Nigeria’s election commission will on Saturday announce whether or
not it will postpone national polls set for February 14, a spokesman
said.
The chairman of the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC), Attahiru Jega, met Nigeria’s powerful Council of
States on Thursday to discuss the country’s readiness for the vote.
Concerns
have centred on struggles to distribute voter identity cards to 68.8
million registered voters as well as unrest in the northeast, where
hundreds of thousands face disenfranchisement because of Boko Haram
violence.
Following Thursday’s meeting, “the Commission has
scheduled a consultative meeting with chairmen and secretaries of all
registered political parties, as well as a meeting with (regional
election chiefs on Saturday),” INEC spokesman Kayode Idowu said in a
statement.
“Thereafter, the Commission will address a press
conference to brief the nation on its decision with regard to whether or
not the general elections will hold as currently scheduled,” he added.
The
closed-door council of states meeting — attended by past presidents,
state governors, security chiefs and INEC — lasted more than seven hours
and included tense discussion over the February 14 date, multiple
sources said.
Jega reportedly sought to assure the council that INEC was ready and pushed back aggressively against calls for a postponement.
National Security Advisor Sambo Dasuki has publicly pushed for a delay to allow more time for voter card distribution.
Separately, the dynamics of the Boko Haram conflict have changed rapidly over the last 10 days.
Neighbouring
Chad, which boasts one of the strongest armies in the region, has
joined the fight, pounding Islamist targets inside Nigeria and sending
in ground troops to pursue insurgent fighters.
Nigeria and Chad
have claimed huge successes this week, but Boko Haram’s defeat is hardly
imminent and voting in the hard-hit northeast may be impossible for
several months.
More than one million people have been displaced
by the conflict and Nigerian law does not allow people to vote outside
the district where they are registered.
The opposition All
Progressives Congress is opposed to a postponement and has accused the
ruling party of pushing for a delay out of fear that it is heading for a
defeat.
President Goodluck Jonathan has described the May 29
inauguration of the vote winner as “sacrosanct” but has made no specific
comment on the importance of February 14.
PDP spokesmen have said
INEC must make the final decision but stressed the importance of
distributing as many voter cards as possible.
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