Skip to main content

Nigeria's Electoral Body Cautions Buhari, Atiku

Nigeria's electoral body cautions Buhari, Atiku
 
Nigeria’s electoral commission has called on politicians to ‘moderate their rhetoric’ ahead of Saturday’s delayed presidential election.

The chairperson of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu called for calm as both president Muhammadu Buhari and the opposition’s Atiku Abubakar have become more combative in their tone following the postponement of the election.

“Please speak in a manner that does not contribute to heating the polity and the political atmosphere,” Yakubu said.
I have always said that General Buhari is not a democrat.
Presidential and parliamentary elections were called off just hours before polling on Saturday, with logistical difficulties blamed for the distribution of materials.

Buhari’s veiled threats

On Monday, during a meeting with the National Caucus of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Buhari warned that the security agencies were ready to neutralise anyone who tampered with electoral processes.

“I really gave the military and police order to be ruthless… Anybody who thinks he has enough influence in his locality to lead a body of thugs to snatch ballot boxes or disturbs the voting system, will do so at the expense of his own life,’‘ Buhari said.
 
RAED MORE: Nigeria poll delay angers Buhari Violent ballot-snatching has been a feature of elections in Africa’s most populous nation and the comments drew the backing of APC supporters.

Atiku responds

Nigeria’s main opposition on Tuesday accused Buhari of paying “lip service” to democracy, accusing APC of trying to rig the vote, by using dead voters, foreigners and technological manipulation.
Both parties have claimed the other is in league with INEC. INEC itself denies any political interference.

Atiku, who is the presidential candidate for the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP), said Buhari’s words were “a painful reminder of the era of dictatorship and military rule”.
Buhari, 76, is a former army general who seized power in a coup in 1983. At the last election, he called himself a “converted democrat” and dropped the title “general”.

“I have always said that General Buhari is not a democrat,’‘ Atiku told senior members of PDP.
“He’s never been a democrat… It’s lip service. He’s more of a power-monger than a democrat.”
He added: “It’s quite shocking for any head of state to utter such words in a democracy and we will not accept it from General Buhari in this country.”Abubakar, 72, said a “pre-condition for free, fair, and credible elections is that the people are able to cast their votes without fear or violence”.

Lessons from 2015

The 2015 election saw Buhari become the first opposition candidate in Nigerian history to defeat a sitting president. The vote was also considered to be the country’s most credible.
Abubakar told Buhari: “You owe it to our people to let them give their verdict in the same way you were elected.

“If you do so, history will commend you for it. If you do not, history will condemn you for it. But before history does it, we will condemn you for it.” The election is the sixth in the 20 years since Nigeria returned to civilian rule after decades of military government and security has always been an issue.
 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Facts The Economist Got Them Wrong on Magufuli

DAR ES SALAAM, East Africa:  By Dr. Hernan Louise Verhofstadt* “ A BIT like President Donald Trump, Tanzania’s president, John Magufuli, likes to fire employees on television. In November Mr. Magufuli used a live broadcast from a small town in the north of the country summarily to dismiss two officials,” this is an extract from a recent online article I came across from the newspaper that I admired when I was growing up in Europe back in 1990’s; the Economist . Before I venture into other serious issues, the excerpts above contains gross factual errors; my own fact-check indicates that in the named public rally during the opening of Kagera Airport, there was no summary dismissal of the two officials instantly on television, as alleged. Instead, the two, one District Executive Directors for Bukoba Urban and another for Rural were relieved their duties later through a press release from President’s Office.   This is my prima impressio reading the Economist this

Tundu Lissu, a despot in the shadow?

By Masinde Masondore, Montreal, Canada, 01-04-2018:  WHEN a learned politician brags of publicly embarrassing his President and counts it an honor while deliberately sabotages the nation's economic interests is a misfit in African traditions. 'Africans have had own ways of criticising the King, the way it happened in ancient Israel, however, in any case, the nation's interests were set apart from any sabotage," Gilbert Moshi. Tindu Lissu, a controversial Tanzanian opposition politician would be leaning on a wrong wall. He chose a road less travelled by learned individuals who mostly were rational. The road he walks and the philosophy he exhibit, only label him a tyranny of darkness. Any democratic leader, whether in opposition or ruling party ought to be totally enveloped in wisdom which prevents monumental errors of judgment. Lissu does not exhibit a minute of it. One of the pillars of customer-focused policies in the business world i

FIVE THINGS MP LISSU IS LYING TO THE WORLD; AN OPEN LETTER

From: Concerned Tanzanian Citizen; To: WRI, WU, EU, International Press, USAID, US Gov, Tanzanian Diaspora; Date: 28 January, 2019     Dear all, Greetings from Tanzania- the land of Kilimanjaro, Serengeti, Ngorogoro, Zanzibar and above all, the land of great peace, transformation and reforms under President John Pombe Magufuli. I have leant that your various institutions will, in the course of this week and beyond, accommodate the opposition lawmaker from Tanzania, Tundu Lissu, to speak about diverse issues on politics in Tanzania. Unfortunately the power thirsty politician will not tell you all you need to know. In my first open letter to you, I will focus into 5 truths that this MP will hide to you, and in the second, I will dwell into major transformations happening in Tanzania, that again, MP Lissu cannot dare a mention to you.                              Attack on His Life and Ensuing Propaganda The MP will obviously reminisce on the unfortun