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Nigeria: IRI to Monitor Presidential and Parliamentary Elections
Edna Adan Leaves Today To Abuja for monitoring Nigeria’s Elections

ISSUE 273
Front Page
Index
Headlines

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

Regional Affairs

The Independence Of Somaliland A Reality Not A Hope, UDUB

Somaliland: Africa's Oasis Of Calm

Editorial
Special Report

International News

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


PRESS RELEASE

Washington, D.C. April 11, 2007 – The International Republican Institute (IRI) today announced it will send an international delegation to monitor Nigeria’s April 21 presidential and parliamentary elections.   Representatives from China, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Hungary, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Namibia, Poland, Somaliland, Sudan, Uganda and the United States will travel to Nigeria to monitor voting and ballot counting throughout the country.   Following the voting, IRI will issue a statement on the findings of the delegation.

IRI’s delegation will be led by Ambassador Pierre-Richard Prosper, former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes; The Honorable Andras Gyurk, of Hungary, Member of the European Parliament; and Abbe Apollinaire Muholongu Malumalu, President of the Independent Electoral Commission of Democratic Republic of Congo.

Other delegates are Israel Akinsanya, National Chairman of Liberia’s Liberty Party; Rasheed Ali, aide to the Secretary-General of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement; The Honorable Pagan Amum, Secretary-General, Sudan People’s Liberation Movement; Michael Davis, Executive Director of the Universal Human Rights Network; Dr. Sulley Gariba, of Ghana, Director of the Institute for Policy Alternatives; The Honorable Pawel Gras, Member of the Polish Parliament; The Honorable Carole Hillard, former Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota; Minister Edna Adan Ismail, former Foreign Minister of Somaliland; Ping Jia, of China, human rights lawyer and civil society activist; Christopher Khisa, aide to Member of the Kenyan Parliament, The Honorable Noah Wekesa; Rachael Leman, Policy Coordinator for U.S. Congressman David Dreier;   Fan Li, of China, President of the World and China Institute; Dr. Robert Lloyd, Professor of International Relations at Pepperdine University; The Honorable Raila Odinga, Member of the Kenyan Parliament; Scott Palmer, former Chief of Staff to U.S. Congressman Dennis Hastert; Dr. Peter Pham, Director of the Nelson Institute for International and Public Affairs at James Madison University; The Honorable Manuel Pinto, former Member of the Ugandan Parliament; Dr. Jessica Piombo, Professor and Regional Coordinator for Sub-Saharan Africa at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School; Ambassador John Price, former U.S. Ambassador to Mauritius; Tommy Ross, Legislative Assistant to U.S. Congressman David Price; Ambassador Lange Schermerhorn, former U.S. Ambassador to Djibouti; Sylvestre Somo, aide to the President of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Independent Electoral Commission; Marc Traoré, of Mali, Vice-Secretary of Programming for the Community of Democracies; Ambassador Charles Twining, former U.S. Ambassador to Cameroon; The Honorable Benjamin Ulenga, former Member of the Namibian Parliament; Beau Walker, Legislative Assistant to U.S. Congressman John Boozman; The Honorable Noah Wekesa, Member of the Kenyan Parliament; Chris Wyrod, Africa Program Officer at the National Endowment for Democracy.

IRI staff will also serve as observers and assist in the mission.   IRI staff will be led by Lorne Craner, President; Elizabeth Dugan, Vice President for Programs; Stephanie Blanton, Regional Director for Africa programs; and Matthias Naab, Country Director for Nigeria.

Delegates will travel to Abuja, the capital of Nigeria, on April 14.   Once there, delegates will be briefed by representatives from the U.S. Embassy, Nigeria’s National Elections Commission, international and Nigerian nongovernmental organizations, political parties, and representatives of the media.   They will also be briefed on the rights and responsibilities of international observers and Nigerian election law.

Delegates will then be deployed throughout the country where they will monitor polling stations and identify and evaluate strengths and weaknesses in Nigeria’s election system, including campaign regulations, the balloting process, vote tabulation and reporting.

IRI will also field a group of 13 Nigerian civil society activists and academics to observe the gubernatorial and state assembly elections on April 14.  

Since 1998, IRI has played a role promoting Nigeria’s democratic transition and has worked to strengthen the political process in Nigeria.   Since the 2003 elections, IRI has focused on strengthening Nigerian political parties in the pivotal years between elections.   Presently, IRI’s efforts are assisting political parties prepare for the 2007 elections.

In November 2006, an IRI delegation traveled to Nigeria to assess the countries preparations for the April elections.   The report, Nigeria’s 2007 National Elections Pre-Election Assessment, was issued in February 2007.

IRI has monitored more than 130 elections in more than 40 countries.   IRI monitored Nigeria’s 2003 and 1999 presidential and parliamentary elections, 1999 state elections and the 1998 local elections.

Source: International Republican Institute PRESS RELEASE


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