The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega
The  Independent National Electoral Commission on  Tuesday ended months of speculations on the new guidelines for full  blown political activities by releasing the revised election timetable  for the 2011 general elections.
According to the new  timetable, National Assembly elections will  hold  first on April, 2,   2011. They will be  followed by the presidential election on April 9,  2011.
The process is expected to  end on April 16 with the governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections.
The INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega, read out the timetable at a news conference in Abuja.
He  said the release of the timetable/election guidelines was in line with  the powers conferred on the commission by the 1999 Constitution (as  amended), the 2010 Electoral Act  and all other powers enabling  the  commission to perform its functions.
Other details of the election schedule show that campaigns by political parties will begin  on December 1, 2010.
The  party primaries will start on January 1, 2011 while the last day for  the submission of forms CF001 and CF 002 (affidavit and personal  particulars of candidates for all elections) is January 31, 2011.  
The  date for the registration of voters, pursuant to Section 9(5) of the  Electoral Act (2010), has been fixed for between January 15  and 29,  2011.
Section 9(5) of the Electoral Act , provides that the exercise be carried out 90 days before polling day.
The new timetable also states the last day for the withdrawal/substitution of candidates by political parties.
For  National Assembly elections, parties have up till February 14, 2011 to  substitute candidates. Parties also have up till February 21, 2011 to  submit nomination forms for candidates contesting the National Assembly  poll.
February 21, 2011 is  the last day for parties to  substitute candidates for the presidential poll and February 28 for the  governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections.
Electioneering   is  expected to end on April 1, 2011 for the National Assembly  elections and  April 8, 2011 for the presidential contest.
Governorship and Houses of Assembly elections have April 15 as the last day for electioneering.
Jega,  who was flanked at the news conference by national commissioners of  INEC,  also announced that  the run-off for governorship and  presidential elections (if any), would be held within seven days after  the announcement of the result of the affected poll.
Sections 179 (4) and (5),  and Section 134 (4-5)  respectively of the  1999 Constitution provide for this.
The  commission had, in a timetable released on September 7, 2010 , fixed  the voter registration for between November 1 and November 14.
INEC  also scheduled  party primaries for between September  11 and October  30. It  had planned to hold the 2011 general elections in January.
But  at a meeting with leaders of the 63 registered political parties on  September 21, Jega said the January date was not feasible.
He  had said  that the commission had missed many of its timelines that  were crucial to the registration of voters as well as the recruitment  and training of ad-hoc staff for the elections.
At the  meeting, INEC and the parties agreed that  the 2010 Electoral Act and  the 1999 Constitution should be amended to allow for the postponement of  the poll.
President   Goodluck  Jonathan had in October  sent a bill to the National Assembly proposing  amendments to sections  5, 10, 11, and 17 of the constitution (first alteration) Act and  Sections 76,116, 132, and 178 of the 1999 Constitution.
According to him, the amendments  will extend the deadline for the conduct of the election to   the end of April 2011.
The  National Assembly had passed the bill, which mandated INEC to hold the  general elections not earlier than 150 days and not later than 30 days  to  May 29 .  
In the first amendment, the commission was  supposed to hold elections  not  earlier than 150 days  and not later  than 60 days before May 29.
Earlier this month, the  National Assembly had forwarded the bill to the 36 state  Houses of  Assembly, which on Monday, said that they had approved  it.
Source:http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art201011241545380

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