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Adamawa Election: Suspended REC breaks silence, claims his action lawful

THE suspended Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) of Adamawa State, Hudu Ari, has said that his action during the April 15 supplementary election was lawful.

Ari stressed that he announced the results of 69 polling units in the April 15 supplementary election due to security pressure.

The embattled REC made the claim a week after The ICIR reported that INEC was confused over his whereabouts.

In a letter signed by Ari to the Inspector-General of Police, the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the director-general of the Department of State Services (DSS), he explained his role in the controversial declaration of the governorship election.

He stated that he acted within the ambit of the law to avert impending danger of the delay in announcing the results.

According to Ari, “the results brought by the presiding officers from the 69 polling units, which he did not sign, differed from those uploaded on the INEC Result Viewing (IReV) portal.”

He pointed out that attempts had been made to replace him as the collation officer with the administrative secretary.

He further alleged that he was threatened by contesting candidates, and his residential home was surrounded by policemen from the Government House.

“It was based on this that I compiled all the polling unit results and declared the winner of the election based on the highest number of valid votes scored by the candidate of the APC.

“I had the breakdown of the valid votes scored by the two leading candidates in the supplementary election, using the results from the polling units as collated into all relevant forms EC8B, C, D and E respectively by properly and legally appointed and recognised collation officers and my humble self as the Adamawa State Chief Collation Officer and Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC).

“Prior to the declaration, there was an intelligence report made available to me that the two national commissioners were at the Government House, Yola at 8:31pm on April 15, 2023 and held a meeting with Governor Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri.”

He accused some PDP supporters of attacking two INEC commissioners and the returning officer because of Fintiri’s defeat.

“It was alleged that the people beaten in the purported video wanted to subvert the rerun election in Adamawa State and undermine the will of the people as expressed through the ballot,” he said.

The ICIR reported that President Muhammadu Buhari approved the suspension of the Adamawa REC on Thursday, April 20.

The development was disclosed in a statement signed by the Director of Information in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Willie Bassey.

The statement noted that the Adamawa State Police Commissioner, Directorate of State Services (DSS) officials and their counterparts from the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), who allegedly aided Ari’s declaration,  would be investigated alongside the suspended INEC official.

Buhari ordered the Director-General of the DSS and Commandant-General of the NSCDC to probe their officials who were involved in the illegal act.

Controversial declaration of election result

The ICIR also reported that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), whose candidate and incumbent governor, Ahmadu Fintiri, was leading in the results already announced by the electoral body, protested the declaration of the APC flagbearer as the winner of the Adamawa poll.

The suspended REC illegally declared the winner while the collation of results had yet to conclude.

According to the Electoral Act (2022), the Returning Officer for the election, rather than the REC, has the power to declare the winner of an election.

Fintiri had the highest number of votes cast in the governorship election held on March 18, but some votes were cancelled, and the election could not hold in some parts of the state, compelling INEC to declare the exercise inconclusive.

Fintiri polled 421,524, while Binani secured 390, 275 in the March 18 election.

The incumbent governor won 13 of Adamawa’s 21 local government areas, while Binani won eight LGAs in the first round of the exercise on March 18.

Similarly, Fintiri was leading in the supplementary votes counted in 10 out of the 20 local government areas when the REC made his pronouncement.

The ICIR also reported that INEC declared Fintiri the winner on Tuesday, April 18, after polling 430,861 votes to beat Binani, who got 398,788 votes.

Two dead, 12 injured in Kogi auto crash

AT least two people died, and 12 others were injured as a result of a road accident involving a single vehicle in Kogi state on Sunday,  April 30.

The 18-seater bus vehicle had been speeding along the Zariagi-Okene road when one of its tyres burst, and it somersaulted.

Confirming the incident, the Sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) in the state, Stephen Dawulung, said the accident occurred in the early hours of the day.

“The injured have already been conveyed to Kekere Hospital, Kabba Junction, Zariagi, by our personnel who carried out the rescue operation.

“Already, the corpses of the dead passengers have been claimed by their relations for burial,” Dawulung said.

The FRSC commander, sympathising with families of the deceased, warned drivers against the use of worn-out or expired tyres, and advised them to take a minimum of 40 minutes to rest after driving for four hours.

On Thursday, April 27, 24 people had died in separate road accidents in Plateau and Bauchi states.

In the Jos North local government area of Plateau State, 10 persons were burnt beyond recognition after a tanker conveying petrol crashed and burst into flames.

Fourteen commuters were also killed and five others injured in an accident that occurred along the Bauchi-Darazo road, Bauchi.

In the first half of 2022, there were 6,627 road traffic crashes in the country, according to data from the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

How I brought multi-million naira public projects to my town – Lai Mohammed

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THE minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has said he played a key role in securing the location of many public projects in his home town, Oro, Kwara State. 

Mohammed stated this in an interview with newsmen at the 2023 Oro Day Celebrations, held in the town and witnessed by prominent sons and daughters of the community.

According to the minister, an average Oro man cannot boast of being successful until he constructs a personal building in the town and contribute to the town’s development.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), one of the major events of the celebration was the commissioning of an 80-bed Mother and Child Hospital, which the minister facilitated.

The hospital was built and equipped with state-of-the-art facilities by the Office of the Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals.

Mohammed said he also facilitated the rehabilitation of township roads in Oro, which was awarded and funded by the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing.

He said besides providing solar-powered street lights in the community, he equally attracted a 60mva, 132/33kV transmission substation to the town.

According to the minister, the project, with 5km turn-in turn-out Offa-Omu-Aran 132kV double circuit transmission lines, was awarded by the Federal government through the Transmission Company of Nigeria.

The NAN said the substation contract was awarded in the sum of N3 billion local content, and $8 million (about N6 billion) foreign exchange.

On whether he would not be accused of bringing development to only his town to the exclusion of others in the state, the minister said he had as well facilitated projects across the three senatorial zones.


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Buhari delivered free, credible elections – Lai Mohammed

South-south cooperation: Nigeria partners Organisation of Africa, Caribbean and Pacific States


The minister said he influenced the construction of a 40-bed Mother and Child hospital in Igbaja, a town within his local government area, by the SDGs office.

He added that he also facilitated the construction of schools in Ajase town and roads in the Isin local government area, as well as water and road projects in Oke-Ero local government.

He claimed to have attracted roads and water projects to Offa and Omu-Aran towns, while in Ilorin, the capital city, he facilitated the construction of classrooms and installation of internet facilities in schools.

NDLEA intercepts drug consignments concealed in imported car

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OPERATIVES of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have seized 126 parcels of Canadian Loud, a synthetic strain of cannabis weighing 63 kilogrammes, concealed in a used Toyota Corolla car imported from Toronto, Canada, at the Tincan port in Lagos.

The agency said it also, on Saturday, April 22, raided a clandestine factory in Mubi, Adamawa State, where a new psychoactive substance, Akuskura, was being produced in large quantity and distributed to Chad, Cameroon and the Niger Republic.

The spokesperson of the NDLEA, Femi Babafemi, disclosing this in a statement he issued on Sunday, April 30, said production activities were ongoing in the premises of the Adamawa factory at the time of the raid.

Babafemi said the NDLEA operatives also thwarted an attempt by a freight agent, Samuel Chukwuemeka Mordi, to export 900 grammes of Loud hidden inside the walls of a travelling bag containing food items to Kenya through the SAHCO export shed of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos on Saturday, April 29.

The spokesman said when Mordi presented the bag, which he claimed contained food items for export, operatives noticed that in the course of searching the consignment, the side walls of the pack were unevenly bloated, after which they dismantled the false packings and recovered the illicit substance.

“The previous day, Friday, April 28, NDLEA operatives at the Tincan port intercepted 63kg Canadian Loud packed in bags in the boot of one of the five used vehicles in a container marked TLLU4840762 coming from Toronto via Montreal during a joint examination with other stakeholders at the port,” Babafemi stated.

The NDLEA said that in Benue state, operatives recovered 859 bottles of codeine-based syrup weighing 117.3kg abandoned by a suspected dealer about two kilometres away from the NDLEA checkpoint along the Enugu–Otukpo road on Wednesday, April 26

Two suspects – Kabiru Muhammed, 35, and 28-year-old Isah Muhammed, – were also arrested with 20 blocks of cannabis weighing 11.2kg concealed in a bag of cassava flakes (garri) along the Zaria-Kano road, Kano, on Friday, April 28.

Police arrest suspects over murder of its officers in Imo

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AT least eight suspects have been arrested over the murder in Imo state of four police officers in an attack that occurred on Friday, April 21.

The public relations officer (PRO) of the Imo State Police Command, Henry Okoye, who disclosed this in a statement he issued today, said the suspects, who were arrested in batches, had admitted to being members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Eastern Security Network (ESN).

Okoye said the first arrested suspect, Mathew Chuwkuma, confessed to being the Sector Commander of the IPOB/ESN group in Mbaise and gave information that led to the arrest of three others.

“In the course of investigation, the suspects all confessed to be members of the proscribed IPOB/ESN syndicate terrorising the good people of Imo and had a hand in the recent killing of four police officers and two civilians at Ngor Okpala.

“They volunteered crucial information that assisted the determined operatives on April 27 at about 1240hrs, in raiding their second hideout/shrine in Itu, Ezinitte Mbaise local government area of Imo, which led to the arrest of four other notorious IPOB/ESN suspects famous on the command’s wanted list due to their nefarious activities,” Okoye stated.

According to the PPRO, other members of the syndicate had engaged the police in a gun battle. However, many of them fled the scene with gunshot injuries after being overpowered by security officials.

He also said several incriminating items were recovered from the suspects’ hideout, including an AK 47 rifle, three pump action guns, two single barrel locally made guns, one locally made pistol and one cut-to-size gun.

“Frantic investigating efforts are in top gear to arrest other syndicate members at large and make them face the full wrath of the law,” Okoye stated.

The ICIR had reported that the policemen and a couple were shot dead in the Ngor-Okpala area of Imo state on Friday.

The officers had been eating at a restaurant in the area owned by the couple before a group of armed men showed up and opened fire on them.

Police to demolish gunmen’s hideouts in Anambra

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THE Anambra state police command has marked for demolition 17 buildings identified as gunmen’s hideouts in the state. These hideouts are located in the Uli community, Ihiala local government area.

The police said it was also looking out for any other buildings in areas harbouring criminals and gunmen, and disturbing the state’s peace.

The Commissioner of Police, Echeng Echeng, representing the Area  Commander of Ihiala, Bassey Christopher, at the Uli Peace and Security Convention on Saturday, April 29, said, “Any building harbouring criminals and gunmen will be demolished, and about 17 of them have already been marked for demolition. We are not going to spare anyone or any building, irrespective of who the owner is.”

Echeng, tagging the security operations in the community, ‘Action All The Way’, declared that the peace and security summit and convention was the last chance for criminals to leave Uli town.

“We advise the landlords that own those buildings to chase those criminals out of their homes,” he said.

There had been several reports of gunmen attacks in Anambra state and other parts of the southeast region. In 2022, the Anambra state government ordered the demolition of a structure in Idemili local government area suspected to be harbouring the gunmen. 

Scores of police and other security personnel had been killed in southeastern states since the beginning of 2021 in targeted attacks, according to local media tallies.

 According to the Nextier SPD Violent Conflict Database, attacks by non-state actors in the southeastern region between 2021 and 2022 killed 83 civilians and 36 security personnel in only the first quarter of 2022. Of this number, Anambra state accounted for 40.9 per cent of death cases recorded in that period. 

24.8m Nigerians facing acute hunger in 26 states – UN

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THE United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has raised the alarm that one out of eight Nigerians, representing 24.8 million people, are facing acute hunger this year.

This is contained in a statement released on Saturday, April 29 in Abuja by the WFP head of Communications, Advocacy and Marketing in Nigeria, Chi Lael.

Lael disclosed that the agency, to address the urgent needs of those affected by conflict and in dire need of humanitarian aid in the North-east, was ramping up efforts to provide emergency food and nutrition assistance to 2.1 million people.

Part of the statement read, “WFP is gravely concerned that years of armed conflict in North-east Nigeria is driving hunger and malnutrition, with millions in need of life-saving assistance and facing the risk of famine.”

The WFP projected that Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states would witness severe hunger during the peak of the lean season between June and August 2023, with 4.3 million people being affected, and almost 600,000 on the brink of catastrophe. 

The situation is expected to result in emergency levels of food insecurity, with alarmingly high rates of acute malnutrition and mortality, unless there is a consistent increase in humanitarian assistance.

The agency lamented that the ongoing conflict had affected the nutrition status of children on several fronts, and projecting that two million children in the Northeast region would suffer from acute malnutrition.

It stated, “With more than 4.3 million people also in need of food assistance in North-west Nigeria, resources for the North-east have been increasingly squeezed.

“A total of 24.8 million people, or one out of 8 individuals, are experiencing acute hunger this year in Nigeria’s 26 states and the capital, Abuja. The more people in need of urgent food assistance who go unassisted, the greater the risk of starvation and death among the most vulnerable, and the more people will be forced to resort to coping mechanisms such as survival sex, selling possessions and child labour.

“A lack of assistance also increases the risk of youth recruitment into armed groups, as well as displaced populations returning to inaccessible areas where they are beyond the reach of humanitarian assistance and other social services.”

The WFP said chronic insecurity was preventing many people in the North-east from growing the needed food or earning an income.

In the last year, it added, the conflict had left households unable to leave their homes due to an increase in movement restrictions, killings, and abduction of civilians, particularly in Borno state where the violence was concentrated.

Thousands of people were said to be left with only one month’s food supply as households in conflict-affected areas rely on minimum income to purchase food. 

“The hunger crisis worsens an already bad situation for many families struggling with economic hardship, surging inflation, impacts of Russia-Ukraine war, the currency redesign policy, slow post-COVID-19 recovery, and unprecedented floods in 2022 which limited agricultural production and overall food availability,” the agency said.

The WFP disclosed it requires the sum of $190 million over the next six months to provide life-saving food and nutrition assistance to the most vulnerable people.



Buhari gifts Nigerians tax increase as tenure elapses

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has approved increase in some taxes as his parting gifts to Nigerians as he rounds off his tenure. 

Buhari is expected to hand over on May 29, 2023 to the president-elect, Bola Tinubu, after exhausting his two terms.

The Federal government has introduced new Fiscal Policy Measures (FPM) for 2023 in a circular dated April 20, 2023.

The circular, signed by the minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, is titled, ‘Approval For The Implementation Of The 2023 Fiscal Policy Measures And Tariff Amendments.’

The FPM introduces additional excise duty ranging from 20 per cent to 100 per cent on alcoholic beverages, tobacco, wines and spirits.

Nigeria will begin to tax single use plastic, while five per cent telecommunication tax has been approved.

The taxes will take effect on June 1, 2023, immediately after the end of the Buhari administration.

The document reads in part, “This is to confirm that His Excellency Mr. President has approved the implementation of the 2023 Fiscal Policy Measures made up of Supplementary Protection Measures (SPM) for the implementation of the ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET) 2022 – 2026 and a revised excise duty rates on Alcoholic beverages, Cigarettes & Tobacco products, as well as introduction of excise duty on Single Use Plastics (SUPs).

“As part of Nigeria’s commitment to climate change adaptation and mitigation to environmental degradation, a Green Tax made up of excise duty on Single Use Plastics (SUPs) and Import Adjustment Tax (IAT) Levy is introduced on Motor Vehicles of 2000 cubic centimetres (cc) and above.”

The changes are effective from May 1, 2023 subject to a 90-day grace period for importers who had opened Form M before May 1, 2023.

The affected items are rice, woven fabrics, ceramic tiles and sinks, steel, containers for compressed or liquified gas, aluminium cans, washing machines, electric generating sets and rotary converters, smart phones, new and used passenger motor vehicles, and electricity meters.

On the revised excise duty rates, additional excise taxes ranging from 20 per cent to 100 per cent increase on previously approved rates for alcoholic beverages, tobacco, wines and spirits have been introduced effective from June 1, 2023.

These are above the 2022 FPM’s approved roadmap for 2022-2024 in the form of new and higher ad-valorem excise duties and specific rates, while the excise duty rate on non-alcoholic beverages was retained at of N10 per litre.

On green taxes, the Federal government will charge by way of excise duty on single use plastics (SUPs) like plastic containers, films and bags at the rate of 10 per cent.

There is also an import adjustment tax (IAT) levy that was introduced on motor vehicles of 2000 cc to 3999 cc at 2 per cent, while it is 4 per cent for vehicles of 4000cc and above.

Vehicles below 2000cc, mass transit buses, electric vehicles, and locally manufactured vehicles are exempted.

Buhari delivered free, credible elections – Lai Mohammed

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THE Minister  of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed said Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari delivered on his promise of free and fair elections in the 2023 polls.

In a statement he issued on Sunday, April 30, Mohammed described the exercise as the best election in Nigeria’s history, adding that members of the opposition contesting the process were “shameless sore losers.”

“The President would rather lose his state and many of his party’s strongholds than tamper with the fidelity of the election, and that is why he provided a level-playing field for all parties.

“Going by the results, none of the opposition parties met any of the conditions stipulated for winning the presidential election. They did not even come close, in spite of their pre-election grandstanding. They keep leaning on some international observers to justify their fraudulent claim that the election was rigged,” he noted.

Buhari had posited last week that overconfidence, complacency and bad tactical moves cost members of the opposition parties the election.

Reiterating this point, Mohammed said the challenges experienced with the INEC Result Viewing (IReV) portal were inconsequential to the outcome of the elections.

“The opposition’s insinuation that the failure to immediately upload the result of the presidential election onto IReV affected the credibility of the election is a fraud. It is an act of blackmail and deceit by desperate individuals.

“The opposition Labour Party, in particular, will go down in the history books as the first-ever distant third-place finisher in a presidential election anywhere to have bold-facedly claimed victory,” he noted.

Ahead of the 2023 presidential and national assembly elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) assured Nigerians that results would be transmitted electronically from polling units to the IReV portal, a new method aimed at addressing results manipulation.

Buhari also promised to leave a legacy of free and fair elections during the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly in 2022.

Several Nigerians had bought into the promise of credible elections, and over nine million new eligible voters registered to vote ahead of the elections.

INEC, however, reneged on its promise to upload results in real-time, claiming that technical glitches had been responsible for the situation.

This attracted criticisms from some Nigerians, especially  members of the two main opposition parties, People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party (LP), who are currently contesting the emergence of Nigeria’s president-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu as winner of the fiercely contested elections.

Election Violence: SERAP drags INEC to court over failure to probe governors, deputies

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THE Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has sued the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over “the failure to investigate allegations of electoral violence and other electoral offences, including bribery, against some state governors and their deputies during the 2023 elections.”

The ICIR had reported that SERAP had asked the INEC to urgently appoint an independent counsel to investigate allegations of electoral violence and bribery against state governors during the just concluded general elections.

The SERAP warned the electoral commission to promptly identify and arrest perpetrators of electoral violence or risk lawsuits. 

“We would be grateful if immediate steps are taken to implement the recommended measures within seven days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, SERAP shall consider appropriate legal actions to compel INEC to comply with our request in the public interest,” the organisation said.

The SERAP, in a statement made available on Sunday, April 30, said it was asking the court for “an order of mandamus compelling INEC to seek the appointment of independent counsel to investigate allegations of electoral offences against state governors and their deputies during the 2023 elections.”

In the suit number FHC/ABJ/CS/583/2023 filed on Friday, April 28, at the Federal High Court, Abuja, SERAP is also seeking “an order of mandamus compelling INEC to promptly, thoroughly and effectively investigate reports of electoral violence and other electoral offences committed during the elections, identify suspected perpetrators and their sponsors, and ensure their effective prosecution.”

The organisation argued that suspected perpetrators and their sponsors had “clearly” acted in violation of constitutional provisions, international standards and the Electoral Act by allegedly engaging in electoral violence and other electoral offences “in so blatant a fashion.”

SERAP is arguing that “identifying, arresting, investigating and prosecuting any politicians and their sponsors suspected to be responsible for electoral offences during the elections would end the impunity of perpetrators. It would also advance Nigerians’ right to freely participate in their own government.”

According to SERAP, addressing the brazen impunity and reports of electoral violence and other electoral offences during the 2023 general elections would send a strong message to politicians that they would be held to account for any infringement of the electoral process.

The suit, filed on behalf of SERAP by its lawyers, Kolawole Oluwadare, Andrew Nwankwo and Blessing Ogwuche, read in part, “Election violence is a threat to fair and representative elections.

“Election violence is inconsistent and incompatible with the principles of democracy, the rule of law, transparency and accountability for politicians to allegedly use violence to disrupt the electoral process.

“Section 52 of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act allows INEC to seek the appointment of an independent counsel to probe allegations of electoral violence and other electoral offences that may have been committed by any state governors and/or their deputies.

“When politicians and their sponsors decide to engage in electoral violence and other electoral offences rather than contest fairly for people’s votes, there are possibilities that such politicians will show a disregard for democratic rules, and a disposition to adopt illegal means becomes inevitable.

“Ending impunity for electoral violence and other electoral offences would promote accountability of suspected perpetrators and their sponsors, ensure justice for victims, and ultimately advance the people’s right to vote, as well as bolster voter confidence in the electoral process.

“Electoral violence and other electoral offences reportedly committed during the 2023 general elections are contrary to the express provisions of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended], the Electoral Act and international standards.

“The Nigerian Constitution provides in Section 14(1)(c) that, ‘the participation by the people in their government shall be ensured in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.’

“Sections 121 and 127 of the Electoral Act prohibit electoral bribery and undue influence before, during and after any election.

“Section 145(2) provides that, ‘a prosecution under this Act shall be undertaken by legal officers of INEC or any legal practitioner appointed by it.’ Under section 2(b), the commission ‘shall have power to promote knowledge of sound democratic election processes.’

“According to a report by the Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD), several polling units recorded violence and/or fighting across the country.

“These violent incidents were often focused in political strongholds of opposition or perceived opponents, which suggest that the use of BVAS – which limits overvoting when properly used – has resulted in a more concerted effort to stymie citizens casting their votes in opponent’s strongholds.

“Similar incidents of intimidation were reported in the six geo-political zones.

“In several states, political thugs, apparently with the support of law enforcement officials, disrupted and sent back voters intending to vote for opposition parties. Party agents were reported to be directing people who to vote for, while those unwilling to do as directed were denied ballot papers and forced to leave the polling units.

“There were reports of destruction of used ballot papers and vandalization of entire polling units in some states. Violence was also used to target BVAS machines in order to disrupt the process and ensure the cancellation of results.

“According to the CDD, there are reports of vote-trading in zones across the country, with both cash and goods used by all political parties in an effort to entice voters to cast their ballots at their direction. The CDD noted vote buying at polling units during the elections across the country.”

Election violence reports

The ICIR had also reported many electoral violence and irregularities in some states during the general elections.

There was a wide spread of voter intimidation, voter inducement and violence in some states, especially in Lagos, Benue, Kogi and Kano states.

In a report, the Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD) said it tracked 109 deaths linked to electoral violence in Nigeria between January and March 10.

The ICIR in a report also documented how political thugs attacked Polling Unit 25 and injured some INEC officials and a voter in Dekna, Kogi State.

Also, armed men reportedly disrupted voting in Akinyele, Aguda, Surulere, Lagos, housing polling units 081, 082 and 083 and took away ballot boxes and papers during the presidential and national assembly elections.

The ICIR detailed how in Kano state, some residents of the Tudun Wada local government area were burnt to death, while some were shot dead by political thugs during the presidential and national assembly elections.

The incident led to injuries to many people who luckily escaped death.

Residents, survivors and eyewitnesses interviewed by The ICIR  pointed accusing fingers at Alhassan Ado Doguwa as the person who “led the thugs and caused violence while possessing firearms” on that day.

These incidents were among many other cases of irregularities and violence that this platform reported.