Combating electoral violence in Nigeria
Every election since the independence of Nigeria in 1960 always has one tale of violence or the other trailing it and the present democratic dispensation is no exception. Recent rerun elections in Bayelsa and Rivers states were marred by massive violence. OLAJIDE OMOJOLOMOJU examines the history of electoral violence in the electoral process in Nigeria, the causes and the possible solutions.
Election is an integral part of the democratic process which gives the citizenry the opportunity to freely determine who leads them at every strata of government at specific periods and take decisions that that shape or mar their socio-economic and political destiny.
It also provides opportunity for the citizenry to also recall their elected representatives when they fail or vote them out at the next available opportunity.
However, Nigeria’s political history in recent times has become replete with violence before, during and after elections, be it general elections, supplementary or rerun elections. And this has not augured well for the sustenance of democracy in the country.
An anonymous author has written that “the surest way to encourage violence is to give in to it,” but also, no matter how formidable violence has become in the electoral process, the people can overcome it with unity.
How do we describe electoral violence? It has been very difficult to give particular definition to electoral violence, perhaps because of the popular maxim that ‘violence begets violence” developed by Frantz Fanon in the era of anti-colonial struggles.
And because violence begets violence, those who retaliate to first violence do not see themselves as perpetuating violence. They simply argue that they are countering violence. However, one can attempt an operational definition of electoral violence. Electoral violence is all forms of violence, physical, psychological, administrative, legal and structural, at different stages of an electoral process, engaged in by participants, their supporters, and sympathizers, including security and election management body staff.
These forms of violence take place before, during and after elections. Electoral violence could also be intra or interparty.
Perhaps, for a better understanding, a historical perspective of electoral violence in Nigeria’s electoral process from independence will suffice.
Nigeria’s political history is replete with instances of electoral violence, right from independence on October 1, 1960. The Human Rights Watch, in 2007, in its follow up of post-independence events, described Nigeria’s post-independence history as being overshadowed by the depredations of a series of corrupt, abusive, and unaccountable governments.
The nation seems to have acquired a culture of electoral violence as seven of the eight general elections conducted since independence in 1960 have been violence-ridden – 1964/1965, 1979, 1983, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2015.
At independence, the nation adopted the parliamentary system of government after the British, which colonised Nigeria. The first post-independence election organized by the government of Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa and President Nnamdi Azikiwe in 1964 and 1965 were characterized by widespread complaints of fraud, violence and intimidation. Protest in the wake of the regional elections, which in some areas degenerated into violence and inter-communal rioting, claimed more than 200 lives. This perhaps contributed to the first coup in 1966.
The next election was held in 1979, when a civilian administration headed by Alhaji Shehu Shagari of the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN), was installed by the Olusegun Obasanjo-led junta.
The Shagari-led government organized a civilian to civilian transition election, but unfortunately, having failed to learn from its First Republic counterparts, repeated history and massively rigged the 1983 general elections through very violent means in connivance with the election management body, the Federal Election Commission (FEDECO) and security forces.
The massive rigging and violence that trailed that election set the tone for another wave of military intervention on December 31, 1983, which lasted till May 29, 1999, when the present democratic dispensation was instituted.
Since the advent of the ongoing democratic dispensation, the nation has only added to her litany of fraudulent and violent elections, as the 1999, 2003 and 2007 general elections that brought President Olusegun Obasanjo and later, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua to power, were marred by widespread violence and fraud.
For example, the US-based Jimmy Carter Centre for Democracy, which monitored the 1999 election as an international observer, concluded its report on the outcome of the presidential election like the others before it this way: “It is not possible for us to make an accurate judgment about the outcome of the presidential election.”
The 2003 election was even more pervasively and openly rigged than the flawed 1999 polls, and far more bloody.
These two elections set the stage for the 2007 elections, with the Obasanjo maxim of do-or-die election, and which both local and international observers succinctly described as the worst election in Nigeria’s history. The 2007 elections even ranked among the worst conducted anywhere in the world in recent times, according to HRW’s interviews with voters and observers on the April 2007 elections.
US-based National Democratic Institute (NDI), stated in its post-election statement that the electoral process “failed the Nigerian people,” while the HRW, which also monitored the election, reported that the failed April 2007 polls “cast a harsh and very public light on patterns of violence, corruption and outright criminality that have come to characterize Nigeria’s political system – and on the extent to which officials and institutions at all levels of government accept, encourage and participate in those abuses.”
The 2011 elections did not fare any better as it was characterized again by pervasive violence before, during and after the elections. It is perhaps the 2015 general elections that one can say with all certainty that was free of violence, although it also had its fair share of violence before and during the elections in some states, but it could pass and has been described as one of the best to be conducted in the political history of Nigeria.
It follows from the above that in almost every election year since independence, electoral violence has become part and parcel of the Nigerian electoral process. About 800 Nigerians, including 10 youth corps members, lost their lives to electoral violence, aside the millions of naira worth of property destroyed.
There is a legal framework guiding the electoral process at every point of election in Nigeria, but despite this, the elections are always viewed as a contest between those who want to acquire power and those who are likely to lose power.
This contest between two contending forces normally put the toga of violence because many politicians usually want to cut corners.
Nigeria’s democratic history has showed an electoral and political violence that often times threaten the country to its very foundations, and this has made it near impossible to consolidate democracy and thus making it difficult for the country to be referred to as a democratic state though operators vehemently lay claim to it.
Although it has been established historically that violence is a major feature of politics everywhere around the world, politically-related violence varies in intensity, trends and dimensions from one political system to another and from one country to the other.
Causes of electoral violence
Many reasons could be adduced for perpetrating electoral violence, especially in the Nigerian political landscape. Former governor of Lagos State and Minister of Works, Power and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, put the blame of electoral violence on alleged disempowerment of the electorate.
Fashola, while blaming the electoral umpire for contributing to electoral violence, said: “The seed of violence is sown when people perceive that they are being disenfranchised either by denying them the freedom to vote or through delay of electoral materials. If we are talking about electoral violence, pre, during and post, some things have happened to which, perhaps, we haven’t paid enough attention to, which is the most recent evidence of people snatching ballot boxes.
“And what is the recent evidence of electoral failures; people being disenfranchised, prevented from voting because electoral materials don’t get to them or their votes are cancelled or delayed.”
He also added that other possible reasons for electoral violence is the refusal of politicians to accept defeat, adding that: “Another possible cause of electoral violence is a reaction to a possible stimulus, a stimulus that suggests that, ‘well, we will do what we like to get power and you go and do what you like’.”
Also, the do-or-die politics, introduced during the tail end of the Obasanjo presidency has also, in no small measure, contributed to the spate of electoral violence in the land.
Again, the humongous salary that elected representatives of the people collect every month has also been identified as one of the reasons the electoral process is always marred with pervasive violence, as every contestant in the electoral process wants to win at all cost and also get a share of the huge emoluments that elected officials collect from the national treasury.
Greed and avarice have also played an important role in election violence in Nige
ria. Greed on the part of the politicians, who go to the extent of imposing themselves on the populace for their own selfish interest which borders on wealth acquisition through the power bestowed on them through the ballot, is also one of the major causes of electoral violence.
And also of importance is ignorance; ignorance on the part of the youths who are used to perpetrate violence during election. Such ignorance is occasioned by lack of education and knowledge, to understand that politicians are only using them to perpetrate violence at election time to satisfy their own selfish interest.
Other causes of electoral violence include: electoral abuses, and rigging of elections; abuse of political power; alienation, marginalization and exclusion; and the political economy of oil; poverty/unemployment; ineffectiveness of security forces and the culture of impunity; weak penalties; weak governance and corruption and, proliferation of arms and ammunitions.
Other related causes of violence during election are: lack of security; partisanship of traditional rulers, who are supposed to be the custodians of our cultural heritage; abuse of office by elected officials; zero-sum politics or the winner takes it all syndrome; lucrative nature of political office; poor handling of election petitions, and lack of faith in the judiciary; lack of compliance with the extant electoral law and enforcement of the enabling laws; partisan disposition of the police, and other security agencies detailed to monitor elections, and secure lives and property; corrupt INEC staff and ad-hoc officials, who connive with the politicians; conflict of interests between and among politicians; and greed and selfish interests of politicians coupled with ideological bankruptcy.
Of important note is that, most perpetrators of electoral violence and/or the brains behind them are more often than not, never brought to book, as no one has been comprehensively prosecuted for election violence in the country. This has continued to embolden the perpetrators to become entrenched in the act.
According to the HRW, architects, sponsors, and perpetrators of this violence generally enjoy complete impunity because of both the powers of intimidation they wield and the tacit acceptance of their conduct by police and government officials at all levels.
It is therefore against this background that Nigeria’s governing elites have been widely implicated in acts of electoral violence, corruption and fraud, which have become pervasive and entrenched in the politics of the nation.
Pains of electoral violence
Of course, every violence, whether electoral or otherwise, leaves in its wake, tears sorrow and devastation. So, electoral violence always leave behind tales of deaths, injuries, destruction of property and displacement of people.
In most cases, innocent lives are always lost in the wake of election-related violence. A vivid example is the recent violence that trailed the rerun state and National Assemblies elections in Rivers State where no less than 10 people including a member of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), lost their lives.
Apart from the loss of lives, property worth trillions of naira have been lost to electoral violence. An example is the violence that trailed the 1983 general elections in many parts of the country. A case study is the old Ondo State example where personal property and those of government were wantonly destroyed.
In most cases, it is not the direct victims that suffer from the effects of electoral violence. More often than not, those who have nothing to do with the electoral process also suffer the effects of electoral violence. Many people have one time or the other been displaced and become refugees in their fatherland.
Electoral violence also affects the credibility of the electoral system, the democratic system and the rule of law, as it raises doubts over the outcome of such electoral process where violence pervades.
Panacea to electoral violence
Since ignorance has been identified as one of the major causes of electoral violence, it’s imperative that the citizenry be educated politically and strategically, which is the most effective way of curbing electoral violence.
The reason for this is not far-fetched. Political education is the conduit-pipe through which political cultural values and behavioural patterns of the society are imbibed and internalized.
Government should educate the citizenry on the inherent dangers of allowing an entrenched culture of electoral and political violence as part of the features of the political and electoral system.
Having identified education as the launch-pad of a nation-state’s development agenda, political education constitutes a herculean task for the several agents of education in Nigeria and as soon as we get this right, every other remedy to electoral violence will fall in place and these include: constitutional amendment; electoral reforms; pressure from civil society groups through agenda-setting; change in the character of the political elites; among others.
There is also the need for the establishment of Election Malpractice Tribunal as recommended by the Justice Muhammadu Lawal Uwais’ Electoral Reform Committee to punish manipulators of the electoral process.
When electoral offenders get punished adequately for the infractions, it will serve as deterrent to other would-be perpetrators of electoral offences and make electoral crimes less attractive.
There is also the need to make elected offices less attractive, especially in terms of the emoluments attached to such offices. This was the contention of the senator representing Bayelsa-East senatorial district in the upper chamber of the National Assembly, Ben Murray-Bruce, who advocated for reduced salaries for political officeholders.
Senator Murray-Bruce charged Nigerians to vehemently push for demonetization of politics at all levels as a way of doing away with do-or-die politics, adding that the huge salary of politicians was responsible for electoral violence.
He said this in a series of tweets he posted on his Twitter handle recently, adding that do-or-die politics, which breeds electoral violence, happen because “presidents and governors have too much power over the treasury of their domains,” noting that do-or-die politics, and by extension, electoral violence, will end when political officeholders stop getting access to huge allocations.
Also, the electoral umpire must remain transparent in all engagements and strive to resolve tensions, suspicion and speculations that could lead to election violence and also work closely with state institutions such as the security agencies to identify early enough, areas prone to violence in order to mount preventive actions.
The political class too has a role to play in curbing electoral violence. Politicians must eschew politics of bitterness and hate and also learn to accept defeat gallantly and winners too should learn to be magnanimous in victory.
And of course, the youths should stop making themselves a willing tool in the hands of politicians to destabilise the electoral process. A lecturer at the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies, University of Ilorin, Dr Joseph Fayeye, urged youths to resist being used to cause mayhem in elections.
He charged them thus: “Do not lay down your lives on the altar of petty politics for anyone to win election,’’ even as he urged them to engage aspirants seeking elective offices in debates about their programmes and manifestos, especially for the youths.
Fayeye said that youths who allowed themselves to be recruited as agents of destruction are as good as “devaluing themselves,” adding that: “Therefore, Nigerian youths cannot afford to be used as cheap labour to disrupt elections and foment troubles.”
Finally, the government also has to provide adequate employment opportunities for the youths to make political thuggery less attractive to them.





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