Nigeria's Ruling Party Wins Key State Gubernatorial
Fakhir Rizvi Published July 15, 2018 | 05:39 PM
Lagos, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 15th Jul, 2018 ) :A candidate from Nigeria's ruling party won a key state gubernatorial on Sunday, the electoral commission said, marking an early victory for President Muhammadu Buhari ahead of general elections next year.
Kayode Fayemi, former solid minerals minister of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), won the fiercely-contested election in Ekiti state, defeating Olusola Eleka from the opposition People's Democratic Party (PDP).
"John Olukayode Fayemi of the APC, having satisfied the requirement of the law and scored the highest number of votes, is hereby declared the winner," said Abel Olayinka, Independent National Electoral Commission officer, in a statement.
"I congratulate Dr. John Kayode Fayemi on winning the governorship election," President Buhari said in a statement posted on his official Twitter account.
"Commendation also goes to our great party, the APC, for the hard-fought victory after a dignified campaign." The election, which the APC won by 19,338 votes, was free from violence but vote-buying was an issue, international observers on the ground said.
"Money rain in Ekiti as PDP, APC entice voters with cash," wrote the Vanguard, a Nigerian newspaper.
"Unfortunately, I think it has become part of the system here," said Sentell Barnes, from the International Republican Institute, a US pro-democracy group.
"Before people would stuff ballots, but now that's harder to do with the card reader, so now you find people using money to influence people." Nigeria's 2015 presidential election, in which Buhari made history by becoming the first opposition candidate to unseat an incumbent, was widely praised as free and fair.
Analysts were watching the high-stakes gubernatorial elections as a litmus test of Buhari's popularity and the strength of Nigeria's young democracy.
"There's a perception that the ruling party is determined to hold onto power next year and the elections in Ekiti and Osun will serve... as a test of how much force they are willing to use," said Cheta Nwanze, of Lagos-based SBM Intelligence.
Buhari, 75, is under pressure to secure a second term as he faces rising violence across the country, from Boko Haram jihadists in the northeast as well as renewed bloodshed in the long-running farmer-herder conflict that has killed 1,000 people since January.
Related Topics
Recent Stories
PM vows to work for country along with students
US ambassador meets Senate Chairman, discusses bilateral ties
UHS to issue MBBS degrees within three months after final result
Aiman Khan granted UAE Golden Visa
PSX achieves significant milestone, surpasses 72,000 mark
Pak Vs NZ T20I: Orphaned children extended special invitation to watch match
Finance Minister lauds UNDP’s unwavering support during floods
President Raisi leaves for Iran from Karachi
Currency Rate In Pakistan - Dollar, Euro, Pound, Riyal Rates On 24 April 2024
Today Gold Rate in Pakistan 24 April 2024
Punjab CM inaugurates Pakistan’s first Virtual Women Police Station
Dutch model Donny Roelvink embraces Islam
More Stories From World
-
Extreme heat scorches Southeast Asia, bringing school closures and warnings
46 seconds ago -
Ambassador Hashmi greets China on Space Day
11 minutes ago -
Mass cancellations loom despite French air union calling off strike
31 minutes ago -
Record-breaking London stocks spearhead global rally
40 minutes ago -
'City Hunter' manga hero drops the sexism for new live-action film
40 minutes ago -
Russian deputy defence minister held over bribery accusations
41 minutes ago
-
Danger warning issued for Bangkok as extreme heat bites
51 minutes ago -
Iran cuts Syria presence after strikes blamed on Israel: monitor
1 hour ago -
Four injured as escaped army horses bolt through central London
1 hour ago -
Biden pledges swift weapons delivery to Ukraine
1 hour ago -
Ukraine attack drones strike Russia energy sites
2 hours ago -
UK Rwanda deportation law leaves asylum seekers fearful
2 hours ago