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Chukwu Chimezie @Chukwu2025 $1.12  

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  Observers Flag Vote-Buying, Low Turnout and Logistical Gaps Ahead of Anambra Governorship Election

Awka, Nigeria – A coalition of election observers has raised serious concerns about the upcoming governorship election in Anambra State, warning that systemic issues threaten the credibility of the exercise.

Key findings

  • The Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD-West Africa) says that while the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has improved preparations, public confidence remains fragile because of logistical weaknesses witnessed during earlier voter registration and the ongoing campaign. (Businessday NG)

  • Vote-buying is again a major worry. The All Progressives Congress (APC) and other parties have sounded the alarm that voters are being offered cash and inducements in exchange for ballots. (Independent Newspaper Nigeria)

  • Low voter turnout is expected and already seen as a danger. INEC itself notes a longstanding pattern of voter apathy in the state — turnout in past governorship polls was 25.5% (2013), 20.1% (2017) and just 10.3% in the 2021 poll. (Vanguard News)

  • Logistical issues: While INEC says it has deployed thousands of staff, vehicles and boats for the election, observers warn that delays in deployment, accreditation device failures and slow material arrival in previous exercises continue to raise doubts. (Businessday NG)

What the observers are urging

  • CDD insists that INEC ensure seamless deployment of voting materials, a fully functioning citizen accreditation system (the BVAS device) in all polling units, and impartial security agency conduct. (Sahara Reporters)

  • Observers are calling on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other agencies to investigate and sanction vote-buying, saying it seriously undermines the principle of “one man, one vote”. (Vanguard News)

  • They also urge parties to avoid transactional politics, citizens to turn out to vote and to guard against manipulation of posted results. (Sahara Reporters)

Why it matters

This election in Anambra is more than a routine state contest: it is seen by many stakeholders as a litmus test of Nigeria’s sub-national democratic processes, particularly in terms of institutional credibility, inclusivity and public trust. (ndr.org.ng) The combination of entrenched vote‐buying, logistical bottlenecks, and fading voter enthusiasm threatens to weaken the legitimacy of the outcome.

The immediate context

  • INEC reports that Permanent Voter Card (PVC) collection in Anambra has reached about 98.8% of registered voters ahead of polling. (Vanguard News)

  • Yet, despite that high collection rate, previous elections indicate turnout remains extremely low — a gap that observers say reflects a deeper problem of popular disaffection. (Vanguard News)

  • A range of structural challenges remains: internal party disputes reducing competitiveness; high cost of campaign access limiting smaller parties; risk of disinformation in the campaign environment. (Businessday NG)

Outlook

As polling day approaches, all eyes will be on whether INEC, security agencies and stakeholders can deliver a process where voters feel their vote truly counts — and where inducements or intimidation do not dictate the outcome. If turnout remains low, or if vote-buying is pervasive and unchecked, the election risks becoming less about voter choice and more about transactional politics.

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Chukwu Chimezie @Chukwu2025 $1.12  

18
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