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Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos - Politics - Nairaland

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Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by ForG(m): 7:20pm On Mar 02, 2023

What Nigeria needed above all was a clean election to reiterate the basic message of democracy: that a sovereign people can choose its leaders. Sadly, it did not happen. The election — which appears to have delivered the presidency to Bola Tinubu, a wealthy political fixer running for the incumbent All Progressives Congress — was badly mismanaged at best.
It failed to set the example needed for west Africa, a region where too many national leaders have extended term limits or resorted to seizing power at gunpoint. Nigeria remains a democracy, but only just.

The omens had been better. The emergence of Peter Obi as a viable third-party candidate had brought excitement and forced candidates to talk about policies, if only a little. Neutral observers thought the Independent National Electoral Commission was in good shape.
They had high expectations that INEC’s promise to transmit voting tallies electronically from polling stations would eliminate ballot stuffing. The outgoing president, Muhammadu Buhari, had staked what remains of his tattered reputation on a clean contest.

Yet the INEC badly misfired. Voting started late in many districts, depriving millions of the right to vote. The system to upload results from 177,000 polling stations stuttered, causing legitimate concerns of vote tampering during long delays. Violence was troubling. Party goons invaded many polling stations in what appeared to be blatant acts of intimidation. The Financial Times witnessed armed men remove a presidential ballot box in Surulere, Lagos.

The official result put Tinubu on 37 per cent, Atiku Abubakar from the People’s Democratic party on 29 per cent and Obi on 25 per cent. But some individual results do not pass the smell test. That includes Obi’s ever-so narrow victory in Lagos state, where crowds had greeted him like a rock star.

More worrying still was voter turnout, which was pitifully low at 27 per cent. If official results are right, two-thirds of the 87mn people who lined up for hours to collect their voter registration cards failed to cast their ballot. Apathy cannot explain it.
Something, including the possibility of widespread voter suppression, must have prevented them from voting. Total turnout of 25mn votes in a country of 220mn people is unacceptably low. Tinubu’s tally of 8.8mn gives him the weakest of mandates.

Obi and Abubakar must now decide whether to pursue their claims of rigging in the courts. If they do, Nigeria’s judiciary should take a long hard look. The courts in Kenya in 2017 and Malawi in 2020 overturned suspect elections. If Nigeria’s courts find suspicions, they should not shrink from annulling individual contests or even the whole result.

It is plausible courts could conclude that — despite some obvious irregularities — the overall result reflected the will of the people. In that case, or if there is no court challenge, Tinubu will be faced with one of the most difficult jobs in the world.

Nigeria has been teetering on the edge of catastrophe, with a breakdown of security and an almost total absence of growth. Neither is sustainable. By 2050, Nigeria will have 400mn people. They cannot be left without hope.

The next president must quickly remove the ruinously expensive fuel subsidy and rationalise the exchange rate system. The army and police, both riddled with ineptitude and corruption, need urgent reform. These basic steps are the minimum to begin to repair a deeply damaged country.

Tinubu campaigned partly on his ability to pick a strong team. If he is confirmed as president, he must name a cabinet of independent, competent and honest ministers. Even Nigerians who did not vote for him will hope against hope for that.

https://www.ft.com/content/ad9bbed0-a2c4-4e20-96ae-c23cd42296fe

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by ResidentSnitch(f): 7:22pm On Mar 02, 2023
This election will go down as one of the biggest heist in the history of democracy in the world if care is not taken. It was nothing short of daylight robbery with impunity.
That Druggie should redeem his already tattered image by rejecting that he won the election or he'd forever be known as a mandate thief.

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Wodu89: 7:25pm On Mar 02, 2023
Just a spark is what the entire nation is waiting for. Watch the FG will make a.mistake and provide this spark by arresting Peter Obi on grounds of.incitement. and gbam, nationwide wildfire protest and almost insurrection would begin

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by huptin(m): 7:28pm On Mar 02, 2023
It's horrible...Wike was the one that made the rigging too obvious.. that man is a total disaster

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by PrinceOfLagos: 7:28pm On Mar 02, 2023
This election is the worst ever conducted in this country

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by treesun: 7:30pm On Mar 02, 2023

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Racoon(m): 7:31pm On Mar 02, 2023
The bastards criminal election riggers in the APC thinks their atrocities are invincible to the world. They are so shameless that they confidently legalised such brazen criminality and wants to foist on a nation? It will never be well with all who are involved in this sham called election.

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Racoon(m): 7:34pm On Mar 02, 2023
They had high expectations that INEC’s promise to transmit voting tallies electronically from polling stations would eliminate ballot stuffing. The outgoing president, Muhammadu Buhari, had staked what remains of his tattered reputation on a clean contest.

Yet the INEC badly misfired. Voting started late in many districts, depriving millions of the right to vote. The system to upload results from 177,000 polling stations stuttered, causing legitimate concerns of vote tampering during long delays.

Violence was troubling. Party goons invaded many polling stations in what appeared to be blatant acts of intimidation. The Financial Times witnessed armed men remove a presidential ballot box in Surulere, Lagos.
Sarrki, Afamed, Yarimo, Helinues, Ihordspy, Seunmsg, Eriggs, NLpoliceman, , NgeneUkwenu

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Freetech: 8:10pm On Mar 02, 2023
..... But US election was also disputed with all their so called tech.

Maybe these paid nuisance thought we forgot that

Why was the US election not totally cancelled?

Naira swap or confiscation cause voter apathy. How will a cashless man with no food to eat go out to vote. Fuel Problem too.

This election cost us more than 300bil, imagine the nonsense from him just because he's white. Very pre meditated bias report.

We know you got from Obi for Promoting him. Just stop there

I only pity those who continue to keep their money at Fidelity Bank. I won't say more than that.
Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by ForG(m): 8:13pm On Mar 02, 2023
Freetech:
..... Bot US election was also disputed with all their so called tech.

Maybe these paid nuisance thought we forgot that

Why was the election not totally cancelled?

This election cost us more than 300bil, imagine the nonsense

My thought also.
An isolated case of ballot snatching in Surulere is very inconsequential to the final result.

Except it can be proven that this is only a microcosm of a grand nationwide malpractice scheme.
Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Beremx(f): 8:15pm On Mar 02, 2023
What a bad reputation for Nigeria.

All those who were involved in suppressing the people, denying them of their voting rights should be issued visa bans

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by abobote: 8:23pm On Mar 02, 2023
Worse election in the history of man

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by LesbianBoy(m): 8:23pm On Mar 02, 2023
If tinubu thinks he can steal Peter obi mandate and rule peacefully for the next 4 years then he must be mad angry

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by AdaojoTheUrchin: 8:27pm On Mar 02, 2023
The good thing about this electoral heist was that it was too obvious, and with phone technology the evidence have been collated.

It is now left for the world to watch the supreme court Judges look at black exhibits and call them white with their usual use of 'technicalities'. grin

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Freetech: 8:31pm On Mar 02, 2023
LesbianBoy:
If tinubu thinks he can steal Peter obi mandate and rule peacefully for the next 4 years then he must be mad angry

You mean same Obi the package fraud and all round failure sent out of Anambra with curses now have a mandate beibg stolen?

The jaz he collected from Egypt is still working on some of you.

Fake Christian using Egyptian marabout to manipulate gullible youths.

abobote:
Worse election in the history of man
[

Where do you put Iwus 2007 election to call this worse.

Up till today, there's no breakdown of the total vote cast by state. We were still voting when Iwu announced the result in Abuja
Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by ForG(m): 8:41pm On Mar 02, 2023
Freetech:


You mean same Obi the package fraud and all round failure sent out of Anambra with curses now have a mandate beibg stolen?

The jaz he collected from Egypt is still working on some of you.

Fake Christian using Egyptian marabout to manipulate gullible youths.

I see your plight brother, but it's not true.

In the whole of Nigeria, only Lagos is smaller than Anambra, yet:

Most billionaires in Nigeria,
Lowest poverty rate in Nigeria
Nigeria's first private refinery
Home to Nigeria's foremost automotive company.
Discovered oil 10 years ago.

All this under one man.

Note, Anambra is not a port city like Lagos, and is surrounded by some of Nigeria's poorest states.

I'm not apologetic to Obi, as I'm apolitical.

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by Ofunaofu: 8:42pm On Mar 02, 2023
You don't steal the people's mandate and then turn around to ask that everyone should join hands with you to move the country forward


The country can't move forward while you are still holding on to a stolen mandate

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Re: Financial Times: Our Correspondents Witnessed Live Election Rigging In Lagos by MrSegunAdewole: 8:45pm On Mar 02, 2023
PrinceOfLagos:
This election is the worst ever conducted in this country
and Seun Nlfpmod will never send this to Fp

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