Nigeria Elections Generally Peaceful, Transparent Says ECOWAS Observers

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The general elections in Nigeria on Saturday, according to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Observation Mission, were largely peaceful and fair.

This information was released on Monday in Abuja at a preliminary briefing on the elections by former Sierra Leonean President and head of the ECOWAS delegation Ernest Koroma.

The majority of electorates kept their composure during the voting process, according to Koroma, who claimed that voter turnout was low in most of the polling places he visited.

“Vote counting and tallying processes were carried out in a transparent, simple and professional manner, in the presence of party agents, observers, and security agents in the daytime in some polling units and with lamps in others, where voting was delayed,” he added.

While commending the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, for ensuring a hitch-free exercise, he, however, noted that there were pockets of violence in some states of the federation during the election.

The former President of Sierra Leone added that: “Most polling officials and ad-hoc staff demonstrated inadequate knowledge of their duties, especially with voting materials.

“The set-up of most of the polling units visited did not adequately protect the secrecy of the voting process.”
The Mission, therefore, called on INEC to ensure prompt transmission and declaration of the provisional results.

It also urged INEC to increase the frequency of communication on developments regarding the electoral process to the general public to discourage misinformation through social media.

Speaking also, the President of the ECOWAS Commission, Omar Touray said: “ECOWAS will indeed follow results closely and continue to reach out to all stakeholders within the framework of our preventive diplomacy”.

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