The Borneo Post (Sabah)

16 killed in Nigerian election violence

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LAGOS: Sixteen people were killed on Saturday in electoral violence across Nigeria during presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections, a network of civil society organisati­ons said.

The Situation Room umbrella group of pro-democracy groups, which is monitoring the vote, said on Twitter that “16 deaths have been recorded across 8 states”.

Six people were killed in the southern state of Rivers, which has long been a flashpoint for violence, while two others were killed in neighbouri­ng Bayelsa.

Two people were killed in Borno and Yobe states in the northeast; two in the north central state of Kogi; and two in Ebonyi, in the southeast.

One person was killed in Zamfara, in the northwest, and another in Lagos, in the southwest, which also saw ballot boxes and papers set on fire, the monitors said.

There were reports of votebuying in six states, they added in a mid-afternoon update.

Electoral violence, which has marred previous votes in Africa’s most populous country, was relatively low compared to other years. Most voting took place without incident.

Nigeria’s Centre for Crisis Communicat­ion, which comprises representa­tives from security agencies, on Friday identified 12 election flashpoint­s around the country.

Analysts SBM Intelligen­ce said 233 people were killed in 67 incidents of election-related violence from last October to Friday – an average of two people per day.

In oil-rich Rivers, police said unknown gunmen shot dead a former local government leader and his brother in the Andoni area of the state.

Both were members of President Muhammadu Buhari’s ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) party.

Police spokesman Nnamdi Omoni said “hoodlums” dressed in military uniforms also invaded some polling stations in the Okrika area of the state and snatched voting materials. — AFP

 ??  ?? Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) check disturbanc­es by hoodlums at a polling station in Kano, the commercial capital of northern Nigeria. — AFP photo
Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) check disturbanc­es by hoodlums at a polling station in Kano, the commercial capital of northern Nigeria. — AFP photo

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