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Buhari receives W’African elders mediation forum, assures polls will be credible

By Terhemba Daka, Abuja
07 December 2022   |   4:01 am
President Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday, played host to West African Elders Forum Pre-Election Mediation Mission at the State House, Abuja, where he reiterated that the 2023 general elections would be free, fair and credible.
[FILES] Nigeria President Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday, played host to West African Elders Forum Pre-Election Mediation Mission at the State House, Abuja, where he reiterated that the 2023 general elections would be free, fair and credible.

Speaking to the forum, led by a former Sierra Leonean President, Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma, Buhari thanked the guests “for accepting to do this service for our sub-region.”

The President specifically cited off-season elections held in Anambra, Ekiti and Osun states as pointer to the fact that the Federal Government would allow people to choose the leaders they want.

“That right is guaranteed,” Buhari affirmed, adding: “We are settling down and making progress. People should vote whomever they want, in whatever party. We shall not allow anyone to use money and thugs to intimidate the people. Nigerians know better now. They are wiser, and know that it is better to dialogue than to carry weapons. Elections are even more difficult to rig now.”

Koroma, who led a team made of Fatoumata Tambajang, former Vice President of The Gambia, Dr. Mohammed Ibn Chambas, former Special Representative of the Secretary General of the United Nations, and Ann Iyonu, Executive Director of Goodluck Jonathan Foundation, said they had met with stakeholders across the parties, civil society, and Independent National Electoral Commission, among others, “and we commend you for making it clear, both locally and internationally, that the elections would be free and fair.”

He commended Buhari for not listening to voices that may have tried to convince him to seek a third term in office, against the laws of the country, noting that “other countries look up to Nigeria for direction.”

“When we had issues in Sierra Leone and Liberia, it was Nigeria that came in to stabilise the system,” the former President said. He urged the Nigerian leader to look into other areas of concern as raised by the stakeholders, including security, and issues that may cast doubts on clarity and credibility of the elections.”

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