Nigeria’s electoral body, the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) said supplementary presidential and National Assembly
elections will be held in parts of the country where votes did not take
place or returns were not made.
INEC made the announcement in a statement on Friday.
The supplementary elections will be held simultaneously with
governorship and state house of assemblies elections slated for
Saturday, March 6.
“Consequently, the meeting decided that supplementary elections will
be conducted in all areas where elections did not take place and/or
where returns could not be made on Saturday, March 9th, 2019, alongside
governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections,” the INEC’s
national commissioner for information and voter education, Festus Okoye
said.
This came after electoral officers met to give assessments about the just-concluded presidential and National Assembly polls.
Chairman of Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) Mahmood Yakubu addressed media representatives in Abuja on
February 19, 2019, ahead of rescheduled general elections.
The presidential election was held on Saturday, February 28. It was
marred by delays, sporadic violence, and allegations of vote rigging.
Incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari defeated opposition candidate Atiku Abubakar of the People’s Democratic Party.
INEC announced the final count on Wednesday, after days of vote
tabulating across states. Buhari secured approximately 56 per cent of
the vote, compared to Atiku’s 41 per cent.
After the announcement, Buhari thanked his supporters. “I am deeply
humbled and profoundly grateful to you for judging me worthy of
continuing to serve you and for your peaceful conduct,” he said.
However, Abubakar is challenging the results of the poll. He claimed
that there were “statistical improbabilities” that were apparent, such
as high turnout in areas plagued by conflict and lower turnout in
peaceful states.
He also alleged that the military personnel deployed to keep the peace had helped suppress the vote in certain areas.
“If I had lost in a free and fair election, I would have called the
victor within seconds of my being aware of his victory to offer not just
my congratulations, but my services to help unite Nigeria by being a
bridge between the North and the South,” Abubakar said.
He added, “I hereby reject the result of the February 23, 2019 sham election and will be challenging it in court.”
The commission, however, stated that it is determined to rectify the
challenges that occurred during the presidential election and prevent it
in the March 9 election.
The governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections will be held in 29 of 36 states across the country on March 9.
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