Opinion
Ensuring Violence, Free Elections
Nigerians will troop out to elect their President
on Saturday, March 28, 2015, in what is seen as the most unpredictable election in the country’s political history. Nevertheless, one of the main socio-political problems of Nigeria is electoral violence. Almost all our political processes have been characterised by violence. This is not good for the progress and development of this country. Participants in our politics and government should give thought to this problem and play the political game according to the rules provided in the constitution of the land. It should be noted that the constitution is the supreme law of the land.
As noted already, our elections have been characterised by political violence. This dates back to the First Republic (1960-66). In the 1965 Western elections violence was reported particularly during the campaigns and the elections proper. The main contenders were the Nigerian National Alliance (NNA) and the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA). Many people including officers of the Western Electoral Commission were shot and killed by party thugs. There were rioting and fighting in such places as Mushin, Ekiti, Ilesha, Ibadan and Egba South 1. Because of these, polling was abandoned. The chairman of the Federal Electoral Commission, Mr E. E. Esua resigned.
The Second Republic (1979-83) was not devoid of violence. For instance, the 1983 elections were characterised by violence and rigging. In states such as Oyo, Ondo and Niger some Federal Electoral Commission Officials were burnt to death. In Benue State, the younger brother of NPP Gubernatorial candidate, Mr Paul Unongo was murdered in cold blood. The elections were rigged by all the parties that contested for them. Furthermore, in Ondo State where Chief Omoboriowo claimed to have won, violence greeted his victory following which many lives and properties were destroyed. Omoboriowo himself went into hiding.
In our current political dispensation cases of violence have also been observed. For instance, events leading to the 2003 elections witnessed political violence. In Anambra State there were cases of violence which took the lives of a Lawyer Mr Barnabas lgwe and his wife Mrs Abigail Igwe. Others who lost their lives in the same Anambra State included Eddy Okeke and the chairman of the All People’s Party, Nnewi South Local Government Area, Mr Eze Odumega Okonkwo. Most of the killings were alleged to have been carried out by a group known as the Bakasi Boys.
Similarly, the Attorney General and Minister of Justice of Nigeria Chief Bola Ige was assassinated by four armed men in his bedroom in Ibadan on December 23, 2001. Investigation into his death is still going on and so far there are no clues as to who killed him. In Imo State, the Principal Secretary Mr Theodore Emeka Agwaru to the Imo State Governor Mr Achike Udenwa was assassinated on February 23, 2003, in Owerri by unknown persons. This came on the heels of the killing of the senatorial candidate of the All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP) Chief Ogbonnaya Chijioke at his Shell Camp residence in Owerri.
In fact, it is the duty of everybody in this country to avoid further violence in the current democratic dispensation. Violence does not pay anybody. Instead violence breeds further violence and this is not good for the well-being and progress of our country.
It should also be noted that soon after the presidential elections on April 16, 2011, political violence enveloped such places as Kano, Kaduna, Bauchi and Niger States on April 17, 2011. Following the violence, business premises, houses and churches were razed. The house of the Vice President Namadi Sambo in Zaria was burnt. The death toll was given as two hundred and more than twenty houses were set ablaze in the affected Northern states. An Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office in Bajoga, Funakaye Local Government Area of Nasarawa State was razed.
Currently (2015) political violence had been observed in states such as Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Cross River, Ekiti, Adamawa, Edo, Delta, Kano and Kaduna. In these places lives and properties were destroyed. This is not good for the health of this country. Nigerians should therefore ensure that violence is not experienced in Saturday’s Presidential Elections and after. We should conduct ourselves peacefully. After all, there can never be progress without peace.
Tolofari is Distinguished Life Fellow of the Institute of Corporate Administration of Nigeria, Abuja.
Mann Tolofari
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