The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) has
declared that President Muhammadu Buhari may win the 2019 election.
USIP made this known in a report it released on the
forthcoming general election, saying its report was based on its interactions
with Nigerians from different sectors.
The organisation said though many Nigerians feel
that the current administration has not met their expectations, this is not
likely to cost the All Progressives Congress (APC) government its hold on
power.
“Many Nigerians feel their hopes have not been met.
Some respondents suggest the electorate is sufficiently disappointed that voter
apathy will be greater in 2019 than in 2015, with the unifying narrative of
change that helped elect the APC in 2015 much less compelling as a factor in
mobilising the electorate, and perceptions that another defeat of the
presidential incumbent is less likely to happen in 2019,” the report read.
Comparing the 2015 elections to the forthcoming
one, the report said there is a greater chance of the occurrence of election
violence, listing Adamawa, Anambra, Ekiti, Kaduna, Kano, Lagos, Plateau, Rivers
as the eight of 36 states with greater risks of election violence.
While it stated that it is up to the combined
efforts of political parties, security agencies and the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) to curb violence in the election, it said the greater
work lies with the electoral body.
The report said: “Important shifts in Nigeria’s
political and security context have occurred since the 2015 elections,
presenting both evolving and new risks to the 2019 elections.
“Of all the state institutions, most respondents
felt that peaceful elections in 2019 are contingent on the performance of
Nigeria’s INEC.
“Given the relative success of the 2015 elections,
they felt that INEC ought to be able to deliver credible elections again in
2019. They feared, however, that any regression from the level of performance
achieved in 2015 could lead to violence because some would view the failings
not as a result of incompetence but as deliberate attempts to frustrate the
will of the voters.
“INEC should at least match the standards it set in
2015, and any regression could set the stage for violence.
“Yet, while the potential for election violence
exists, there are signs of hope. Some states have developed successful election
conflict-mitigation practices. In the short amount of time remaining, INEC and
the police should undertake a number of key reforms.”
It stated further that “the United States along
with other international supporters of the electoral process should also
intensify their efforts to reinforce the work of these key Nigerian
institutions.
“Beyond institutional support, rather than apply a
conventional approach to electoral violence mitigation, donor programming
should adapt to Nigeria’s current context, political shifts and opportunities
as well as be sufficiently flexible to respond to the risks distinct in each of
states in the federation.
“In advance of the election, international
diplomatic efforts to preempt electoral violence need to be intensified.
Regional and international actors should convey their expectations that political
parties effectively address their internal disputes, and be ready to put on
notice politicians responsible for escalating these disputes.”
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