Muiz Banire, former chairman of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON), says a larger percentage of Nigerian voters can’t make informed decisions during election.
Speaking on Sunday at the International Conference Centre (ICC) in Ibadan, Oyo state, Banire noted that Nigeria must tackle illiteracy to dispel ethno-religious tension in the country.
Banire’s submission was part of his presentation titled ‘Ethno-Religious agitation and imperative inclusiveness’ at the 11th annual zonal symposium organised by the Muslim Students’ Society of Nigeria (MSSN) B-Zone.
He averred that 70 percent of those who voted during the 2019 presidential election were illiterates.
According to him, a larger percentage of the voting population is influenced as they cannot make informed decisions.
The senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN) further said the country needs to get census right in order to ensure equity since “everybody knows that most of the entitlements in Nigeria are based on the census figure”.
“There are some prerequisites that must be addressed. As of today, Nigeria has no reliable census. We don’t even know how many we are; the same manner we don’t know how much oil we produce,” he said.
‘So, we need certainly to get our census right, but I’m not too sure that that can ever be gotten right, because except there is a nationalistic conviction in all of us, we can’t get it.
“Everybody knows that most of the entitlements in Nigeria are based on the census figure — revenue, location of infrastructure, employment. So, everybody strives to manipulate it from one to the other and without it, no progress for the nation. We must get our census right.
“We must get the election right. Of course, we are making progress but we are not yet there. When INEC improved in technology and everything, now it’s vote buying. We have to tame that. We have to tame illiteracy.
“The last election, only 35 percent of Nigeria’s eligible voters voted Nigeria’s president, and out of this 35 percent, 70 percent of them are illiterates — those who do not know why they are voting; ‘they said we should go and vote’; ‘they said that man is in our area’; ‘he’s our town man’; ‘we attend the same mosque’; ‘he’s our pastor’ — and all manners of primordial considerations.
“So, at the end of the day, those who do not know are the ones showing us the road in Nigeria.”
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