Wednesday, February 18 2026 -Protesters on Monday, February 16, returned to the National Assembly complex, demanding that lawmakers make real-time electronic transmission of election results compulsory in the Electoral Act Amendment Bill, 2026.
The demonstrators, drawn from civil society organizations such as
Situation Room Nigeria and ActionAid Nigeria, called for the complete removal
of manual collation of results, arguing that it creates room for manipulation
at collation centres.
According to the groups, genuine transparency can only be achieved if
results are transmitted electronically in real time directly from polling
units, without any fallback to manual processes.
The protest resumed after a five-day suspension of demonstrations
following assurances given to the groups during last Tuesday’s Senate sitting.
Security personnel mounted barricades at the entrances of the National
Assembly complex, restricting access and compelling the protesters to gather
outside the main gates.
The demonstrators insisted there was no valid reason to retain
manual backup systems, noting that budgetary allocations for elections already
account for the technological infrastructure needed to support electronic
transmission.
The renewed agitation comes amid controversy in the Senate over Clause
60(3) of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill.
During an emergency plenary session last week, Senate Chief Whip Tahir
Monguno proposed deleting the phrase “real-time” from the clause and
substituting “transmission” with “transfer.”
The proposal sparked heated debate in the chamber, with lawmakers
including Enyinnaya Abaribe raising objections and points of order.
At the conclusion of deliberations, senators approved the electronic
transmission of results to the INEC Result Viewing Portal but retained manual
collation as a contingency in the event of technical difficulties.
The Senate is expected to reconvene on Tuesday at 11 a.m. to continue
deliberations on other national issues.
Meanwhile, the protesters have vowed to sustain their advocacy,
maintaining that they will not relent until real-time electronic transmission
of election results is unequivocally guaranteed in the amended legislation.

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