Anambra 2025: Media professionals urged to ensure election balanced reports

Mrs Olachi Nwugo

By Mimi Chiadikaobi

Head of Legal Department, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Anambra State, Mrs Olachi Nwugo has called on journalists reporting the Anambra November 8 governorship election to be guided by the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2022.

She said that media has an indispensable constitutional role under the new Act (Section 22 of the 1999 Constitution) as the watchdog of society which is reinforced by transparency-focused provisions of the Electoral Act 2022.

Nwugo said that It is crucial for the media to understand the interplay between the hard-copy Form EC8A and the IReV-uploaded image.

“EC8A, the hard copy form remains the legally primary document for the declaration of results.

However, the IReV-uploaded image is a powerful verification tool that provides real-time transparency and a mechanism to resolve disputes at collation, significantly reducing the incentive for result manipulation, ”she said.

Nwugo noted that for the 2025 Anambra State governorship election, the media is a fundamental partner in maximizing the Act’s intended benefits.

“Media’s  accurate,  timely and  impartial  reporting underpinned  by  a  solid  understanding  of  these legal  provisions  and  technological  processes, will  ensure  that  the electorate remains informed and the integrity of the process is protected.

“We urge you to leverage the transparency of the IReV platform to counter disinformation and hold all actors accountable to the letter and the spirit of the Electoral Act 2022”.

She noted that the Electoral Act 2022 has provided a robust legal architecture for a  transparent  and  credible  election.

Nwugo discloses that  the  deployment  of  technology  particularly  the  BVAS  for  accreditation  (S. 47  &  S. 51)  and  the  IReV  for results transfer and verification (S. 60 & S. 64) has fundamentally altered Nigeria’s electoral landscape for the better. 

She further noted that the role of the media as the primary source of information and accountability requires a deep knowledge of the legal framework that supports the electoral process.

She also said that the act for legal foundation explicitly provides the legal basis for INEC to deploy technological devices  for  accreditation,  voting,  and  results  transmission,  moving  these critical  processes  beyond  the  previously  ambiguous  realm  of  policy  and guidelines.

Nwugo advised that the media should manage its relevance and at the same time, overcome the legal risks associated with Section 60(5) and 64, since the law mandates transmission.

She said that media houses that prematurely declared results based on unverified, non- IReV data faces the biggest risk and urged for precaution. 

Nwugo explained that credibility mandates the IReV data Policy; all election reports must  state  the  source  and  verification  status  of  the  data provided.

“If IReV data is missing or glitching reporters must say, ‘We are unable to verify this through the official INEC portal at this time  but  this  is  the  hard  copy  result  from  the  polling  unit’ and this hedges the legal risk against the media, “she added.

 
She advises that media should know the difference between voided vote, over-voting, margin of lead, and inconclusive election as defined in the electoral act, ensuring they are legally sound.

Nwugo also advised that media personalities need to consider properly Reporter Security (Safety): Section 101 & 104 of the INEC Regulations to define the Role of Security Agents and the Access to Polling Units to journalists.

She advised that the media is empowered by making sure they carry laminated printouts of the relevant sections of the law to show security agents who might attempt to deny them access or harass them. The law is their shield.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *