Identical twins and other multiple births in Nigeria have
called on President Goodluck Jonathan to intervene in their mass discrimination
against them by INEC. They stated that
about 1,000 sets of identical twins in the country had been denied the
Permanent Voter Cards due to failure of INEC’s biometric machines to
distinguish their identities.
Addressing journalists in Abuja on this problem, joint
presidents of United Twins and Multiple Births for Transformation in Nigeria,
Akpos Mamuzee-Dixon and Ando Mamuzee-Dixon said they are presently experiencing
the problem. They said while Akpos has
gotten his PVC Andos was not given because of the inability of INEC’s biometric
machine to distinguish them.
In a letter dated November 25 and addressed to the INEC
chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, the twins threatened to institute N1bn law suit
against INEC “if within 14 days from the date of your receipt of this letter,
you fail, refuse to carry out our modest demands.”
They said all the attempts they made to get remedy,
including the letter they wrote to Jega through their lawyer, Chief Mike
Ozekhome (SAN), had yielded no result.
Akpos said, “When we got to the point of our registration in
Wuse Zone 7, Akpos presented his Temporary Voter Card, and they found his name
on the list and they gave him his PVC. But when it was my turn, they said they
could not find my name on the list despite providing my temporary card. They
asked to search for my name in other centres. We did but we could not find my
name.
“We were then asked to go to Karu. When we got to Karu, a
woman who was an INEC official told us that when they saw the pictures of the
two of us, they decided to keep one of the cards on the assumption that it was
the same person who was being fraudulent by registering twice.”
They said each or both of many sets of twins in the country
had been denied their PVCs and would likely be disenfranchised if urgent step
was not taken.
“Is it now a crime to be twins? I have no apology for being
a twin or being identical with my twin. President Goodluck Jonathan must
intervene in this. The essence of biometric system is to distinguish persons.
If INEC machine cannot distinguish us as different persons then, with due respect,
INEC has failed.”
Akpos and Andos have threatened to sue INEC since the
commission had allegedly failed to respond to their November 25 letter.
They called on INEC to immediately give Andos his PVC to
enable him perform his fundamental and civil obligation as enshrined in Section
12(1) of the Electoral Act, 2011.
In the letter written on their behalf by Ozekhome’s law
firm, the twins also demanded N20m as
compensation for the trauma, psychological depression and feeling of societal
rejection they had been made to pass through with the denial of Ando’s PVC.
Source: Punch
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