Concerns Mount about Possible Tampering as Nigeria Tallies Vote Results

Concerns Mount about Possible Tampering as Nigeria Tallies Vote Results

Nigerian election officials sifted through millions of votes from this weekend’s national elections Monday, as questions emerged about the tallying process and tensions rose in some states about possible vote rigging.

Election observers said the balloting, which was extended into Sunday after technical problems arose with a new anti-fraud system, was conducted without major problems.

Millions voted despite the glitches and deadly attacks on northeastern polling stations by Islamic extremists.

But concerns arose Monday that the process of counting the raw votes may be in danger of being manipulated.

The Nigerian Civil Society Situation Room, one of several local groups monitoring the polls, said politicians might use security agencies to “fiddle with the election collation process” at the state level.

In an indication of the potential seriousness of the problem, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond on Monday released a joint statement saying there were “disturbing indications” that the collation process “may be subject to deliberate political interference.”

The U.S. and British governments “would be very concerned by any attempts to undermine the independence of the electoral commission or its chairman…or in any way distort the expressed will of the Nigerian people,” the statement said.

President Goodluck Jonathan, who has been in office since 2010 and whose Peoples Democratic Party has held the presidency since 1999, is facing a challenge from former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari from the All Progressives Congress.

To win the election without a runoff, a candidate needs a majority of the nationwide vote while also securing at least 25 percent of the ballots in two-thirds of the country’s 36 states and the capital.

Observers: election was ‘acceptable’

 

The vote was scheduled to be held on Saturday, but technical glitches with a new biometric vote system led officials to extend voting in Sunday. Some polling stations, particularly in the north, were hit with attacks from Boko Haram militants.

 

The African Union and the Economic Community of West African States observer missions said despite logistical problems and some violence, the organization of the vote was “acceptable.”

The National Democratic Institute, a nongovernmental organization funded in part from the U.S. and other governments, praised the election, despite the technical problems and sporadic violence.

Christopher Fomunyoh, a Nigerian expert with the organization, told reporters Monday that the group saw no evidence of the military interfering in the poll, as many had feared.

However, “we have concerns about the collation process because of the multilayered collation mechanism,” Fomunyoh said.

That referred to the fact that results are collated separately in each polling station and state as well as in the main center in Abuja, a practice he said should be reviewed given the new technology.

Festus Okoye, national coordinator for the Independent Election Monitoring Group and a member of the Situation Room, said there were concerns in three states in particular: Rivers, Imo and Benue.

“Now to collate the results, people are trying to tamper with it,” he said.

“We believe this election represents a quantum leap in our democratic aspirations and in our determination to institutionalize democracy in this country,” he said. “We will not like a situation where some elements within the political elite who did not fight for democracy will take us back to where we are coming from and we will not tolerate that type of situation.”

In the southern state of Rivers, tensions mounted as opposition officials and supporters called for the election to be re-done. The state’s governor reportedly refused to cast his vote over concerns the local vote could be manipulated.

Police on Monday used tear gas to disperse hundreds of women dressed in black, who marched on the state electoral office in Port Harcourt.

The country’s top election official, Attahiru Jega, said his office was investigating the complaints in Rivers and other states.

“There are many alleged cases of malpractices and we certainly pay a lot of attention to investigating this and if our staff are involved in any way or manner, obviously we will apply the appropriate sanctions and take the appropriate decisions as provided for by the electoral legal framework,” Jega said.

Protests

Protests continued on Monday, and police used tear gas to disperse a protest by at least 100 women opposition members, Reuters reported.

In Bauchi state, the military fired warning shots after hundreds of youth gathered outside the local electoral office, shouting opposition slogans and shouting that they would protect their vote from rigging.

Nigeria was originally due to hold the election in mid-February, but officials pushed back the vote because of fighting and instability in northeastern states where Boko Haram militants have been battling the government since 2009.

The security situation improved after a multinational offensive drove the militants from many towns they had controlled.

Also contributed were Ibrahim Yakubu in Kaduna, Hilary Uguru in Port Harcourt, Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi, Chris Stein in Kano and Katarina Hoije in Lagos. Some material for this report came from Reuters and AP.

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