How the 2019 Presidential Election in Nigeria was Massively Rigged
By Femi Aribisala
In the 2015 presidential election,
Muhammadu Buhari of the APC was awarded 15,424,921 votes by Attahiru Jega’s
INEC; while Goodluck Jonathan of the PDP was awarded 12,853,162 votes.
In that election, Buhari presided
like a colossus over the North, which was stoked up to insist on a Northern
presidency. Bola Tinubu presided over the South-west, in coalition with Buhari;
while President Goodluck Jonathan prevailed in the South-south as its
native-son.
Suppression of South-Eastern Votes
However, the South-eastern states
were regarded as orphans, they had no real godfather. As a result, APC
succeeded essentially through INEC suppression of the votes of the South-east;
and the exaggeration of the votes of the North; especially the North-west. INEC
ensured that, far more disproportionately relative to other geopolitical zones,
millions of South-East voters disappeared between 2011 and 2015.
INEC registered only 7.6 million
voters from the entire South-east for the 2015 election, and only 5.6 million
PVCs were reported as collected. But in Buhari’s North-west, there was an
incredible figure of 17.6 million voter-registrations and 15.1 million PVCs
were reported as collected.
While in the South-west, there were
4.2 million votes in 2015, relative to 4.6 million in 2011 (more or less the
same number): in the South-east, there were only 2.6 million votes in 2015,
relative to 5 million in 2011; a drastic drop of 2.4 million votes. That drop
was virtually the APC margin of victory in 2015. Buhari defeated Jonathan with
a plurality of 2,571,759 votes.
While Kano, Katsina, Kaduna, Jigawa
and Bauchi posted humongous figures in 2015; Imo, Anambra and Abia posted
disappointing figures. While the card-readers failed in many parts of the
South-east, suggestive they were programmed to fail; they worked in most parts
of the North. In places like Lagos and Kano, many non-indigenes, especially the
Igbo, were not even given their PVCs and so could not vote.
APC Master-Plan
Once Buhari was elected, APC started
preparing the grounds for the manipulation of the 2019 presidential election.
During the congratulatory visit of a delegation from Benue, the newly-elected
president said jokingly: “I beg Senator Akume and the governor-elect not to
make my 2019 attempt too difficult.” The plans hatched included releasing
trumped-up EFCC anti-corruption dogs against possible PDP 2019 presidential
hopefuls, such as Sule Lamido of Jigawa.
However, the heart of the APC
master-plan required the party to refocus its machinations from the South-east
to the new orphan; the South-south, which remained a PDP stronghold. Otega
Emerhor, APC governorship candidate in Delta State, spoke the mind of the party
during a congratulatory visit to newly-elected Buhari in Aso Rock. He told the
president: “As you are aware, Delta State, along
with Akwa Ibom and Rivers, are rich in oil resources and PDP is determined to
hold on to these states at all cost to utilize the huge revenue base of these
states to re-launch itself to national reckoning. It is, therefore, strategic
for APC and your administration to pay particular attention and to assist us
put in place modalities to break the stronghold of PDP in Delta and the other
states".
APC went ahead to execute this
master-plan with a vengeance. The party challenged the outcome of the 2015
elections in the South-south in the courts. It then embarked on an onslaught of
intimidating attacks on the judiciary to make it fall in line with its agenda.
Using the over-bearing power of the
presidency, some South-south tribunal chairmen were summarily dismissed,
replaced with more malleable choices. Some cases were even transferred to APC’s
presidential stronghold in Abuja on spurious grounds. In the process, APC
secured the cancellation of the elections in Rivers, Abia and Akwa Ibom. The
appeal courts required them to be re-taken.
Supreme Court Firewall
However, APC met a firewall in the Supreme
Court. The apex court overturned the doctored verdicts of the appeal courts in
Rivers, Abia and Akwa Ibom, restoring the mandate of their PDP governors. As a
result, the “Supremes” immediately became public enemy number one of Buhari and
the APC, who were incensed by the verdicts.
President Buhari complained that the
Nigerian judiciary is his major “headache” in the fight against corruption.
There was nothing wrong with the judiciary when it ruled in favour of the APC
in Yobe, Ogun, Lagos and Benue. But when it ruled against the APC in Rivers,
Abia and Akwa Ibom, something became fundamentally wrong with it.
It is not surprising, therefore that,
on the eve of the 2019 presidential election, and in an act of outright
constitutional illegality and rascality, Buhari suspended the chief justice of
Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen; a South-south man from Cross River, and replaced him
with Justice Tanko Mohammed; a Northerner from Bauchi. So doing, the president laid the
foundation for more successful future judicial verdicts for the APC; in the
expectation that the results of the 2019 presidential election would end up in
the courts and might be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court.
Suppression of South-South votes
The next bus-stop for the APC was the
outright suppression of South-south votes especially, as well as the votes in
other areas of PDP strength in the 2019 presidential election.
Bombs went off in PDP-controlled
areas, destroying election materials. Bullion vans appeared on the eve of the
election in Lagos, carrying money for dubious purposes. Igbo Lagosians were
threatened with fire and fury if they dared come out to vote. Thugs were
unleashed on areas of PDP strength to cart off ballot boxes and disrupt the
vote. Over 30 people were killed in election-related violence, mostly
orchestrated by APC supporters.
Take a close look at the result in
the South-south. In 2015, the PDP stronghold of Rivers State shared a total of
1,556,313 votes between the PDP and the APC, giving the PDP the lion share of
1,487,075 votes. In 2019, this was suppressed to 624,681, a decrease of 931,632
votes. Out of this, PDP only obtained 473,971 votes; making a total decrease of
1,013,104 votes between 2015 and 2019.
In 2015, the PDP stronghold of Delta
shared a total of 1,260,315 votes between the PDP and the APC. But by 2019,
this had been suppressed to 815,360; a decrease of 444,955 votes. In 2015, PDP
secured a whopping 1,211,405 votes from Delta. But by 2019, this had been
suppressed to 594,068; a decrease of 617,337 votes between 2015 and 2019.
With Obi on the PDP vice-presidential
ticket, there was also APC assault on Igbo votes, which were expected to be
overwhelmingly in favour of the PDP. As observed, Igbo votes had been depressed
by 2.4 million in 2015. Now with an Igbo son on the PDP ticket, surely more
Igbos would come out to vote in 2019 than did in 2015. But no! Igbo votes were
depressed even more.
In 2015, 567,160 votes came from
Enugu. But in 2019, this shrank to 409,976. In 2015, 381,697 votes came from
Abia. But in 2019, this shrank to 304,756. In 2015, 678,688 votes came from
Anambra. But this shrank to 558,036 in 2019. In 2015, 692,438 votes came from
Imo. But this shrank to 475,386 in 2019. The only exception was Ebonyi, but the
exception was insignificant. In 2015, 343,171 votes came from Ebonyi. But in
2019, this increased marginally to 349,299; an increase of only 6,128 votes.
In effect, the Igbo states of the
South-east that had lost 2.4 million votes between 2011 and 2015, lost another
565,701 votes between 2015 and 2019. Kaduna alone, with 1,643,057, had more
votes than the combined Igbo votes of Abia, Ebonyi, Enugu and Anambra states; all
with only 1,622,067 votes. At this rate of continuing decrease, Igbo votes are
now virtually redundant and might soon disappear completely in a few years down
the road.
Agenda of Northern Supremacy
While Southern areas of PDP strength
were experiencing voter-suppression, Northern areas of APC strength were
increasing in voter-strength, even against all possible odds. Where APC won, it
won largely with inflated margins. Where PDP won, it won with narrow deflated
margins. PDP’s Atiku could only prevail in his home-state of Adamawa by a
flimsy 32,188 votes. But Buhari won in his home-state of Katsina by a whopping
924,077 votes.
As a result, a president who presided
over Nigeria becoming the poverty-capital of the world with some 90 million
people now hungry-poor, ended up with an implausibly increased majority on
election day. In 2015, Buhari won by 2,571,759 votes; but in 2019 he increased
this to 3,928,869 votes. Even those areas ravaged by the scourge of Fulani
herdsmen were apparently well-pleased with his government’s neglect, if we are
to believe INEC’s bogus election results.
On election day, Boko Haram bombs
were exploding in Maiduguri. But this did not prevent Borno residents from
providing the largest voter-increase of all in 2019. In 2015, Borno provided
499,183 votes to all PDP and APC candidates combined. But now in 2019, it
provided 908,284 votes; an incredible increase of 409,101 votes. 92% of those
votes (836,496) went to Buhari, in spite of his failure to tame Boko Haram as
he had promised to do in 2015.
Just think about it. While
war-ravaged Borno was posting this massive voter-increase, votes in
cosmopolitan Lagos, a city of over 20 million people, were depressed by the
flagrant exclusion of PDP votes, especially in the Igbo-populated areas. As a
result, votes in Lagos shrank between 2015 and 2019 by 395,947 votes; virtually
the same figure as Borno’s fictitious increase. In 2015, Lagos posted 1,424,787
votes. But in 2019, Lagos shrank to only 1,028,840 votes.
In 2019, Lagos mega-city was not
first, second or third in national vote-size. It could only manage fourth,
behind the new Northern juggernauts of Kano, Kaduna and Katsina; all of them
APC strongholds posting 50% or more votes than Lagos. Of the 10 highest-voting
states nationwide in 2019, only Lagos comes from the South: all the other 9 are
from the North. Only one (Plateau) was awarded to the PDP.
In 2015, the spread between North and
South was suspicious. The North provided 16,227,005 votes to the South’s
12,051,078 votes; a difference of 4,175,927 votes. But now in 2019 the spread
has grown to alarming proportions. By the time the total votes were tabulated,
and with 13 million votes needed to win, the North had provided a fictitious
17,259,624 votes. The South was left with 9,195, 201 votes; making a difference
of 8,064,423 between North and South.
That is virtually double the
difference in the 2015 figure. You begin to wonder if Southerners like Bola
Tinubu who are complicit in the APC agenda are too naïve to see this ominous
writing on the wall. It means the North no longer needs Southern votes in order
to prevail in future presidential elections.
Between 2015 and 2019, Northern votes
among the two main APC/PDP contenders increased by 1,032,619 votes; while
Southern votes decreased by 2,854,977 votes. This gave the North an
advantageous margin of 3,887,596 votes.
It is not a coincidence that Buhari
won by virtually the same margin: 3,928,869 votes.
Culled from the internet
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