The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has disclosed that it recorded 10.4 million fresh registration in the nationwide Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) before its suspension on July 31.
In its CVR Update for Quarter 4, week 16, which was released on Monday, Aug. 1 in Abuja, INEC confirmed the figures.
The commission also announced that during the period, 12.2 million registrants completed their registrations, of which 3.4 million registered online, while 8.8 million registered through physical registration.
INEC gave the gender breakdown of the registrants who completed their registrations to be, 6,074,078 males and 6,224,866 females.
The update also showed that 8,784,677 of the registrants that completed their registrations were youths, 2,430,709 middle-aged, 956,017 elderly, 127,541 old persons, while 87,083 were Persons With Disabilities (PWDs).
Read Also: 2023: INEC Will Uphold Integrity Of The Ballot – Yakubu
INEC also said that during the period of CVR, the commission received 31,098,013 applications including those for voter transfer, requests for replacement of PVCs, update of voter information record, etc, of which 216,442 was from PWDs.
It gave the gender breakdown of those who applied to be 16,148,645 for males and 14,949,368 from women.
A breakdown of the completed registration by states showed that Lagos has the highest number of registrants that completed their registration with 585,629 registrants, followed by Kano with 569,103 and Delta with 523,517.
Ekiti has the lowest number of people who completed registration with 124,844, followed by Yobe with 152,414, FCT with 211,341 and Imo with 213, 270.
Africa Today News, New York reports that the last CVR commenced in April 2017 and ended in August 2018, in the lead-up to the 2019 general elections.
It was scheduled to resume in the first quarter of 2020 but was suspended following the break out of COVID-19 pandemic.
However, INEC resumed the exercise on June 28, 2021, and suspended it on July 31.
Meanwhile, quite a number of Nigerians have continued to call on the commission to reopen the registration as many of them are yet to register.