The opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), today maintained that it has uncovered plans by the government of Goodluck Jonathan, alongside the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to render card readers ineffective on election day.
APC in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed said, "We can authoritatively inform Nigerians that the morbid fear of card readers by the Jonathan Administration and the PDP has now been translated into concrete action. They have hired an Israeli, Gyora Berger, to do the dirty job of jamming the card readers.
"To those who might accuse us of crying wolf, they should realise that every alarm we have raised in the past has been true, including that the Jonathan administration was pushing for the postponement of the elections and that they are mortally afraid of the use of PVCs and card readers."
The opposition party insisted that the Israeli was employed specifically to develop three prototype card reader jammers, which he had accomplished, developing three of such jammers (25 metres, 50 metres and 100 metres range) to be carried in the pockets of trusted PDP stalwarts on election day with a view to disabling the card readers within the state radius.
APC further argued that aside disabling the card readers, "The jammers would also disable all telephones, iPads, etc within the states radius of those carrying them on their persons.
"An order had been placed for 75,000 pieces of the jammers at a cost of $200 per piece, bringing the total cost to $15m. The jammers would be air freighted to Nigeria next week.
"The plan is to deploy the card jammers to the areas deemed to be the strongholds of the APC, such as the North-west, North-East, North-Central and the South-West.
"It is the planned procurement of the jammers that has given the confidence to the administration and party officials to continuously boast that Buhari will never rule Nigeria, and also the reason why a chief of the PDP boasted last week that the card readers won’t work, thus advising INEC to make alternative arrangements."
Photo credit: The Punch
No comments:
Post a Comment