 Ahead of the commencement of the continuous voter registration on Monday, June 28, the independent National Electoral Commission, INEC says the exercise will x-ray the dead and the underage, and those found the fault may face five-year jail terms. Resident Electoral Commissioner Inakwaiba, Mike Igeni, dropped this hint earlier today on our breakfast show. Destiny Momo has more. The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC says it will deploy 5,346 personnel to 2,673 registration centers for continuous voter registration CVR, and the commission is therefore migrating to the INEC voter enrollment device, IFED, which is based on an Android tablet. The Resident Commissioner for Aqaibom State, Mike Igeni, says for a start, 774 enrollment devices will be distributed to all local governments and one other in each state, making it 811 IFED machine. For those who are doing transfer, those who are complaining about deface or lost PVC, you already have your data in the system, if we confirm that. The commissioner also spoken how INEC intends to capture the registration process for fresh registration, lost permanent voter card, PVC, and cases of transfer, given that the 2023 election is close. On security, Igeni says it is not INEC's job to provide security, but they will consider the best options, stressing that a five-year jail term awaits the falters of underage in dead people's registration. Registration, even both living and dead people who are not absent, in any case, the system itself, the beauty of this particular system where the IVED we are using, is that the offence for that, it could attract a five-year imprisonment and a minimum of one year. INEC chairman Professor Yakubus says the CVR exercise will be carried out continuously for over a year until the third quarter of 2022. Destin Momo for PLOS TV Africa.