50 People Killed in Election Violence

Tue, Mar 31, 2015
By publisher
2 MIN READ

2015 Election

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About 50 people have died in the presidential and National Assembly election on March 28

By Anayo Ezugwu  |  Apr. 6, 2015 @ 01:00 GMT  |

THE National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, has said that more than fifty persons were killed during and after last March 28 presidential and National Assembly elections in the country. The commission stated this in a statement it issued on Monday, March 30, commending Nigerians for refusing to be intimidated or discouraged by operational and logistical hiccups that trailed the election in various parts of the country.

Chidi Odinkalu, chairman, governing council, NHRC, who signed the statement said that there had been incidents, reports and allegations of various forms of violence, including some reported attacks by extremists in some parts of North-Eastern Nigeria, which it said was designed to frustrate the electoral process. It said that varying acts of violence, which resulted in fatalities, were reported in Akwa Ibom, Borno, Bauchi, Edo, Gombe, Lagos, Osun, Rivers, and Yobe states.

“At the end of yesterday, (Sunday, March 29) the number of persons reported killed in these attacks and incidents are over 50. This number includes one state legislator, a community leader and two ad hoc election staff of Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, allegedly killed in an extremist attack in Gombe State, as well as the killing of an officer of the Nigerian Armed Forces in Rivers State.

“There were also reported cases of injuries from politically-motivated violence in Edo, Ekiti, Imo, Lagos, and Kano states as well as allegations of snatching of ballot boxes, card readers and related election materials in some states, including Akwa Ibom, Benue, Gombe, Imo, Niger and Rivers states.”

It stressed that there were also isolated but very worrying reports of arson attacks on assets of INEC and that of Police in some parts of the Niger Delta. It blamed the incidents on widespread availability of small arms and light weapons in some parts of the country, especially in parts of Akwa Ibom, Imo, Delta, Rivers, and Benue states.

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