a thing to implicate the Resident Electoral Commissioner for Imo State.

He assured the political parties in the election that INEC will be fair and unbiased.

He assured we are giving to all political parties is that we are not going to allow any pandering towards any interest in this election; our interest is to conduct free, fair and credible elections.

He added that the electoral umpire has deployed nine additional RECs and two national commissioners to each of the three states where governorship elections will hold on November 11, 2023.

He added that the electoral umpire has deployed nine additional RECs and two national commissioners to each of the three states where governorship elections will hold on November 11, 2023.

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