Friday, March 29, 2024
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Nigeria braces for hotly contested poll

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ABUJA: Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan warned against violence ahead of the presidential election as people stockpiled food, cash and fuel for fear of post-election clashes.
Jonathan will face former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari in what is seen as the closest presidential race since the end of military rule in 1999.
In a broadcast to the nation on Saturday, Jonathan said no political ambition could justify violence or bloodshed, adding that security measures had been taken to guarantee a free and fair election.
‘Let me warn, however, that as President, Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, I am under oath to protect the lives of all Nigerians and the security of our country at all times. I will never abdicate my responsibilities in that regard,’ he said.
‘Those who may harbour any intentions of testing our will by unleashing violence during the elections in order to advance their political ambitions should think again,’ Jonathan said.
He added that security agencies were ready to deal with anyone who tried to disrupt the peaceful conduct of the elections or cause public disorder in Africa’s top oil producer and biggest economy.
Around 800 people died in post-election violence in 2011 in which Jonathan defeated Buhari. Western powers have been pressing both sides not to stoke tensions, with U.S. President Barack Obama and other world leaders issuing a direct appeal for calm this week.
In the capital Abuja long queues formed outside banks as people withdrew money. Queues for fuel also stretched for hundreds of metres in cities across the country.
‘I’m getting my cash out now because I don’t know what is going to happen. If it gets bad, you don’t want to be stuck with no cash,’ Wale Olatunji, 31, a businessman queuing in the sun at a bank in Abuja, said.
Ishaya Yahaya Junior, a 40-year-old civil servant in the northern metropolis of Kaduna, said, ‘We have been stockpiling provisions – lots of people have been doing this. We don’t want to go outside if there is trouble.’ He estimated that his family could live for three weeks on stored food if necessary. (Reuters)

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