Friday 13 February 2015

Returnees in Dilemma over Election Shift

13 Feb 2015 Prof. Attahiru Jega, INEC Chairman Many south easterners who returned home for fear of election violence are now trapped in a dilemma over whether to go back to their bases or not. Many of the returnees arrived at the weekend, oblivious of the postponement of the elections to March 28 and April 11. Consequently, they are now faced with the decision of whether to remain till the new election dates or return to their businesses and jobs, reported the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN). In Enugu, some of the returnees expressed disappointment with the postponement, saying that it had put them in the dilemma of whether to stay back home or return for their means of livelihood. A businessman, Mr. Emmanuel Agu who lives in Kano, said he moved his family to his village only for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to shift the election by six weeks. “Honestly, this situation has brought untold economic hardship for me because I had budgeted that my family will spend three weeks here but with the postponement, they will now stay for about two months. “I moved them for the fear of post-election violence as witnessed in 2011. We really spent a huge amount of money to convey our load to Enugu. In fact, I am stranded here because I don’t know whether to leave my business and stay back till the end of the elections or go back to Kano with my family. “My major problem is money because I am not doing anything here in Enugu and it will be difficult for me to go back to Kano and come back in six weeks. “I am calling on public spirited individuals to come to our aid since it is obvious that we cannot stay in the northern part of the country during the elections,” he said. Another returnee, Mr. Pius Ugwuanyi, who resides in Maiduguri, said his return to Enugu had paralysed his business. He lamented that a few days after he came back from Maiduguri with his family, the election was shifted. “I received the news with mixed feelings because I don’t have money to go and come back in six weeks with my family. “I am truly confused, but I have no option than to stay back till the end of the elections. The implication now is that my staying back in Enugu will really paralyse my business because my customers will certainly run away before I go back. “My major problem now is how to survive with the little money in my possession till the end of the general election,” he said. From Awka, a spare parts dealer in Maiduguri, Mr. Francis Onwumelu, said the postponement would affect his business and the education of his children. “We closed our shops to travel down to Awka with my family last weekend hoping to return immediately after the elections, but as it is, we cannot go back until April. “This will seriously affect my business and the education of my children who are supposed to be in school,” he said. For Mrs. Maureen Ijedibia, who sells dry fish in Lokoja, the option is to return to her base and face her business before the elections. “Going back to Lokoja has become necessary for me because I did not save enough money that will take me till April after the elections,” she said. From Abakaliki, Mrs. Nkiru Aja, a businesswoman in Taraba, told NAN that she had since returned to her base with her family to resume duty. “I am a widow with four children and I cannot afford to lose any of them which is why I returned with them. “The postponement has caused a lot of confusion and doubled the expenses for me, but we accept it in good faith. “I pray that all the relevant stakeholders in the conduct of the election would justify the reasons for the adjustment,” she said. Another returnee, Mr. Kenneth Chukwuma, who runs a business in Gombe, said he cannot afford to stay till April. “We are not questioning the judgment of INEC or the security chiefs but what is the guarantee that the dates the elections were shifted to will hold? “My children are in school and six weeks is too much for them to stay back home. We will go back to Gombe,” Chukwuma said. Meanwhile, the Imam of Aba Mosque in Abia State, Alhaji Idris Bashir, has confirmed that a good number of people of northern extraction who left Aba for their homes did so for fear of attacks during the elections. Bashir said that some had left to cast their votes since they did not register in Aba. “Some of those who left the city are those who registered in their states of origin and have gone to vote but some of us who registered in Abia are still here,” he said. The movement of northerners doing business in Aba has affected the cost of some food items like yam, beef, watermelon and cucumber, among other staples. http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/returnees-in-dilemma-over-election-shift/201699/

No comments:

Post a Comment