A disturbing administrative blunder at a local office of the Independent National Electoral Commission has plunged the nation into fresh outrage, exposing yet another layer of incompetence from an agency already struggling to earn public trust. The commission stands thoroughly shamed after a citizen publicly caught its officials distributing what appeared to be official death certificate forms to innocent registrants who had simply come to register as voters.
The footage, which has ignited furious reactions across social media, shows a bewildered young man confronting INEC staff after noticing that the physical paperwork he was asked to fill bore the unmistakable formatting and legal language of a death registry. While officials at the centre verbally assured the queue of citizens that they were handling routine voter registration sheets, the man insisted the documents were clearly designed for recording deceased persons. The commission has offered no immediate explanation, no apology, and no statement clarifying why such documents were sitting on a voter registration desk.
This is not a simple misunderstanding. This is a reckless failure of basic administrative competence. If INEC cannot even distinguish between a form for the living and a form for the dead, how can Nigerians trust them to distinguish between legitimate votes and electoral fraud? The commission has spent months lecturing the public about the need to purge dead voters from the rolls, yet at the very grassroots level where citizens engage with the process, its staff are handing out death certificates to healthy, living Nigerians who simply want to exercise their constitutional right.
The irony is devastating. INEC Chairman Professor Joash Amupitan recently admitted that the voter register is bloated with the names of deceased individuals, blaming poor record keeping from other government agencies. He spoke passionately about cleaning up the system to restore electoral integrity. But what Nigerians witnessed in that registration centre was the opposite of integrity. It was chaos. It was carelessness. It was a public humiliation of every citizen who still believes in the democratic process.
LIVE UPDATE: A man at the INEC office has alleged that officials are giving people Death Certificate forms to fill and sign, while presenting them as Voter Registration forms.
We are being asked to fill and sign what is clearly a Death Certificate form, but they are calling it a… pic.twitter.com/gYnGBTlTXA
— Big Sman.🍥 (@MR__Sulaiman1) June 15, 2026
What makes this incident even more unforgivable is the absence of clear public communication. INEC rolled out this verification and clean up exercise without properly educating its own field staff, without issuing sample forms to the public, and without establishing any mechanism for citizens to verify whether the documents they are signing are legitimate. The result is predictable and entirely preventable. Citizens are now afraid to approach registration centres. They are circulating videos of alleged malpractice. They are losing whatever fragile confidence they had left in the electoral system.
Civil society organisations and legal experts have already begun demanding a full public inquiry into this incident. The commission must answer painful questions. Were these forms intentionally placed at the centre to discourage registration? Was this a tragic case of bureaucratic cross wiring where forms from the National Population Commission were accidentally shipped to an INEC office? Or does this point to something more sinister, a deliberate attempt to embarrass citizens or create barriers to voter participation?
INEC has a duty to explain itself immediately and without excuses. The staff involved must be identified and sanctioned. Every form distributed from that centre must be retrieved and audited. And the commission must issue a public apology not just to the young man who exposed this shameful episode, but to every Nigerian who has been subjected to this degrading and confusing process.
Nigeria is watching. The world is watching. And what the world sees today is an electoral commission that cannot even handle paperwork without causing a national scandal. That is not the behaviour of a credible institution. That is the behaviour of an agency that has lost its way and must now be forced back on course by public pressure and genuine accountability.

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