The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) announced that, as of December 2022, 7,746 deceased voters had been removed from the national voter register in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
The Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Victoria Etta-Messi, disclosed this to our correspondent on Thursday.
“Seven thousand, seven hundred and forty-six decreased persons across the 36 states and the FCT were removed from the National Register of Voters as of December 2022,” she disclosed.
According to INEC, a thorough cleaning of the voter register is usually done before every general election.
The commission also identified the problem of double or multiple registrations, which was addressed by deploying the Automated Biometric Identification System.
This process flagged and removed 2,780,756 cases of invalid registrations, representing 22.6 per cent of all new registrants nationwide.
INEC further noted concerns about declining voter turnout. The 2023 presidential and National Assembly elections recorded a 27.5 per cent turnout, down from 35.6 per cent in 2019.
Some stakeholders attributed this decline partly to an inflated voter register and called for more rigorous efforts to clean it.
The review’s stakeholders recommended that INEC strengthen collaboration with agencies such as the National Population Commission and the National Identity Management Commission to identify deceased voters.
There were also calls to suspend individuals who have not voted in the past three elections and require them to revalidate their registration.
“One suggestion from this review was to strengthen collaboration with other agencies, such as NIMC and NPC, to identify deceased persons in the register and remove them. In addition, the commission could suspend individuals who have not voted in the past three elections from the register and request them to revalidate their registration,” INEC noted in its review.