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33 years after: Can Nigeria ever have another election like June 12?

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MKO Abiola

By Clifford Ndujihe, Politics Editor

THE process was crude but transparent. The organisers called it Option A4. Only two candidates stood for the election. No thumb-printing was required.  Voting was done by queuing behind the candidate/party of your choice. Those on the queues were properly counted separately and figures entered into the result sheets against the respective candidates or parties.

It was as clear as daylight who won or lost. Welcome to the June 12,1993 presidential election won by late Business tycoon and politician, Chief MKO Abiola.

Conducted by then National Electoral Commission, NEC, as the electoral umpire was  called, led by late Professor Humphrey Nwosu, the June 12 election has, arguably, remained the freest and fairest poll in the history of electioneering in Nigeria, 33 years after.

It was also one of the keenest. Of the over 14 million voters that took part, Chief MKO Abiola of the Social Democratic Party, SDP, got over eight million while his challenger, Bashir Othman Tofa, of the National Republican Convention, NRC, garnered about six million.

Controversial annulment

Results of most the states had been tallied before the military regime of General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida annulled the election and flung the nation into bloody political crisis that took another six years to be partially resolved in 1999 with the election of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo also from South-West as Abiola, as president.

Ever since that election, Nigeria has not had another comparable poll in terms of conduct and  credibility.

In last month’s primaries, some parties tried to replicate the June 12 model but ended up counting those on the queues geometrically instead of arithmetically as shamefully displayed in an avalanche of trending videos.

That is why today is a unique day in Nigeria’s electioneering history.

It is the 33rd anniversary of the June 12, 1993 presidential poll. Today is also the 8th anniversary of the Federal Government’s recognition of June 12 as Democracy Day, and the third that will be marked by President Bola Tinubu.

While marking June 12 in 2018, President Muhammadu Buhari apologized to the family of Chief M.K.O Abiola, the presumed winner of the 1993 presidential election, and conferred a posthumous award on him as the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, GCFR.

In 2019, President Buhari took a step further by assenting a bill into law and officially recognised the date as the nation’s day for commemorating the return to civil rule.

By the Act, May 29 gave way to June 12 as the country’s Democracy Day.

Cloud of challenges

As the nation marks June 12 amid a cloud of insecurity and a salad of unity-threatening challenges, forthcoming polls beginning with June 20 governorship election in Ekiti and bye-elections in six constituencies in four states, as well January 2027 general polls,, many questions are begging for answers.

Abiola’s aborted welfare programme

Late Chief M.K.O Abiola’s campaign was anchored on welfare of the people with ‘’Farewell to Poverty’’ as the theme. His campaign theme was Hope 93.

Thirty- three years after, has Nigeria waved poverty farewell? If Abiola had been allowed to exercise his mandate would things have been different?

Few months before the 1993 election, according to the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics, NBS, 1992 data, no fewer than 39.2 million Nigerians were living below the poverty line, that is 42.7 percent of the then 91.5 million population.

Following the truncation of the 1993 transition programme, the number of those living below the poverty line (less than $1a day as of then) jumped to 67.1 million, representing 65.6 per cent of the 102.3 million population, NBS data showed.

In 2018, a report by Brooking’s Institution said at the end of May 2018, Nigeria had about 87 million people living in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. And extreme poverty in Nigeria was growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continued to fall.

Today, no fewer than 131 million Nigerians are multi-dimensionally poor

Another question is: When will Nigeria have free and fair polls like that of June 12, 1993? It was an election that the results were known to all parties – Social Democratic Party, SDP; and National Republican Convention, NRC’s agents without disputation before being officially announced by the electoral commission.

There were no incidents of ballot box-snatching, and falsification of election results at collation centres among other electoral infringements.

Beginning from the first series of elections on December 5, 1998 when the first local council polls of the Fourth Republic were conducted to the 2023 general elections, balloting has been characterised by ballot snatching, falsification of figures, fielding of unqualified candidates, malfunctioning of card readers, intimidation and harassment of voters, and violence among others.

Consequently, the outcome of many elections have been nullified by the courts, a reason we now have staggered governorship elections in eight states.

So far, transmission of election results is still an issue. Diaspora and electronic voting is far from sight. 

Already, future polls and the 2027 general polls are being threatened by insecurity, and voter apathy with youths shunning the ongoing continuous voters registration,CVR, citing lack of faith in the process and saying their votes won’t  count despite repeated assurances by INEC officials.

Disputed polls

After the 1999 general elections, outcomes of most polls were decided by the courts as attention shifts to the courts after every poll.Apart from 2015, when out-going President Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, refused to challenge the victory of Major General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress, APC, other presidential polls had been subjects of litigation.

In 1999, Chief Olu Falae, who flew the Alliance for Democracy/All Peoples Party joint ticket challenged former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s victory in 1999 but did not pursue it to the Supreme Court. Buhari and other candidates challenged the victories of Obasanjo, late Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and President Goodluck Jonathan in 2003, 2007 and 2011 respectively.

After the 2019 general polls, focus immediately shifted to the judiciary where 77 election tribunals constituted by President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa, addressed 786 petitions.

The 786 petitions were the second highest since the return to democratic rule in 1999. The highest was in 2007 when 1,291 petitions heralded the infamous ‘’do-or-die’’ elections held that year. The winner of the 2007 presidential election, late Dr Umaru Musa Yar’Adua admitted that the election that brought him to power was flawed. Consequently, he set up the Justice Mohammed Uwais Election Reform Committee to hammer out solutions.

Indeed, the Uwais panel made far-reaching recommendations that have been implemented in breach or piece meal hence the country is still mired in controversial elections.

Uwais committee’s work

Following the work of the Uwais’ committee, noticeable improvements were witnessed in the 2011 general elections when the number of petitions went down to 732. More improvements were recorded in 2015 as the figure further went down to 611 petitions.

However, the gains of 2015 appeared to have been eroded in 2019 as the number of petitions rose to 786. And in the “go to court” elections of 2023 1196 petitions were filed.

According to data released by Engr Iro Gambo, director Voter Registry of the Independent National Election Commission, INEC, dated April 19, 2017, the electoral body conducted 167 elections after the 2015 electoral cycle and most of them by the Professor Yakubu Mahmood regime.

Three types of elections conducted since 2015 were: Re-run elections by court order following nullification of 80 elections; End of tenure (four governorship, and 68 Area Council, Abuja), 72; and Bye elections caused by death or resignation of lawmakers, 16. Of this number, 123 were concluded at first ballot and 44 were inconclusive.

And at the law courts, 80 of the 167 elections were nullified of which Rivers State accounted for 37 of the 80 annulled polls. Also, of 44 polls concluded with supplementary elections, two happened in Rivers Of the re-run election ordered by the Court of Appeal in 2015, the North-Central had 14; North-East six, North-West, one; South-East 13; South-South, 46. And upturned elections for which certificates of return were issued by court order were as follows, North-Central, five; North-East, three; North-West, one; South-East, four; South-South, eight; and South-West, two.

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Disclose every ‘incriminating information’ against Peter Obi – Ex-presidential candidate to Okonkwo

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Former Presidential candidate of the National Interest Party, Eunice Atuejide, has challenged the African Democratic Congress, ADC, chieftain, Kenneth Okonkwo, to bring up all evidences against Mr Peter Obi in court.

Atuejide threw the challenge on Thursday while fielding questions in an interview on Arise Television’s ‘Prime Time’.

She said she is an ardent supporter of Peter Obi, and does no want to follow anyone with criminal records or a man the public cannot scrutinise.

“I challenge Kenneth Okonkwo to disclose in court everything he has against Peter Obi that incriminates him.

“I want that scrutiny for my children’s sake. I’m following Peter Obi with all my heart, all my life, and I don’t want to follow a man that has criminal records, whom we probably cannot scrutinize.

“One of the reasons I’m happy to do this is that my children are seeing everything. They are happy that mommy is following a man that at least is different from all the other politicians we have known in Nigeria. So, I need Mr Kenneth Okonkwo to absolutely publish everything.

“And I have told my leader that I’m going to demand that he continues this case in court, so that everybody that has every information that incriminates him, I want to see them,” she said.




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Party primaries contests, not wars – Obasa tells politicians

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Speaker of Lagos State House of Assembly, Mudashiru Obasa has declared that primary elections of various political parties are mere contest and not to be seen as war. 

Obasa said this in his democracy day message to the people of the State and Nigerians in general. 

The statement was signed by his Special Adviser on Research, Media, and Documentation, Adeshina Oyetayo. 

Obasa, in the statement made available to DAILY POST, explained that politicians must strive to ensure internal cohesion, dialogue, and mutual respect. 

While speaking on the June 12 struggle, he maintained that it remained an epochal date in the annals of Nigeria.   

“Every June 12 remains a powerful reminder of the sacrifices of our heroes past and the enduring resilience of Nigerians in the defence of freedom, justice, and democratic values.

“This day commemorates the sacrifices of pro-democracy heroes. Twenty-seven years into our Fourth Republic, we reaffirm our unshakeable faith in democratic governance as the best path to national development and individual prosperity. 

“Party primaries are contests, not wars. We must prioritise internal cohesion, dialogue, and mutual respect. Let us resolve differences through democratic means, strengthen our structures, and remain focused on delivering good governance to Nigerians.

“A united APC will not only consolidate democratic gains but also position the party to continue driving national progress and stability,” he said. 




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Three years of hard choices, navigating economic challenges, recovery

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Tinubu anniversary

By Johnbosco Agbakwuru

President Bola Tinubu assumed office on May 29, 2023, amid huge expectations. Since the return to civilian rule in 1999, he was the stalwart  of the National Democratic Coalition, NADECO, which spearheaded the battle against military rule to lead the nation.

He marked his first Democracy Day on June 12, 2023 with aplomb.

Although the national economy was in poor condition when he took office,. three years in the saddle, the tide has been turbulent; there have been lamentations from the citizenry, but the ship of administration appears to be sailing despite the bumps and storms.

The storm before the government is the result of the administration’s deliberate choice between “reform over ruin” and “decisiveness over hesitation”—a framing that captures both the ambition and the controversy surrounding his economic agenda.

Marking the third anniversary of his administration on May 29, 2026, President Tinubu addressed Nigerians not merely as their leader but as “a fellow citizen who understands the sacrifices many families have made in recent years.”

The address laid out a comprehensive account of the challenges that confronted Nigeria when he took office in May 2023, the difficult reforms his government implemented, and the progress he says Nigeria has now achieved. The President acknowledged that “we have not solved every problem, and we are not yet where we want to be.”

Tinubu said that Nigeria faced “profound economic and structural difficulties” at the inception of his administration. He enumerated several interconnected challenges: mounting fiscal pressures, unsustainable fuel subsidies, declining revenues, exchange-rate distortions, rising debt-servicing costs, insecurity across several regions, energy supply constraints, and declining public confidence in institutions.

Breaking point

On one of the issues that has affected the economy, which is the subsidy regime, Tinubu noted that the country had reached a breaking point. “At the height of the subsidy regime, Nigeria was spending as much as ?18.4 billion daily to sustain petrol subsidies—over ?4 trillion in 2022 alone,” he said. These resources, he argued, “could have been invested in roads, healthcare, education, housing, and critical infrastructure.”

Equally troubling, the President said, was the forex system. “Multiple exchange rate windows and forex arbitrage created massive distortions, with Nigeria losing more than ?8 trillion over three years to rent-seeking and speculative practices.”

“The situation demanded urgent and courageous action,” Tinubu stated. “Difficult but necessary decisions had to be taken to stabilise the economy and prevent a deeper national crisis. The easy choices would have been politically convenient. But leadership demands courage, especially when the right decisions are difficult.”

Human cost

On the sacrifice of his reforms, the President acknowledged the human cost. “These decisions came with sacrifice,” he said. “The rising cost of living triggered by our measures placed enormous pressure on families, workers, and businesses. Young people searching for jobs felt discouraged. Many questioned whether these difficult decisions would lead to a better future.”

Tinubu expressed personal awareness of these sacrifices: “I remain deeply conscious of those sacrifices, and I assure you: your sacrifice has not been in vain.” He then made a bold claim: “And today, I can say with confidence that Nigeria has stabilised and is moving forward again. Across the country, visible progress is taking shape.”

Despite the hardship, the President said there is light at the end of the tunnel with economic growth and a market boom. The administration’s most striking claim concerns the stock market. Tinubu reported that “the All Share Index rose from 53,000 and market capitalisation of N30 trillion in 2023 to a record All Share Index of 250,000 and market capitalisation of N160 trillion this year.” He added that “companies are declaring record profits and dividends.”

The President also asserted that “our economy is now more competitive and better positioned for sustainable growth than it was in 2023. Public finances are improving. States and local governments have greater resources to invest in their people. Investor confidence is growing.”

Yet these macroeconomic gains exist alongside persistent concerns about the cost of living, job availability, and whether ordinary Nigerians are experiencing the benefits of this growth. In the midst of the government’s efforts, Tinubu acknowledged that there is still a gap: “We have not solved every problem… The task before us now is clear: we must ensure that the benefits of reform are felt more directly in the daily lives of ordinary Nigerians.”

On infrastructure, Tinubu presented what he called “unprecedented scale” development. “Over 2,700 kilometres of highways and major roads are under construction, reconstruction, or rehabilitation,” he said. The projects include the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, the Sokoto-Badagry Super Highway, the Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Road, the East-West Road, and many rural access roads.

“Significant sections are already completed or nearing completion,” the President claimed, noting these projects are “improving transportation, reducing travel time, boosting regional trade, and creating thousands of jobs.”

Rail modernisation projects are also “ongoing to improve connectivity, logistics, and economic integration across the federation,” Tinubu added.

In the oil and gas sector, Tinubu credited his reforms with attracting “billions of dollars in fresh investment from the international oil companies that had shunned our country.” The “$5 billion NLNG Train 7 project is nearing completion to boost LNG production capacity, exports, and dividends,” he said. Domestic gas utilisation is expanding, and “local refining capacity has improved our energy security.” With “large-scale domestic and modular refineries operational,” Nigeria is “reducing its dependence on imported petroleum products and conserving foreign exchange,” according to the President.

One sector that has continued to pose problems for successive administrations is the power sector. Tinubu acknowledged that the sector “suffered from debt, underinvestment, and uncertainty, which weakened generation capacity and limited growth.” But he said his administration is now “clearing legacy obligations, expanding transmission infrastructure, investing in renewable energy, and strengthening the national grid because no modern economy can grow in darkness.”

Tinubu’s statement also highlighted social interventions. He said agricultural programs have “supported millions of farmers by improving seedlings, fertilisers, mechanisation, and irrigation and by expanding access to finance and markets.” The government is “opening new agricultural corridors to create jobs, strengthen supply chains, and reduce pressure on household incomes.”

He further stated that access to education has expanded through the Nigerian Education Loan Fund, which “has provided over 1.5 million students with access to higher education, disbursing more than ?282 billion to ensure that no willing student is denied access due to financial hardship.”

President Tinubu said the “Renewed Hope Housing Programme, along with that of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), is delivering over 10,000 housing units across 14 states and the FCT, creating over 300,000 jobs and expanding access to affordable housing.” Major “Renewed Hope Cities in Abuja, Lagos, and Kano are progressing steadily,” he said. The consumer credit initiative “CREDICORP is opening up new economic opportunities for workers and families.”

The President said “thousands of primary healthcare centres are being revitalised, while health insurance coverage is expanding for vulnerable Nigerians.”

He also highlighted his administration’s efforts in telecoms stabilisation and digital transformation. According to him, the telecommunications sector, “one of the most important drivers of modern economic growth,” received “decisive action to stabilise” after “years of severe operational pressures and declining investment.” Now, “confidence is gradually returning to the sector. Telecom operators are expanding networks, investing in infrastructure, recruiting Nigerian talent, and widening digital access across the country.”

Tinubu recognized the importance of youth in socio-economic development. He said: “To our young people, I want you to know this nation believes in you. You are not a problem to be managed. You are the engine of Nigeria’s future.” He said the administration is investing “in digital skills, technical education, innovation, student financing, and enterprise support because the future must be driven by Nigerian talent, creativity, and productivity.”

Insecurity challenge

The greatest challenge before the government, which requires collective and urgent attention, is insecurity. There has been a worsening security situation in the country, but Tinubu said security remains “central to our national mission. Our Armed Forces and security agencies have intensified operations against terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, oil thieves, and criminal networks.” He acknowledged that “while challenges remain, many communities and highways are becoming safer and more economically active.”

According to him, the government is “continuing to invest in intelligence, surveillance, logistics, technology, and inter-agency coordination,” improving “the capabilities of our armed forces and security agencies, and reclaiming the authority of the Nigerian state wherever criminality threatens peace and order.”

“I want to assure you that this government will not relent until every Nigerian can live, work, travel, and dream in safety,” Tinubu pledged.

Tinubu told Nigerians that the administration will “continue to ensure that food prices, which have largely come down from their peak in 2023/2024, remain low.” The government is “working to reduce transportation costs as operators of commercial trucks, buses, and taxis convert their petrol engines to CNG and switch to electric vehicles.” It has also “set our sights on creating more opportunities for decent work and enabling enterprise expansion.”

The President concluded with a call for unity: “We must choose hope over despair, unity over division, and nation-building over narrow interests.” He emphasized that “true security and prosperity require that every Nigerian feel included and valued. Nigeria belongs to all of us—no region, faith, or group should feel marginalised or forgotten.”

“Our diversity is a source of strength. Whether Christian or Muslim, North or South, urban or rural, we rise or fall together as one nation under God,” Tinubu said.

He invoked Nigeria’s historical resilience: “History teaches us that great nations are not built in comfort. They are built through sacrifice, resilience, courage, and collective purpose. Ours is a nation of extraordinary people. We survived the civil war and rebuilt. We overcame dictatorship and restored democracy. We endured hardship and remain bearers of hope. The Nigerian spirit remains strong and unbroken.”

“Today, the world is watching our country again, not as a nation defined by its difficulties, but as a nation determined to rise,” he declared. “Across agriculture, infrastructure, power, technology, manufacturing, and industry, the signs of recovery are becoming clearer. Confidence is returning. Productivity is improving. Opportunity is expanding.”

Despite the rough paths, the President asked the citizenry one final thing: to keep faith with Nigeria. “Let us reject cynicism and division. Let us move forward together, united in purpose, disciplined in effort, compassionate toward one another, and confident in the greatness that lies ahead.”

“History tests nations before it elevates them. Nigeria is passing through such a test. But I believe with all my heart that we shall emerge stronger, fairer, more united, and more prosperous than ever before,” Tinubu said. 

As Nigeria continues navigating the complex terrain between macroeconomic reform and everyday hardship, President Tinubu’s third-anniversary statement serves as both a defense of difficult choices and an assertion of emerging progress. It is left for the government to reciprocate the citizens’ patience and perseverance with positive outcomes and tangible changes that will restore hope and place the country on a development trajectory. Whether ordinary Nigerians will feel the benefits more directly remains the administration’s next critical challenge—and the nation’s most important test.

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