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EFCC: Governorship Aspirants Spent N30bn in Primary Elections Ahead of 2027
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EFCC: Governorship Aspirants Spent N30bn in Primary Elections Ahead of 2027

This Day about 2 hours 3 mins read

Hammed Shittu in Ilorin

Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mr. Ola Olukoyede, yesterday, revealed  that,  some governorship aspirants in Nigeria spent between N20 billion and N30 billion to secure electoral victory during the just concluded political parties primaries elections in the country.

He however, warned that the trend posed a serious threat to democratic governance and fuels corruption in public office.

Olukoyede made the revelation in Ilorin, Kwara State capital while delivering the inaugural High-Level Guest Speakers’ Series organised by the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies (CPSS), University of Ilorin.

The theme of the event “De-risking and Mobilising Critical Stakeholders for Peaceful and Credible 2027 Elections in Nigeria”, he said huge financial resources deployed during elections often compelled elected officials to divert public funds after assuming office in a bid to recover their investments.

Olukoyede  said the huge financial outlay required to win elections often created pressure on public office holders to divert public funds after assuming office, citing an example of what it required to win a governorship election.

He said the EFCC remained committed to tackling vote-buying and other forms of financial inducement capable of undermining the integrity of Nigeria’s electoral process.

“The commercialisation of votes weakens the foundation of good governance because it compromises the political recruitment process. Leaders who buy their way into office are more likely to focus on recovering their investments rather than serving the public interest,” he said.

Olukoyede revealed that the anti-graft agency made several arrests across the country over vote-buying and related electoral offences, with a number of convictions already secured, noting also that those prosecuted included politicians, electoral officials and ordinary citizens found culpable of electoral misconduct.

The EFCC chairman warned that impunity in the electoral process could undermine democracy and national stability, stressing that there must be no sacred cows in the enforcement of electoral laws.

He also disclosed that the commission planned to deploy drones and other technological tools to strengthen election monitoring ahead of the 2027 general election, particularly in tracking vote-buying and financial inducements at polling units.

Olukoyede called on political parties and their supporters to embrace issue-based campaigns and reject inflammatory rhetoric capable of inciting violence.

He urged stakeholders, including the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), security agencies, civil society organisations, the media and political actors, to work collaboratively to ensure peaceful, free and credible elections.

Earlier, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin, Professor Wahab Egbewole (SAN), described electoral corruption as a major threat to national security and democratic development.

In his welcome address, the Director of the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies, Professor G.A. Animasawun, said the lecture series was conceived to provide a platform for proactive engagement on threats to Nigeria’s electoral process ahead of the 2027 polls.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

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