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Nigerian Elections Postponed Hours Before Voting

The outcome of the election, now scheduled on February 23, has a lot at stake, including the state’s control over Nigeria’s oil.
Nigerian Elections Postponed Hours Before Voting

Image for representational use only.Image Courtesy : eNCA

Five hours before voting was to commence, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)—after an emergency meeting—announced at around 3am local time that the 2019 Nigerian elections, originally scheduled for February 16, have been postponed.

Without delving into details, the INEC simply cited logistical complications as the reason. It was reported last night that ballot papers for the region of Niger east and north were missing.

February 23 is the new date for the presidential and parliamentary elections, which will be followed by elections for governorships on March 9.

Both the ruling party and its primary opposition have condemned the decision by the INEC, accusing each other of attempting electoral manipulation.

This Nigerian election—the largest democratic exercise in Africa—comes four years after the first peaceful transition of power in 2015, when the then incumbent Jonathan Goodluck from the centre-right People’s Democratic Party (PDP) conceded defeat to Muhammadu Buhari from the centre-left All Progressive Congress (APC).

Unlike in all previous elections since democracy was restored in the country in 1999 after a period of military dictatorship, ethnic vote banks are expected to not be the decisive factor determining the outcome, because both incumbent president Buhari and his primary opponent from the PDP, Atiku Abubakar, belong to the same Muslim Hausa-speaking community.

This time the elections have been fiercely contested primarily on the offer the candidates have made to solve the economic crisis that the country has been facing since the fall of oil prices in mid-2014.

Buhari came to power in 2015, promising to revive and diversify the economy.

However, assuming presidency on the heels of falling oil prices—on which the state is dependent for over half of its revenue and 90 per cent of the foreign exchange—Buhari could not deliver on his promise to revive the recession-bound economy.

Four years later, by the end of last year, unemployment had soared to 23.1 per cent — the highest since 2010. Over half the population, as per the World Bank’s estimate, lives under less than $1.90 a day. Capital flight was not successfully reigned in and the stock market collapsed to almost half its size in 2014.

Further compounding the problem of oil-price collapse was the failure to make a decisive break with the IMF-prescribed austerity measures, which Nigerians have been subjected to for decades, impoverishing healthcare and education services.

Minimizing public expenditure in the name of fiscal discipline has starved the country’s vital oil industries to such an extent that last year, as of October, refineries operated at a mere 11 per cent capacity, forcing Nigeria to import 90% of its oil-products while exporting huge amounts of crude.

However, rather than offering to break with the neoliberal policies and revive the public sector that is of strategic importance to the state, Buhari’s primary opponent, Atiku Abubakar—a wealthy businessman with stakes in numerous sectors, including oil—has promised to sell the state-owned oil refineries to private players, if elected.

Apart from the direct consequences of losing control of its largest source of revenue and the foreign exchange needed to finance its imports, such a measure—if undertaken—will severely limit the state’s ability to undertake any economic diversification programme in the future.

In what might be a consolation to some sections opposed to privatisation, Abubakar has announced that the revenue raised by selling of state assets will be allocated to the resource-starved education and health sector. He has promised to raise the percentage of budget allocated to education from the current 3 per cent to 25 per cent and to healthcare from 3.9 per cent to 15 per cent.

However, Abubakar has elaborated no plan on how this level of funding will be maintained once the one-time revenue thus raised is exhausted.

The question of ability to continue such financing is of particular importance because the self-professed Thatcherite has also vowed to reduce the corporate income tax, which, after his proposed reforms, will be the lowest in Africa.

What’s more, there exists a high degree of suspicion that Abubakar and his associates might themselves be the greatest beneficiaries of the reforms he has proposed. It was during his tenure as vice-president in the last decade—when he oversaw the privatisation of parts of the oil and gas sector—that Abubakar amassed his private fortune.

Concerns regarding possible corruption in this period were raised in a recent Eurasia Group report. In 2010, a US senate committee report had also stated that one of Abubakar’s wives, who is an American, had helped him transfer $40 million of funds from his offshore holdings to the United States, raising “a host of questions about the nature and source” of his wealth. He is also currently under investigation in Nigeria.

On the other hand, Buhari—a former military dictator who is widely recognized to be a converted-democrat—has taken a firm stand against privatisation.

He has vowed to undertake spending to revive the oil sector, to expand transportation infrastructure by connecting all the states through railway links and to complete the Chinese funded hydro-electric project worth $5 billion.

For the workers struggling to make ends meet under the austerity policies amid economic crisis, Buhari has promised an increase in minimum wages.

Having already cemented his reputation as a sincere, though not very successful, anti-corruption campaigner, Buhari has promised to introduce stricter punishment for graft.

Abubakar, on the other hand, dismissing allegations of corruption against himself, has advocated preventive instead of punitive measures to fight corruption. These include privatisation, which he argues, will bring transparency to the opaque walls behind which dealings are made in state-owned enterprises.

The two candidates also differ on how to deal with the threat from Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram.

While Buhari is advocating a greater allocation of resources to the military, Abubakar has maintained that the correct response will be to provide jobs in the poorest regions to deny a recruiting ground for the organisation.

With the polls suggesting a neck-to-neck competition between the two primary candidates, this is going to be a high-stakes election. On its outcome depends the future of Nigeria’s control over its oil, the future of its public sector and the course of resolution of the conflict with Boko Haram.

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