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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Jason Burke in Lagos

Polling closes in Nigeria’s tightly fought presidential and parliamentary races

A voter casts her ballot in Agulu, Anambra state, during Nigeria's election on Saturday.
A voter casts her ballot in Agulu, Anambra state, during Nigeria's election on Saturday. Photograph: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

Polls have shut in Nigeria, after tens of millions cast their votes to decide a tight and unpredictable contest for the presidency and parliament of Africa’s most populous nation and its biggest economy.

The opening of more than half of all polling stations was delayed by at least an hour with many others suffering problems with new voting technology, civil society groups said. There was some sporadic violence across the country, including a suspected attack by Islamic extremists and some disruption by hired thugs.

Fears of widespread chaos appeared unfounded as night fell, however. An official announcement of results could take between three and five days, but it is probable that the winner of the presidency will be obvious much sooner as the count of individual polling stations becomes known.

In the commercial capital, Lagos, large numbers of voters waited cheerfully for much of the morning for election officials to arrive, often two or even three hours late.

An election official holds up a ballot paper as counting starts in Egbeda in Lagos.
An election official holds up a ballot paper as counting starts in Egbeda in Lagos. Photograph: Benson Ibeabuchi/AFP/Getty Images

“I am very excited. I have been looking forward to exercising my civil rights. I am looking for a better Nigeria,” said Victoria Adeyemo, a 65-year-old lawyer, as she sat waiting for a voting station in the upmarket area of Ikoyi to open.

In the poor and crowded neighbourhood of Mushin, electoral officials and party agents said polls had opened on time to welcome a rush of voters.

Amaka Gloria, 27, said it was a “big relief” that “everyone had been able to vote”.

Analysts have spoken of a “bellwether” election that could be a crucial turning point for Nigeria after several years of worsening insecurity and acute economic troubles. Many see a credible poll and progress in tackling the country’s multiple problems as key to stability across a swath of Africa.

About 300,000 police officers were deployed to protect 176,000 polling stations and a ban on all movement by road, water or air was imposed during the poll. Land borders have also been closed.

Eighteen candidates are vying to replace the outgoing two-term president, Muhammadu Buhari, but the main contest is between 70-year-old Bola Tinubu, from the ruling All Progressives Congress; Atiku Abubakar, of the main opposition People’s Democratic party; and the Labour party’s Peter Obi, who is leading in some polls.

Tinubu and Abubakar, 76, have significant power bases across Nigeria. Both are seen as traditional politicians who have sought to mobilise voters with massive organisation and spending.

“Tinubu is my father, Tinubu is my country. He has done good things for us,” said Adeleke Adejoke Bililis, an unemployed 43-year-old, after voting at Eroko Street polling station on Lagos Island.

“He is Yoruba like me so of course I vote for him,” she said, naming the ethnic community that she and the candidate belong to.

Obi is seen as a reformist willing to overhaul Nigeria’s political system who has reached across the country’s many ethnic and religious fault lines. The 61-year-old former businessman ran an insurgent campaign that relied on social media, word of mouth and the energy of his largely young following.

Labour party presidential candidate Peter Obi is something of an outsider, running an insurgent campaign targeting a younger demographic.
Labour party presidential candidate Peter Obi is something of an outsider, running an insurgent campaign targeting a younger demographic. Photograph: Patrick Meinhardt/AFP/Getty Images

But though recent surveys suggested Obi has between a 10% and 40% lead over his rivals, many experts warned a low turnout could mean victory for the ruling party’s candidate.

Nkechi Richards, a 35-year-old fashion designer in Lagos, said that though some of her friends shared her enthusiasm for Obi, many others “wanted to stick to the familiar and fear the new”.

According to charts drawn up by Yiaga, a coalition of civil society groups which has deployed monitors, the delays to opening of polling stations were most severe in the south-east, where Obi is most popular.

One significant factor is the new voting technology that identifies voters through fingerprints and facial recognition. Officials hope this will make the rigging that has historically marred polls in Nigeria much harder.

Though the contest looks close, Nigerian electoral law makes a runoff unlikely as the winning candidate needs only a plurality of votes, provided they get 25% of the vote in at least two-thirds of the 36 states.

Nigeria is suffering from multiple intersecting crises including economic turmoil, extremism and criminality affecting much of the country. In recent weeks, an effort to replace almost all Nigeria’s bank notes – in part to reduce the widespread practice of vote buying – has caused massive economic disruption and much popular anger.

More than 90 million Nigerians registered to vote, but only 87 million picked up the necessary documents to cast their ballots.

However, analysts point out that this is the seventh poll held since the end of military rule in 1999 and that some Nigerian democratic institutions are growing stronger. That none of the main candidates are former military officers – a first for a Nigerian poll – is also seen as an achievement.

It could also send a message to other leaders and ruling parties clinging to power on the continent.

• This article was amended on 26 February 2023 to clarify that the winning presidential candidate needs only a plurality of votes, not “a simple majority” as an earlier version said.

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