ADDRESS BY HIS EXCELLENCY, BABATUNDE RAJI FASHOLA SAN, TO LAGOSIANS ON EVE OF MARCH 2015 GENERAL ELECTIONS
Dear Lagosians,
It is with a lot of pleasure that I address
you today as we set our eyes on Saturday’s elections.
I think the elections will be historic and
the whole world is watching and waiting, as we conduct the first of five
elections that will be held in West Africa this year.
I think the elections will be historic
because we will set an example for the whole of Africa and show that we can
decide our affairs.
I know, however, that there can be no history
without history makers.
You, the voters, the dynamic people of the
Centre of Excellence, will be the history makers.
Ask yourself what you will be saying to your
unborn children and grandchildren when they ask you in future where you were on
the day when the Great Election that changed Nigeria, took place.
I am sure that you will want to answer that
question with pride, to tell them how you woke up early and walked to the
polling station to cast your vote.
This is one big reason why you must go out
and vote and persuade members of your household and neighbourhood to vote; so
that you can be a part of history.
The second reason is that this election is
about your life, your safety, your wellbeing, your business, your roads, your
children’s safety and wellbeing, their future and that of Nigeria.
As a caring father, mother, uncle or aunty,
do you want someone else to decide the choices for you or will you make the
choice yourself?
If you make the choice for yourself and for
your children and you vote for the party that has made the most impact in your
life, that will be historic, it will be music to their ears, and I am sure they
will thank you for standing up to prepare that bright future for them.
Please know that what you choose to do on
Saturday will decide whether Nigeria changes or remains the same over the next
four years.
So I urge you to come out and vote.
I know that an overwhelming majority of us
want peaceful, transparent, credible and violence-free elections.
But as we wish for very successful elections,
we must know that wishes alone will not take us there. We must take action to
realise our wishes. We must go out to vote and make the change we want.
As long as we remain peaceful and law
abiding, our numbers will be enough to send the strongest and clearest message
of our desire for peace to those who do not wish us well.
I expect the security personnel to act
professionally, in keeping you safe because they and their families also have a
stake in a peaceful election.
As I have said before, this is a clean hands
election.
So I urge you to wash your hands with soap
and water before going out for accreditation in order to make it easy for the
card reader to identify you.
I urge you all to be peaceful and patient
with electoral officers and our children, the Youth Corpers, who will be
assisting them to ensure that we all perform our civic responsibility and vote
to make the type of society we want.
After you have cast your vote, you must
remain at the polling station at a reasonable distance where you can see what
is going on.
Please ignore those who say you cannot stay
at the polling station. You have every right to do so.
Firstly, the election is about your lives, so
why should it take place and be concluded behind your back?
Secondly, no law forbids you from staying at
the polling station. You simply are not allowed to disturb other voters,
interfere with the process or campaign for votes on Election Day.
Thirdly and most importantly, the Electoral
Act requires that the result at each polling station must be collated,
announced by the officials and posted at the polling station.
The question to ask those who say you cannot
stay at the polling station is this: Who will hear the results, and to whom
will they be announced, if voters have left?
Dear Lagosians, I urge us all to rise as one
people as we did during the Ebola outbreak and demonstrate once again that we
are different and we are special, that we can manage a democracy.
We have set an example for the whole of
Africa about how to manage an Ebola epidemic in an urban centre. It was the
first of its type in almost 40 years of Ebola epidemics.
We did it in a democratic setting.
We can set an even better example with this
election by being law abiding and peaceful.
Let us disappoint the prophets of doom and
keep a date with destiny for ourselves and generations unborn.
Let us vote for CHANGE with our permanent
voter’s cards and ballot papers, and make this Saturday’s election one of our
finest political hours.
Dear Lagosians, history beckons. Don’t turn
your backs.
God bless you all.
Eko o ni Baje
Babatude Raji Fashola, SAN
Governor of Lagos State
Governor of Lagos State
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