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US Urges Nigeria to Assure Confidence in Elections
ISSUE 273
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Victims of war crimes unearthed by heavy spring rains at Boqol-Jire in Hargeysa

UN Envoy Concerned At Rising Tensions Between Puntland And Somaliland

" Qaran has a legitimate concern and an arguable legal case "

Somaliland Troops Clash With Puntland Forces

Call For Peace And Justice In Somalia

Africa's Success Story

Two Eritrean Journalists Captured In Somalia Held With “Foreign Fighters”

Somali Civilians Murdered, Raped, As Conflict Worsens, UN Says

Mission Report on the Trial Observation of Detained Human Rights Defenders
in Somaliland

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The Independence Of Somaliland A Reality Not A Hope, UDUB

Somaliland: Africa's Oasis Of Calm

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Peacekeepers With No Peace To Keep

U.S. declines to comment on reported North Korean arms sales to Ethiopia

Kadra Attacked In Public

Doomsday for the Greenback

Worse Than Apartheid?

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

KENYAS MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT FACT FINDING MISSION TO SOMALILAND

Ethiopia Acknowledges Detaining 41 Suspected Terrorists, Denies Wrongdoing

Washington Post Equates Imus's Racist Remarks with When He Called Cheney a "War Criminal"

Somalia's Descent To Hell

North Koreans Arm Ethiopians As U.S. Assents

Somalia : 'The World's Hidden Shame'

The West Now Takes Keen Interest in Peace for Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

Recognition: Ritual or Requisite?

Bad Days Ahead For Puntlanders

The Twenth first Genocide

The Majeerten Envy Towards Somaliland

Mogadishu Massacre: Ethiopia Serves Vengeance In Cold For The US!

Somaliland's Foreign Policy, Understanding The Process Of Multilateral Diplomacy

Ich Bin Ein Hawiye (I Am A Hawiye Citizen)

Is Somaliland Teetering Towards Failure? - Part II


By David Gollust
State Department
12 April 2007

Nigeria president Olusegun Obasanjo (File)
Olusegun Obasanjo (file)

The United States Thursday called on the Nigerian government and election officials to do everything they can to assure the fairness of the country's upcoming elections. The run-up to the two-stage legislative and presidential elections beginning Saturday has been marred by opposition charges of vote-rigging and intimidation. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.

The State Department is appealing to Nigerian authorities to take all possible measures to enhance public confidence in the elections, and officials here are rejecting the notion the United States has been soft on election abuses in Nigeria because of diplomatic and economic considerations.

Nigerian voters go to the polls Saturday to elect state governors and legislators, and again a week later on April 21 in a presidential poll that should lead to a transition from one elected head of state to another for the first time since independence in 1960.

However, opposition politicians have accused the government of outgoing President Olusegun Obasanjo of attempting to keep opposition candidates off the ballot, intimidating voters, and stalling on arrangements for election monitors.

Sean McCormack
Sean McCormack

Earlier this week in an editorial, The New York Times said key international partners of Nigeria, including the United States and Britain, have been far too tolerant of political abuses by Mr. Obasanjo because of his support for peace efforts in Somalia and Darfur, and because of his country's oil wealth.

However, at a news briefing, State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack categorically denied any soft-pedaling of U.S. election concerns. He said the United States is a committed supporter of free, fair and open elections in Nigeria and has taken the matter up directly on various occasions with authorities in Abuja.

"We have talked to the Nigerians periodically about the importance of having the right kind of elections," said Sean McCormack. "And the right kind of election means, one that is free, fair and transparent, not only on election day but also in the run-up to the election, where candidates have full access to the media, that they have an opportunity to express their views, and to try to convince voters to vote for them, free from intimidation."

McCormack said the United States has not just lent rhetorical support to that effort but has backed it up with millions of dollars in aid to help Nigerian parties prepare for elections, to train election workers and poll watchers, and otherwise build an infrastructure for elections that meet international standards.

A written statement issued here said U.S. election aid to Nigeria in the last three years had totaled nearly $15 million.

A billboard bearing Umaru Yar'Adua's face looks down on a street vendor in Katsina, Nigeria, 19 Mar 2007
A billboard bearing Umaru Yar'Adua's face looks down on a street vendor in Katsina, Nigeria, 19 Mar 2007

It said the United States is supporting nearly 200 observers of the upcoming polling accredited to the U.S. mission in Nigeria and to two U.S. non-governmental groups, the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute.

The U.S. statement said election confidence-building steps should include the immediate granting of full and transparent access for both domestic and international election observers, as well as the posting and publishing of results at each polling station.

It urged all Nigerian parties to refrain from violence and to exercise their liberties responsibly and according to the rule of law.

Source: VOA


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