Tuesday, December 9, 2025
31.9 C
Lagos

Business

Wines of Canada Debuts in the Nigerian Market

Carl DIB Merchandising Limited, a leading company in the...

P+ Measurement Services Sparks Global Dialogue on Outcome-Based Measurement at 2025 AMEC Measurement Month

P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence and...

NIPR Institutes Annual PRICE Awards, Fixes 7th Dec for Ceremony

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has once...

LASAA Staff Faces Sanctions for Policy Breach after Viral Allegation, Cleared of Fraud

The Lagos State Signage and Advertisement Agency (LASAA) has...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX Chair: Media Coverage of Capital Market Key to Sustainable Growth

OPENING REMARKS BY THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN EXCHANGE GROUP (NGX)...

Stanbic IBTC Capital Clinches 4 Top Honours at AIHN Investment Banking Awards 2025

Stanbic IBTC Capital, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

NGX T+2 Settlement Cycle ‘Goes Live’ Event

L – R: Chinwendu Ekeh, Head, Operations & IT,...

FG Reassures Investors, Pledges Balanced Capital Gains Tax Outcomes as NGX Lists MREIF

Nigerian Exchange (NGX) today hosted the Minister of Finance...

Nigerian Stocks Present Buying Opportunities as Market Sheds N2.8trn

Nigeria's equities market closed last week ending November 7...

Insurance

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Wins .NG Insurance Website of the Year 2025

SanlamAllianz Nigeria's website/portal, www.sanlamallianz.com.ng, has been adjudged winner of...

Leadway Assurance, AGRA, NADF, Verdure Climate Advance Agric Insurance Solutions

Leadway Assurance, one of Nigeria's leading insurance providers, has...

AIICO Launches All-in-One Financial Protection for Nigeria’s Underserved Population

L-R: Mr. Mike Eko – (Novus Agro Limited) Mr. Oluwatosin...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Secures Board’s Approval to Raise N5bn Capital

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc notifies its shareholders and the...

Insurers Support Partnership with State Govts to Drive Insurance Penetration in Nigeria

The insurance community in Nigeria is poised to upscale...

Business

Wines of Canada Debuts in the Nigerian Market

Carl DIB Merchandising Limited, a leading company in the...

P+ Measurement Services Sparks Global Dialogue on Outcome-Based Measurement at 2025 AMEC Measurement Month

P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence and...

NIPR Institutes Annual PRICE Awards, Fixes 7th Dec for Ceremony

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has once...

LASAA Staff Faces Sanctions for Policy Breach after Viral Allegation, Cleared of Fraud

The Lagos State Signage and Advertisement Agency (LASAA) has...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX Chair: Media Coverage of Capital Market Key to Sustainable Growth

OPENING REMARKS BY THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN EXCHANGE GROUP (NGX)...

Stanbic IBTC Capital Clinches 4 Top Honours at AIHN Investment Banking Awards 2025

Stanbic IBTC Capital, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

NGX T+2 Settlement Cycle ‘Goes Live’ Event

L – R: Chinwendu Ekeh, Head, Operations & IT,...

FG Reassures Investors, Pledges Balanced Capital Gains Tax Outcomes as NGX Lists MREIF

Nigerian Exchange (NGX) today hosted the Minister of Finance...

Nigerian Stocks Present Buying Opportunities as Market Sheds N2.8trn

Nigeria's equities market closed last week ending November 7...

Insurance

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Wins .NG Insurance Website of the Year 2025

SanlamAllianz Nigeria's website/portal, www.sanlamallianz.com.ng, has been adjudged winner of...

Leadway Assurance, AGRA, NADF, Verdure Climate Advance Agric Insurance Solutions

Leadway Assurance, one of Nigeria's leading insurance providers, has...

AIICO Launches All-in-One Financial Protection for Nigeria’s Underserved Population

L-R: Mr. Mike Eko – (Novus Agro Limited) Mr. Oluwatosin...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Secures Board’s Approval to Raise N5bn Capital

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc notifies its shareholders and the...

Insurers Support Partnership with State Govts to Drive Insurance Penetration in Nigeria

The insurance community in Nigeria is poised to upscale...

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5bn FOI Controversy

By Chike Walter Duru

When the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recently demanded a staggering ₦1.5 billion from a law firm for access to the national register of voters and polling units, many Nigerians were left bewildered.

The request was made under the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act, 2011 – a law designed to make public records accessible, not to commercialise them. INEC’s justification, couched in legalese and bureaucratic arithmetic, raises a deeper question: Is Nigeria’s electoral umpire genuinely committed to transparency and accountability?

At the heart of this controversy is a simple statutory principle. Section 8(1) of the Freedom of Information Act clearly stipulates that where access to information is granted, the public institution may charge “an amount representing the actual cost of document duplication and transcription.” The framers of this law envisioned modest fees; not financial barriers.

INEC, however, appears to have stretched this provision beyond reason. By invoking its internal guideline of ₦250 per page, the Commission arrived at the colossal figure of ₦1,505,901,750 for 6,023,607 pages – supposedly the total pages needed to print the entire national voters’ register and polling unit list. It is a mathematical exercise that may be sound on paper, but absurd in context and intent.

Let us be clear: transparency is not a privilege that comes with a price tag. It is a fundamental right. The Freedom of Information Act exists precisely to ensure that institutions like INEC cannot hide behind bureaucracy or cost to deny citizens access to information that belongs to them.

INEC’s justification, however elaborate, falls flat against the law’s overriding provisions. Section 1(1) of the FOI Act affirms every Nigerian’s right to access or request information from any public institution. More importantly, Section 1(2) establishes that this right applies “notwithstanding anything contained in any other Act, law or regulation.” This means that no internal guideline, regulation, or provision of the Electoral Act can supersede the FOI Act, within the context of access to information.

By relying on Section 15 of the Electoral Act 2022 and its own “Guidelines for Processing Certified True Copies,” INEC seems to have elevated its internal processes above a federal statute – a position that is both legally untenable and administratively misguided.

Civil society organisations have rightly condemned INEC’s response. The Media Initiative Against Injustice, Violence and Corruption (MIIVOC) called the fee arbitrary and unlawful, while the Media Rights Agenda (MRA) described it as a deliberate attempt to frustrate legitimate requests under the FOI Act.

These reactions are not misplaced. Charging ₦1.5 billion for public records is tantamount to weaponising cost – turning what should be a transparent process into a pay-to-play system.

The Attorney-General of the Federation’s FOI Implementation Guidelines pegged the standard charge for duplication at ₦10 per page. Even at that rate, printing the same documents would not amount to anything close to ₦1.5 billion. Moreover, in an age of digital data, it is difficult to believe that the only way INEC can share information is through millions of printed pages.

It is worth noting that the National Register of Voters is a digital database – already compiled, stored, and backed up electronically. The polling unit list is also digitised and publicly available. What, then, justifies this astronomical fee?

Democracy thrives on openness. The credibility of any electoral body depends not just on the conduct of elections, but also on the degree of public confidence in its processes. If the cost of accessing basic electoral data runs into billions, how can civil society, researchers, or ordinary citizens participate meaningfully in democratic oversight?

The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ Guidelines on Access to Information and Elections in Africa (2017) are explicit: election management bodies must proactively disclose essential electoral information, including voters’ rolls and polling unit data. Nigeria, as a signatory to this framework, is obligated to promote – not restrict access to such information.

By placing financial barriers in the way of public access, INEC risks undermining not only its own credibility but also Nigeria’s broader democratic integrity. Transparency should not be a privilege of the rich or the powerful. It should be a right enjoyed by all.

This incident presents an opportunity for reflection and reform. INEC must immediately review its internal cost guidelines for information requests and align them with the FOI Act and the Attorney-General’s Implementation Guidelines. More importantly, it should embrace proactive disclosure by publishing the national register of voters and polling units in digital formats that are freely accessible to the public.

There is no reason why information already stored electronically should require billions to access. Doing so not only contravenes the spirit of the FOI Act but also erodes public trust in the Commission’s commitment to open governance.

Access to information is the lifeblood of democracy. It empowers citizens to hold institutions accountable and ensures that governance remains transparent. INEC’s ₦1.5 billion charge is not merely excessive; it is a dangerous precedent that could embolden other public institutions to commercialize public data and silence scrutiny.

If Nigeria must advance its democratic gains, the culture of secrecy and bureaucratic obstruction must give way to openness and accountability. INEC should lead that transformation, not stand in its way.

The Commission owes Nigerians not just elections, but the truth, transparency, and trust that sustain democracy.

Dr. Chike Walter Duru is a communications and governance expert, public relations strategist, and Associate Professor of Mass Communication.

He chairs the Board of the Freedom of Information Coalition, Nigeria. Contact: walterchike@gmail.com.

Hot this week

NGX Chair: Media Coverage of Capital Market Key to Sustainable Growth

OPENING REMARKS BY THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN EXCHANGE GROUP (NGX)...

Stanbic IBTC Bank Champions Economic Growth Through Strategic Partnership with AfDB

Stanbic IBTC Bank, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings...

UBA Group Dominates 2025 Banker Awards, Emerges Africa’s Bank of the Year, For Third Time in Five Years

Africa’s Global Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc,...

Wines of Canada Debuts in the Nigerian Market

Carl DIB Merchandising Limited, a leading company in the...

Stanbic IBTC Capital Clinches 4 Top Honours at AIHN Investment Banking Awards 2025

Stanbic IBTC Capital, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

Topics

Stanbic IBTC Secures 7 FMDQ Gold Awards for Financial Markets Excellence

Stanbic IBTC Holdings’ subsidiaries have been honoured for their...

NCC Opens Application for 2023 Talent Hunt Research through Hackathon

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has kicked off activities...

Bureaux De Change Operators Promise Better Investors’ Confidence in Forex Market

The Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria...

…Ecobank Raises Remuneration of EDs by 9% after Sack of Workers

Meanwhile, in its annual report, Ecobank revealed that while...

AMCON Takes Over 2 Firms in N3.6bn Debt Saga

Following the order of Hon. Justice B.F.M. Nyako of...

Roberts Orya: Fresh 5-Year Transformation Mandate at NEXIM

The Executive Indeed—Leadership, Hardwork, Competence, Transparency and Diligence surely have...

V Bank Wins Banking App of The Year Award

V Bank, Nigeria’s foremost digital bank powered by VFD...

Allianz Report: Nigeria to Register 2.3% Economic Growth in 2022

After being the slowest growing region in 2021, Africa...
Exit mobile version