Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Appeal for calm as Nigerian poll is postponed hours before ballot

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Rodney Muhu muza in Lagos, Nigeria NIGERIANS awoke yesterday morning, expecting to go out and vote — only to learn that the country’s presidenti­al election had been delayed a week, until February 23, because of what the electoral commission called unspecifie­d “challenges”.

The top candidates condemned the decision and blamed each other but appealed to Africa’s largest democracy for calm, while they rushed back to the capital, Abuja, to learn more about what went wrong.

The postponeme­nt was announced a mere five hours before the polls were to open. The decision is a costly one, and authoritie­s now must decide what to do with already delivered voting materials in a tense atmosphere where some electoral facilities in recent days have been torched.

Some bitter voters in the capital and elsewhere, who had travelled home to cast their ballots, said they could not afford to wait another seven days. They warned that election apathy could follow.

The party backing top opposition challenger Atiku Abubakar accused President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion of “instigatin­g this postponeme­nt” with the aim of ensuring a low turnout at the polls.

“Their plan is to provoke the public, hoping for a negative reaction, and then use that as an excuse for further anti-democratic acts,” the party said in a statement. It urged Nigerians to remain calm and turn out in greater numbers a week from now.

A calm-looking Mr Abubakar, speaking to reporters outside his home in northern Adamawa state, said his party would decide on the way forward after an electoral commission briefing on Saturday afternoon. A party spokesman in Delta state in the volatile south said the commission “has destroyed the soul of Nigeria with this act”.

Mr Buhari said he was “deeply disappoint­ed” after the electoral commission had “given assurances, day after day and almost hour after hour that they are in complete readiness for the elections. We and all our citizens believed them.”

His statement appealed to Nigerians for calm during the “trying moment in our democratic journey” and stressed that his administra­tion does not interfere in the commission’s work.

One ruling party campaign director in Delta state, Goodnews Agbi, said it was better to give the commission time to conduct a credible vote instead of rushing into a sham vote “that the whole world will criticise later”.

Commission chairman Mahmood Yakubu said in the early-morning announceme­nt: “This was a difficult decision to take but necessary for successful delivery of the elections and the consolidat­ion of our democracy.”

Frustrated voters gathered in the capital.

“I came all the way from my home to cast my vote this morning... and then I got informed that the election has been cancelled, so that is the reason why I am not happy, and I’m very, very angry,” voter Yusuf Ibrahim said.

Elsewhere, some Nigerians turned to playing football instead, or anguishing over rescheduli­ng weddings, exams and other events because of the voting delay.

A civic group monitoring the election, the Situation Room, said the delay “has created needless tension and confusion” and called on political parties to avoid incitement and misinforma­tion.

Nigeria postponed the previous presidenti­al election in 2015 because of deadly insecurity in the north-east, which remains under threat from Islamic extremists.

More than 84 million voters in the country with a population of some 190 million had been expected to head to the polls in what is seen as a close and heated race between Mr Buhari and Mr Abubakar, a billionair­e former vice president. Both have pledged to work for a peaceful election even as their supporters, including high-level officials, have caused alarm with warnings against foreign interferen­ce and allegation­s of rigging.

When Mr Buhari came to power in 2015 he made history with the first defeat of an incumbent president in an election hailed as one of the most transparen­t and untroubled ever in Nigeria, which has seen deadly postvote violence in the past.

Now he could become the second incumbent to be unseated. This election is a referendum on his record on insecurity, the economy and corruption — over which he has been criticised by some Nigerians for doing too little, too slowly.

 ??  ?? FIRST TO PRINT: A man at a newspaper stand in Kano, northern Nigeria, reads a copy of a newspaper which managed to print the news of the postponeme­nt in time
FIRST TO PRINT: A man at a newspaper stand in Kano, northern Nigeria, reads a copy of a newspaper which managed to print the news of the postponeme­nt in time

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