On Tuesday, voters in Nigeria selected the country's former military ruler
Muhammadu Buhari as the new president, unseating divisive incumbent
Goodluck Jonathan. "With all but one of Nigeria’s 36 states counted," The New York Times reported on Tuesday, "Buhari held a lead of more than two million votes."
Buhari's Historic Win
The defeat of Jonathan, who has ruled Africa's biggest economy and largest democracy since 2010, was particularly noteworthy for the fact that it was the first time in Nigeria's history that an incumbent had lost a re-election bid.
“The
first transfer of power to the opposition through an election,” is how
former American ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell described it in a
phone call on Tuesday. For Nigeria, a country with a history of election-related violence and military coups,
Jonathan's phone call to Buhari conceding defeat was a positive sign
for the prospects of a peaceful transition. “I think the fact that
President Jonathan made a concessionary phone call to Buhari sets the
right tone,” said Campbell.
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Buhari himself came to power in the mid-1980s following a coup and served as Nigeria's president for a year and a half.
Campbell noted, however, that Buhari had successfully campaigned on a
platform of anti-corruption and military strength, which were among the
highest-priority issues for voters.
Boko Haram and Other ChallengesBuhari will assume the presidency of a country beset by corruption, failing oil prices, and six years of insurgency waged by Boko Haram.
“We
have seen how Boko Haram managed to fight the Nigerian army to a
standstill,” Campbell said, noting that "rebuilding security services
will be a high priority" for the next president. He added that Jonathan
campaigned on recent successes against the terrorist group, which only
came once neighboring countries contributed forces to the fight. The group still holds significant territory in the country's northeast.
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