Nigeria may delay February vote if card distribution too low
World
By
Reuters
| Feb 05, 2015
Abuja: Nigeria may delay its Feb. 14 presidential election if the electoral commission cannot distribute enough voter I.D. cards by Feb. 8, an electoral commissioner told Reuters on Wednesday.
The hotly contested poll will pit President Goodluck Jonathan of the ruling People's Democratic Party against former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress.
"Let's see how the PVC (permanent voter card) distribution goes by Feb. 8, then maybe," Amina Zachary, a commissioner for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), said on the sidelines of a news conference when asked whether or not the date could be changed.
She made it clear that no decision had been taken. INEC extended its deadline for voters to collect their cards to Feb. 8, but only 44 million out of 68.8 million have been distributed so far, with just 10 days to go before the poll.
Foreign powers are closely observing how elections will be held in Africa's biggest economy and have voiced concerns over violence in the aftermath, as was the case after the 2011 election, when 800 people died.
READ MORE
Businessman denies supplying Sh209 million fake fertiliser
Funds misuse, low skills hamper Nairobi's bid to tap green finance
CS Chelugui disbands KUSCCO board over mismanagement
US envoy: How Kenya can be the Singapore of Africa via industries
Tea firm moves to address sexual abuse
Why tech experts are against regulation of fast-growing AI
Boost for farmers as state seeks to expand mango processing plant
Bridging the digital divide calls for inclusive development
Treasury to cut borrowing, spending on shortfall in revenue collection
State to shut down 25 entities, privatise others in new reforms
A delay would stoke already rising tensions ahead of the vote, but failure to get enough cards out would also compromise the poll.
National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki caused outrage when he called for a postponement in London last month, citing concerns over the slow distribution of voter cards.
The opposition and civil society groups say a delay would bring the credibility of the election into question and they say People's Democratic Party wants a postponement because it fears losing. But they are also concerned about the slow collection of cards by voters.
The main issue is the uneven distribution across the states as the total is already higher than the number that voted in 2011, Zachary said.
Out of Nigeria's 36 states and its federal capital territory, Abuja, 11 have distributed less than 60 percent of the cards while 4 of those are below 50 percent.
Lagos, the most populous state and opposition stronghold, has distributed fewer than 40 percent of its voter cards.
"We've sometimes just had one person at some distribution stations ... now we put two but the cost is very high ... it has eaten up all the money as we have to pay INEC staff extra for staying late," Zachary said, lamenting a lack of volunteers.
- Court orders preservation of Sh61 million seized from Yatani's nephew
- Funds misuse, low skills hamper Nairobi's bid to tap green finance
- State to shut down 25 entities, privatise others in new reforms
- Forget miraa: Discovery of minerals stirs up Meru locals