Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03ABUJA675
2003-04-11 20:01:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Abuja
Cable title:  

NIGERIA: ELECTION UPDATE - WILL THEY BE READY?

Tags:  PGOV PREL KDEM PINR NI 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ABUJA 000675 

SIPDIS


CAIRO FOR MAXSTADT


E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/10/2013
TAGS: PGOV PREL KDEM PINR NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: ELECTION UPDATE - WILL THEY BE READY?


REF: ABUJA 502


Classified by Ambassador Howard F. Jeter. Reason: 1.5(d).


C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ABUJA 000675

SIPDIS


CAIRO FOR MAXSTADT


E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/10/2013
TAGS: PGOV PREL KDEM PINR NI
SUBJECT: NIGERIA: ELECTION UPDATE - WILL THEY BE READY?


REF: ABUJA 502


Classified by Ambassador Howard F. Jeter. Reason: 1.5(d).



1. (SBU) SUMMARY: The April 12 National Assembly
elections, to a significant degree, will be a dry-run
for the presidential election one week later. The
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
claims it is ready to conduct the election. This
cable provides an overview of INEC's preparation. At
this late stage, the lapses with voters registration
are irrevocable. However, INEC's calculation of the
number of registered voters continue to undergo close
scrutiny (septel). Starting April 8, INEC began
issuing voter cards and appeared seriously to tackle
the massive logistical challenges of positioning
material and personnel for election day. There will
likely be foul-ups in the stationing of personnel and
materials on election day. Confusion over who is or
is not a registered voter will also hamper balloting
in many places. Hopefully these gaps will not be too
numerous and INEC will acquit itself well on April 12.
A responsible performance will lower the political
temperature and create greater confidence that the
April 19 Presidential election will be handled
credibly. END SUMMARY.


--------------
MATERIAL ISSUES
--------------



2. (U) INEC now has almost all required materials in
country, but has only started to distribute the
material to Local Government Areas (LGAs). Some LGAs
may not receive materials in time to begin the voting
at 0800 on Saturday, April 12. The number of polling
officials is also a concern. With over 120,000
polling stations nationwide and an average of five
officials per station, INEC must employ hundreds of
thousands of ad hoc personnel, many of whom may have
received little training.



3. (C) The voter card exchange, supposed to run from
April 8 through April 10, has started in some areas.
This process consists of changing the temporary voter
slip given at voter registration for a card to be used
on election day. INEC Chairman Abel Guobadia has
announced that people who did not receive the voter
card would be able to make the exchange at the voting

booth the day of the election. (COMMENT: INEC's
statements regarding the voter cards have been vague
and unclear. The decision to provide voter cards at
the voting booth will likely complicate and confuse
the election day process in many voting stations. END
COMMENT).



4. (C) INEC has released posters showing sample
ballots and specimens have also been printed in many
local daily newspapers. In addition to the standard
ballot, tendered ballots are allowed by Nigeria's
Electoral Law. A tendered ballot is one given to
people whose name does not appear on the register or
are otherwise disqualified from voting, but these
ballots will not be counted. Tendered ballots are
required by the Electoral Law to be a different color
from the standard ballot, but INEC has not prepared
any formal tendered ballots. Tendered ballots will
simply be marked with a "T" by polling officials at
the time of voting. (COMMENT: The use of tendered
ballots to ease the frustration of otherwise
ineligible voters by letting them "participate" is
laudable. However, the system INEC has devised is
short on controls and susceptible to manipulation.
END COMMENT.)


--------------
SECURITY
--------------



5. (C) INEC has stated that elections will not be held
in areas of violence, or even potential violence.
Thus, it is likely INEC will not hold elections in
Local Government Areas in Warri due to the ongoing
crisis in that part of Delta State. INEC also
declared the need for "special security requirements"
in six states where INEC experienced problems during
the voter registration period. These states are
Bayelsa, Delta, Plateau, Nassarawa, Rivers and Taraba.
Additional security measures to deal with the
potentially troubled areas have not been described.


--------------
IN THE COURTS
--------------

6. (C) The Federal High Court in Abuja was scheduled
to rule April 10 on the suit filed against INEC for
allegedly violating the Electoral Law by not
displaying the voters registration lists 60 days
before the election. COMMENT: The court might likely
rule in favor of INEC. Conversely, if the court rules
that INEC violated the law, the ruling still might
allow for the election to proceed. However, an
adverse ruling calling for postponement of the
election is possible, although, at this stage, not
very likely. Whatever the court rules, the losing
party will appeal. Litigation has been an ongoing
problem in the election process, adding confusion and
delays, and will continue well past the elections
themselves. END COMMENT


--------------
MONITORING THE SITUATION
--------------



7. (SBU) Realistic expectations put the number of
domestic monitors at roughly 30,000 people, mostly
from the four organizations including the Transition
Monitoring Group and the JDPC. Unfortunately, this
number will not provide universal coverage of polling
stations. Moreover, coordination among the domestic
groups is rare and has been marked by bickering.
International monitors will exceed 150, mainly from
the EU, the Commonwealth, IRI and NDI. The Mission
will be fielding more than 20 officers to polling
places in ten different states.



8. (C) COMMENT: The April 12 elections are important
in and of themselves. But for many Nigerians their
real value is that they provide an indication of INEC
preparedness for the big contests - the April 19
gubernatorial and presidential elections. There will
be glitches and some polling areas will not open on
time, and certainly not end on time. Nigerians expect
a rough-hewn process. In the end, INEC will not be
judged so much by the glitches that occur, but by how
quickly and impartially it handles them. To a large
degree, the success of these elections will depend on
the ability of polling officials to resolve issues as
they arise at the individual polling stations and on
the integrity of senior INEC officials to safeguard
the sanctity of the vote tabulation process.
JETER