British govt. set to sanction party chiefs who suppressed, intimidated voters

Thu, Mar 23, 2023
By editor
4 MIN READ

Foreign

…says violence, voter suppression marred general elections

THE British High Commission in Nigeria has started collation of relevant information with which it will slam sanctions on those found to have engaged in or incited electoral violence and other anti-democratic behaviours in the federal and state elections of February 25 and March 18, 2023 respectively.

The High Commission, which stated this in a statement released on Wednesday, March 22, 2023, said that “members of our observation mission personally observed violence, and voter suppression in numerous voting locations. We witnessed and received credible reports from other observer missions and civil society organisations of vote buying and voter intimidation, the destruction and hijacking of election materials and the general disruption of the process in numerous states including Lagos, Enugu and Rivers.”

The statement also stressed that “the UK is concerned by the use of inflammatory ethno-religious language by some public and political figures.  We call on all leaders not just to distance themselves from this kind of language, but to prevent those who speak on their behalf from doing so in this way.”

It reminded all of the pledge of the UK Minister of State for Development and Africa, Andrew Mitchell MP, on February 21, that the UK is prepared to take action against those who engage in or incite electoral violence and other anti-democratic behaviours, and that action against such people could include preventing them from obtaining UK visas or imposing sanctions on them under the UK’s human rights sanctions regime.

The statement then confirmed that the High Commission has commenced collation of “relevant information, with a view to taking action against some individuals.”  

British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Catriona Laing

 Full text of the statement reads:

UK Statement on Gubernatorial and State House of Assembly elections

Abuja, 22 March 2023

The British High Commission observed the gubernatorial elections on 18 March, sending teams to Benue, Enugu, Kano, Lagos, Oyo and Rivers States.

We observed improvements around elections logistics by INEC during the gubernatorial elections, particularly when compared to the Presidential elections.  More polling units opened on time, there was greater evidence of BVAS and IREV working and results uploaded in real time from polling units and collation centres.  These are positive markers to build on for future elections.

However, there were notable points of concern.  Members of our observation mission personally observed violence, and voter suppression in numerous voting locations. We witnessed and received credible reports from other observer missions and civil society organisations of vote buying and voter intimidation the destruction and hijacking of election materials and the general disruption of the process in numerous states including Lagos, Enugu and Rivers.

In addition, we observed incidents of harassment of journalists. Freedom of speech and a free press are crucial for a healthy democracy, and journalists must be able to go about their work without being threatened.

The UK is concerned by the use of inflammatory ethno-religious language by some public and political figures.  We call on all leaders not just to distance themselves from this kind of language, but to prevent those who speak on their behalf from doing so in this way.

It is a testament to their commitment to democracy that many Nigerians were prepared to vote despite being faced with intimidation and hostility.

The UK Minister of State for Development and Africa, Andrew Mitchell MP, said on 21 February, that the UK is prepared to take action against those who engage in or incite electoral violence and other anti-democratic behaviours, and action could include preventing people from obtaining UK visas or imposing sanctions under our human rights sanctions regime. We can confirm that we are collating relevant information, with a view to taking action against some individuals.

We urge any party or individual who wishes to challenge the process or outcome of the elections to do so peacefully and through the appropriate legal channels. We will be observing the course of legal challenges made.

The 2023 elections are not only important to Nigeria and Nigerians, but to Africa and the world as a whole.  As a long-term partner, the UK is committed to strengthening the ties between our countries and peoples, including by supporting democratic development. (globalpatriotnews)

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