SERAP Petitions INEC, Demands For Missing N55.9bn Meant To Buy Smart Card Readers, Ballot Papers, Others
Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has urged Professor Joash Amupitan, the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), βto promptly account for the missing or diverted N55.9 billion meant for the purchase of smart card readers, ballot papers, result sheets and other election materials for the 2019 general elections.β
SERAP said the grave allegations are documented in the latest annual report published by the Auditor-General on 9 September 2025.
The organisation also urged him to βdisclose the names of the contractors that reportedly collected over N55.9 billion for the purchase of smart card readers, ballot papers, result sheets and other election materials for the 2019 general elections, including details of the directors and shareholders as well as the contractorsβ addresses.β
SERAP urged him to βrefer these grave violations of constitutional and international standards to appropriate anticorruption agencies for prosecution, as appropriate, and to ensure the full recovery of proceeds of corruption.β
In the letter dated 6 December 2025 and signed by SERAP deputy director Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisation said: βINEC must operate without corruption if the commission is to uphold Nigeriansβ right to participation in their own government.β
SERAP said, βAllegations of corruption in the supply of smart card readers, ballot papers, result sheets and other election materials directly undermine Nigeriansβ right to participate in elections that are free, fair, transparent, and credible.β
According to SERAP, βINEC cannot properly carry out its constitutional and statutory responsibilities to conduct free and fair elections in the country if it continues to fail to uphold the basic principles of transparency, accountability and the rule of law.β
The letter, read in part: βThese allegations also constitute abuse of public office and show the urgent need by INEC under your leadership to commit to transparency, accountability, clean governance and the rule of law.β
βAccording to the recently published 2022 audited report by the Auditor General of the Federation (AGF), the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) βirregularly paidβ over N5.3 billion [N5,312,238,499.39] βto a contractor for the supply of Smart Card Readers for the 2019 general elections.ββ
βThe contract was awarded without prior approval from the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) and the Federal Executive Council. The payment was also βmade without any document and any evidence of supplies to the commission.ββ
βINEC claimed approval was not sought because βthe supply of smart card readers falls under national defence or national security and therefore exempted under the Procurement Act.β
βBut the Auditor-General rejected the claim as βalien to the Procurement Actβ, and stated that βINEC ought to have received a Certificate of No Objection from the BPP for the contract.ββ He is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βINEC also reportedly βpaid over N4.5 billion [N4,505,220,044.06] to six contractors for ballot papers/result sheetsβ, but βthe payments were without any documentary evidence of supply from the contractors.β There was βno evidence of advertisement, bid submission, bid evaluation, approvals and no Certificate of No Objectionβ.β
βThere was also βno evidence of the contractorsβ eligibilityβ, as βINEC failed to show the contractorsβ Tax clearance certificate, pension clearance certificate, NSITF certificate, ITF certificate of compliance, and BPP registration.ββ
βThe Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βINEC reportedly paid over N331 million [N331,228,070.04] to βsome contractors in doubtful circumstances as several payments had contradictory supporting documents.ββ
βThe contract βfor the supply of 25 pieces of generating sets was dated 28 December 2019 but the receipt for the payment was issued 12 months before the contract, that is, 15 January 2019.β The contractors βwere paid even before the award of the contracts.ββ
βINEC claimed that these infractions are justified for the βCommission to ensure that the 2019 general elections were concluded and to avoid what would have been a deep constitutional crisisβ, but the Auditor-General considered the commissionβs response βunsatisfactory.ββ
βThe Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βINEC also reportedly failed βto deduct over N2.1 billion [N2,193,484,804.06] of stamp duty from contractors between 2018 and 2019.β According to the Auditor-General, βthere were no justifiable reasons by the Commission for the failure to deduct and remit the stamp duty.ββ
βINEC claimed it did not receive βany circular requesting it to deduct stamp duty from contract payments to contractorsβ, but the Auditor-General considered the commissionβs response βunsatisfactory.ββ
βThe Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βINEC also failed to βretire over N630 million [N630,625,319.80] of cash advances granted to some officers of the Commission. Some officers βwere granted multiple advances when the previous ones had not been retired.ββ
βThe Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βThe Commission also βawarded contracts of over N41 billion [N41,312,066,801.00] for the printing of ballot papers, result sheets, and voting point result sheets for various electionsβ, but βwithout due process.β According to the Auditor-General, βthere was no evidence that the contractors were eligible to carry out such contracts.ββ
βThere βwas also no evidence of previous work carried out by the contractors, as some of the contractors were Civil Engineering Constructions Company, Oil and Gas Company and Importer of Building Materials, among others, in violation of paragraph 2909 of the Financial Regulations.ββ
βThe contracts βwere also awarded without the Federal Executive Councilβs approval, and βNo Objectionβ approval from the BPP.β The Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βINEC also βirregularly awarded a contract for the supply of 4 Toyota Land Cruisers to the Commission for over N297 million [N297,777,776.00].β The βcontract was awarded without the approval by the Federal Executive Council.ββ
βThe βmarket survey carried out showed that the price of Toyota Land Cruiser in 2019 was not above N50 millionβ, but the commission claimed it paid N74 million for each Toyota Land Cruiser.ββ
βThe Auditor-General is concerned that the money βmay have been diverted.β He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.β
βThese grim allegations by the Auditor-General suggest a grave violation of the public trust and the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended], national anticorruption laws, and the countryβs international obligations.β
βINEC cannot ensure impartial administration of future elections if these allegations are not satisfactorily addressed, suspected perpetrators including the contractors involved are not prosecuted and the proceeds of corruption are not fully recovered.β
βWe would be grateful if the recommended measures are taken within 7 days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, SERAP shall take all appropriate legal actions to compel you and INEC to comply with our request in the public interest.

Hafsoh Isiaq is a graduate of Linguistics. An avid writer committed to creative, high-quality research and news reportage. She has considerable experience in writing and reporting across a variety of platforms including print and online.








