The six-week delay in Nigeria’s presidential election has raised red flags both in the international community and among local political and civil rights groups, with many concerned about the independence of the country’s electoral commission and whether the military hierarchy had too much say in the matter. President Goodluck Jonathan and his chief rival, former military dictator Muhammadu Buhari, are facing off in what is probably the tightest presidential contest in the history of Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and its economic powerhouse, so any change like moving back election day is seen as suspicious and a possible game-changer. Many international observers had already arrived in the country and foreign journalists were struggling to obtain visas when Nigeria’s electoral commission announced Saturday it was postponing the Feb. 14 presidential and legislative elections until March 28.
“Political interference with the Independent National Electoral Commission is unacceptable,” U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said. “It is critical that the government not use security concerns as a pretext for impeding the democratic process.”
Nigerian elections were blatantly rigged until 2011, which was the fairest election ever seen in the country. But political shenanigans and charges by civil rights groups that the police and military favor Jonathan’s party have raised skepticism that the next election will be proper. A recently released Gallup poll indicates the confidence level declined from 51 percent in 2011 to 13 percent last year.
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