— Nigeria has extended voting to Sunday after
problems occurred as millions turned out Saturday to vote in a
presidential election that analysts say is too close to call between
President Goodluck Jonathan and former military dictator Muhammadu
Buhari.
The polling will continue Sunday in some areas where
new machines were not reading voters' biometric cards, said Kayode
Idowu, spokesman of the Independent National Electoral Commission. The
areas where voting will be extended include Lagos, Nigeria's largest
city on the Atlantic coast.
In other areas, vote counting has already begun, he said.
Nearly 60 million people have cards to vote and
determine the outcome of the first election in Nigeria's history where
an opposition candidate has a realistic chance of defeating a sitting
president. The vote takes place amid an Islamic insurgency in Nigeria's
northeast in which thousands have been killed.
Boko Haram extremists waving guns forced voters to
abandon polling stations in three villages of northeastern Gombe state,
witnesses said. The militants have vowed to disrupt elections, calling
democracy a corrupt Western concept.
Two car bombs exploded at two polling stations in
southeast Enugu state but did not hurt voters, police said. Police
detonated two other car bombs at the scene of the first explosion, a
polling station set up at a primary school, said Enugu state police
Commissioner Dan Bature. Boko Haram has been blamed for many car
bombings but was not immediately suspected in the southeastern blasts
far from its northeast stronghold.
President Goodluck Jonathan denied the attacks, saying the state governor told him there were no blasts.
The oil-rich and heavily populated south is deeply
contested and has become a political battleground since the main
opposition parties united in a coalition two years ago, causing dozens
of defections from Jonathan's party.
The official website of the Independent National
Electoral Commission was hacked but was quickly secured, said officials
who said the site holds no sensitive material.
Thousands of people forced from their homes by the
Islamic uprising lined up to vote at a refugee camp in Yola, capital of
northeast Adamawa state, which is hosting as many refugees as its
300,000 residents.
Registration to vote began late in most places,
delaying the scheduled start of voting in the afternoon. Men and women
formed separate lines at many polling stations.
Earlier, officials rushed across the country delivering
ballot materials by trucks, speedboats, motorcycles, mules and even
camels, in the case of a northern mountaintop village.
Good humor turned to anger and altercations as people
waited hours and temperatures rose up to 100 degrees (37 degrees
Celsius) to be registered to vote, only to find that machines were not
reading new biometric voting cards.
Even the president was affected. Three newly imported
card readers failed to recognize the fingerprints of Jonathan and his
wife. He returned two hours later and was accredited without the machine
using visual identification. Biometric cards and readers are being used
for the first time to discourage the kind of fraud that has marred
previous votes.
Afterward, Jonathan wiped sweat from his brow and urged
people to be patient as he had, telling Channels TV: "I appeal to all
Nigerians to be patient no matter the pains it takes as long as if, as a
nation, we can conduct free and fair elections that the whole world
will accept."
Jonathan cast his ballot later in the day.
Social media was abuzz with the problem. One tweeter
said they solved their issue by having an official remove the protective
plastic film from the screen to read a fingerprint on the card reader.
Voting began promptly in a Christian neighborhood of
northern Kaduna city though voters' privacy was not respected. An AP
reporter watched as people milled around a booth where a voter is
supposed to be alone. Then, voters handed unsealed ballots to an
official who put the papers into the ballot box. Voters are supposed to
put their own ballots into the box.
Jonathan and Buhari are front-runners among 14
candidates in the high-stakes contest to govern Africa's most populous
and richest nation. In addition to the Islamic uprising, Nigeria is
beset by militants demanding a better share of oil revenues who attack
petroleum installations in the south and deadly land disputes across the
middle of the country between semi-nomadic Muslim cattle herders and
mainly Christian farmers.
"We need many changes in Nigeria," government worker
Lawal Dahiru said in Buhari's home town of Daura. "We have security
problems, no job opportunities, we need infrastructure like roads,
electricity, water supply, and to mechanize our agriculture."
This is only the eighth election since Nigeria's
independence from Britain in 1960. In a country steeped in a history of
military coups and bloodshed caused by politics, ethnicity, land
disputes, oil theft and, lately, the Boko Haram Islamic uprising, the
election is important as Africa's richest nation consolidates its
democracy.
Nervous foreign investors are watching as Nigeria is
Africa's largest destination for direct foreign investment though its
oil-dependent economy is hurting from slashed petroleum prices.
Nigeria's military announced Friday it had destroyed
the headquarters of Boko Haram's so-called Islamic caliphate and driven
the insurgents from all major areas in northeast Nigeria. There was no
way to verify the claim, which seems unlikely. Critics of Jonathan have
said recent military victories after months of ceding territory to the
Islamic extremists are a ploy to win votes — a charge the presidential
campaign denies.
The failure of Jonathan's administration to curb the
insurgency, which killed about 10,000 people last year, has angered
Nigerians in the north.
International outrage has grown over another failure —
the rescue of 219 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram nearly a year ago.
The extremists have abducted hundreds more since then, using them as
sex slaves and fighters.
The Islamic uprising has exacerbated relations between
Christians like Jonathan, who dominate the oil-rich south, and Muslims
like Buhari who are the majority in the agricultural and cattle-herding
lands of the north. The population of 170 million is almost evenly
divided between Christians and Muslims.
Some 1,000 people were killed in rioting after Buhari
lost to Jonathan in the 2011 elections. Thousands of Nigerians and
foreign workers have left the country amid fears of post-election
violence.
In 2011, there was no doubt that Jonathan had swept the polls by millions of votes.
Now the race is much closer. The game-changer that
transformed Nigeria's political landscape came two years ago when the
main opposition parties formed a coalition and for the first time united
behind one candidate, Buhari.
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