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INEC chairman raises concern over unclean voter register
The Independent National Electoral Commission has recorded 2,685,725 completed registrations in the first phase of the Continuous Voter Registration exercise, which ended on December 10.
INEC Chairman, Prof. Joash Amupitan, disclosed this on Thursday at the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room National Stakeholders Forum on Elections in Abuja.
He said the figure comprises 1,576,137 completed online registrations and 1,109,588 completed through physical capture, noting that turnout was highest in Osun, Kaduna, Plateau, Imo, Borno and Lagos, respectively.
Amupitan said, “Since the CVR exercise began on August 18, I am pleased to share the latest data reflecting the nationwide response. As of our most recent updates, the Commission has recorded 2,685,725 completed registrations. Of this figure, 1,576,137 individuals completed their registration online, while 1,109,588 finalised their registration through physical capture.
“Osun State maintains its lead with 208,357 registered voters, followed by Kaduna State with 159,669; Plateau State with 152,650; and Imo State with 145,561. States like Borno (123,835) and Lagos (123,484) also reflect significant participation.
“The crucial exercise was scheduled to conclude its first quarter on December 10, and Phase One was successfully brought to a close yesterday. Beginning December 15, we will commence the next stage, which is the claims and objections period.”
He explained that the claims and objections window, which opens on December 15, will allow citizens to verify and correct entries before the data is consolidated.
While urging civil society groups and citizens to participate actively, he lamented that the voter register had not been “comprehensively cleaned” since 2011.
He said, “I want to appeal to civil society and all stakeholders here to help mobilise citizens to take advantage of this window. Some of the challenges we face stem from low participation in this stage.
“For instance, during our review in Anambra, we assessed a register of 2.8 million voters, yet turnout suggested only about 20 per cent participation. However, it is important to note that our voter register has not been comprehensively cleaned since 2011, meaning several names of deceased persons still appear.
“I do not want to mention specific names, but in Anambra, a prominent leader—known to have died many years ago—was still listed in the register. When someone who passed away 15 years ago, known both locally and internationally, remains on the voter register, it raises concerns about credibility. Statutorily, the claims and objections window is designed to address this.”
According to him, Phase Two of the CVR will begin on January 5, 2026, with registration centres moved closer to wards and communities to address distance and access challenges encountered in Phase One.
On vote buying, the INEC chairman said the commission had reached out to security agencies for updates on individuals arrested for financial inducement during recent elections.
“We have written to the police, the EFCC and others to provide investigation reports on those arrested. INEC can only prosecute; we do not have powers to arrest,” he said, adding that the commission relies on covert and overt security deployments to curb inducement at polling units.
Amupitan said the deployment of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System and the INEC Result Viewing Portal has enhanced transparency, but their performance is often affected by poor network coverage in many polling units.
“A tool like BVAS is only as good as the network it runs on. Achieving real-time upload of results to IReV is still one of our toughest operational battles,” he said.
He recalled a mock accreditation exercise conducted before the Anambra governorship election, where several polling units experienced delays in BVAS uploads due to unstable network service.
He added that while some devices uploaded accreditation figures immediately, others failed because presiding officers operated in areas with weak network signals.
The INEC chairman said the commission is in ongoing discussions with the Nigerian Communications Commission and mobile network operators, and is exploring alternative technologies and system redundancies. However, he emphasised that INEC does not control the underlying telecom infrastructure.
“Someone once asked what happens if a powerful politician convinces a service provider to switch off its service on election day. The truth is that we do not have control over these networks. These are structural issues we must all confront,” he said.
Amupitan added that the commission looks forward to a future where it can operate its own dedicated service infrastructure, but noted that such capacity does not currently exist.
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TUC Backs JOHESU, Threatens Nationwide Strike Over Salary Stoppage
The Trade Union Congress (TUC) has backed the industrial action embarked upon by the Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU).
JOHESU, an affiliate of TUC, directed its members to continue their ongoing industrial action that started on November 15, 2025, despite a Federal Government’s directive enforcing the ‘no work, no pay’ policy.
The decision followed an emergency virtual meeting of the union’s national leadership held on Monday, January 12, after the expiration of a 72-hour extension of the strike.
Reacting, the TUC knocked the Federal Government for allegedly trying to intimidate the protesting health workers without considering the economic realities.
TUC rejected a circular issued by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare on the implementation of a “No Work, No Pay” policy and the stoppage of salaries of members of the Joint Health Sector Unions through the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System, effective January 2026.
In a statement released on Wednesday, jointly signed by its President, Festus Osifo, and Secretary General, N.A. Toro, the congress described the directive as unacceptable and said it undermined ongoing negotiations between the government and health sector unions.
The TUC said the action violated established industrial relations principles and accused the ministry of acting unilaterally while negotiations were still ongoing.
According to the congress, the stoppage of salaries of JOHESU members would worsen the hardship faced by health workers amid rising inflation, fuel price increases and broader economic challenges.
The statement reads, “The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria unequivocally, vehemently, and totally rejects the circular issued by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare on the so-called implementation of “No Work, No Pay” and the stoppage of salaries of members of the JOHESU through IPPIS, effective January 2026.
“Congress states in the clearest terms that this action is a gross abuse of power, a deliberate sabotage of ongoing negotiations, and a flagrant violation of established industrial relations principles.
“It represents a return to command-and-control labour administration, which has no place in a democratic society. Let it be clearly understood: You cannot negotiate with workers on one hand and unleash punishment with the other. This circular is not policy; it is intimidation, and Congress will not accept it.”
The TUC also warned against what it described as the use of IPPIS to penalise workers, stating that it would resist any attempt to pressure workers through salary stoppages.
“Let it be clearly understood: You cannot negotiate with workers on one hand and unleash punishment with the other. This circular is not policy; it is intimidation, and Congress will not accept it. The stoppage of salaries of JOHESU members, workers who daily save lives, is wicked, insensitive, provocative, and profoundly unpatriotic, especially at a time when Nigerian workers are already being crushed by inflation, fuel price hikes, and economic hardship imposed by government policies.
“The TUC warns that the weaponisation of IPPIS to punish workers is an abuse of state machinery, and Congress will resist any attempt to starve workers into submission, ” the Union said.
The TUC demanded the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of the circular, restoration of all affected salaries and a return to negotiations within seven days.
It warned that failure by the ministry to reverse the decision within the stipulated period would force the congress to mobilise workers across sectors for collective action.
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‘Professorial Cadre’ Lecturers To Get ₦140k Monthly Top-Up In New FG/ASUU Deal, Says Minister
The Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa says lecturers in the “professorial cadre” will now enjoy a ₦140k monthly top-up with the landmark deal signed between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal Government.
Alausa said this on Wednesday during an interview on Channels Television’s Politics Today.
“This allowance is for professors. As long as you’re a full-time professor or you’re a reader, you’ll get that additional top-up,” the minister said on the current affairs show.
“No, it’s been bucketed per annum salary, but you get it every month, and I can tell you a professor will get almost over N140,000 top-off every month. A reader gets about 70,000 top-up additional every month.”
The push is one of the measures to end the incessant strikes by lecturers in Nigeria’s public universities.
Some of the key components of the agreement includes a 40 per cent review of emoluments for university teaching staff and the introduction of a professorial cadre.
“For the first time, the FG has approved a new professorial cadre allowance that apply to senior academics at the level of full time professors and readers in our tertiary institutions,” the minister said during the signing and unveiling of the agreement in Abuja.
“Let me emphasize clearly that these allowances apply strictly to full time and not part time professors and readers.
“This approval recognises the significant workload, administrative, scholarly and research responsibilities borne by academics at this level by the virtue of their profession and positions as professors or readers in our universities.”
When asked if the Federal Government can sustain it, Alausa said, “When the president was convinced that he had the funding, he signed off. Today we have the funding to support the 40% salary increase that we’ve given our lecturers in all our tertiary institutions.
“We started with ASUU today. The enhanced and academic allowances, nine of them in all, have been very structured now—well structured. The lecturers know, academics know who is paying: the one the universities will pay, and the one the federal government will pay via their personnel costs.”
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NGE pays tribute to Mohammed, Agbese
The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) is saddened by the passing of two distinguished and outstanding journalists, Messrs Yakubu Mohammed and Dan Agbese.
By the death of Mohammed and Agbese, who were among the three surviving co-founders of Newswatch Magazine, Nigerian journalism has lost great and irreplaceable treasures.
Yakubu Mohammed and Dan Agbese, both seasoned journalists and members of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE), were respected voices in Nigerian media and Nigeria as a whole.
Their incisive commentaries and commitment to press freedom and democratic values, inspired many.
These iconic journalists were fearless, professional and brought prestige to journalism by their works.
They gave investigative journalism in Nigeria impetus and contributed immensely to nation-building.
As a mark of respect for Yakubu Mohammed and Dan Agbese, we urged all journalists to set aside one day to redeficate themselves and reflect on the salient points of journalism, with eyes on the cardinal points of good journalism, which are truth, accuracy, fairness, objectivity, independence, integrity, ethical standards, transparency, and accountability.
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