There was heavy vehicular movement around the Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State, on Thursday evening as residents, who registered in the state, arrived from across the country to cast their votes.
Our correspondent, who toured the Garri Alimi, Oja Oba, Alore and
Sobi areas of the the state capital, noticed large number of people who
had travelled from other parts of the country to the state capital.
The returnees said they had come from the south-western and
northern parts of the country to exercise their vote for their
candidates at home.
Some of them, who spoke with our correspondents, gave reasons why
they decided to travel home for the polls despite the inconveniences.
Lateef Adebayo said he regretted not participating in the 2011
general elections, adding that he came home this time to vote for his
choice of candidates to avoid blaming himself later.
He said, “I did not vote in the last elections and I believe there
are thousands of Nigerians, who have such non-challant attitude like me.
Recently, it occurred to me that why do I blame bad governments when I
did not vote. May be, they would not have been voted into power if I and
others like me had come to vote.
“In fact, I came home last month too to collect my PVC.”
Yusufu Idris, a tailor in Ondo State, said he was convinced to
some extent that his vote would count going by the arrangements put in
place by the Independence National Electoral Commission.
He said, “I have a feeling that with the use of PVC and card
reader, rigging will be very difficult. That is what pushed me to leave
my work and travel all the way from Akure with my wife to vote because
we registered here in 2011. I believe my vote will count this time
around.”
Forty-three-year-old Amudalat Adeshina said she and her husband hailed from Ilorin but live in Minna, Niger State.
She added they usually come home every two months to visit their son and daughter, who school in the University of Ilorin.
Mr. Gbadeyan Joseph, a resident of Sango, said the zeal with which
his friends in Abuja discussed elections, prompted him to come home in
February to collect his PVC.
“I work as a mechanical engineer with a company in Abuja. I have
been living there for two years now. Most of my friends said they would
rather go home to vote and mobilise others to do so rather than transfer
their registration to Abuja. I think Nigerians are becoming wiser by
the day and more people are willing to vote their conscience
irrespective of monetary inducement from politicians,” he said.
A commercial driver, Abiodun Jimoh, also shared a similar view
with Joseph’s colleagues, saying he had come to Ilorin from Alapa, in
the Asa Local Government Area of Kwara State to mobilise his relatives
to vote.
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