显示标签为“Nigeria”的博文。显示所有博文
显示标签为“Nigeria”的博文。显示所有博文

2011年4月24日星期日

Nigeria unrest 'Recalls Biafra' - BBC News

反序列化操作 "translate" 的响应消息的正文时出现错误。读取 XML 数据时,超出最大字符串内容长度配额 (8192) 。通过更改在创建 XML 读取器时所使用的 XmlDictionaryReaderQuotas 对象的 MaxStringContentLength 属性,可增加此配额。 第 1 行,位置为 9219。22 April 2011 last updated at 03: 06 GMT scenes of devastation and displacement in northern NigeriaNigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has said the violence following his election is a "sad reminder" of events that plunged Nigeria into civil was.

He said Nigeria which is still struggling to come to terms with the suffering of the 1967 conflict when the south-east tried to establish the state of Biafra.

Tens of thousands of people have fled the recent post poll unrest.

The president said the violence was intended to frustrate remaining polls, but they would go ahead.

However, elections for powerful state governors will be delayed for two days, until Thursday, in two of the worst affected states - Kaduna and Bauchi, the electoral commission announced.

Riots broke out in the north on Monday after Mr. Jonathan, a southerner, emerged.3 as the winner of the presidential poll.

Former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari, who is popular in the north, denies instigating the "sad, unfortunate and totally unwarranted" events.

Nigeria is divided by rivalry between the predominantly Muslim north and the mainly Christian south, which also have cultural, ethnic and linguistic differences.

Mr. Jonathan's people's Democratic Party (PDP) has previously alternated its presidential candidate between people who come from each of the two halves of the country, in an attempt to keep the peace.

Continue reading the main story Goodluck Jonathan, people's Democratic Party: 22.5 million votes (59.6%)Muhammadu Buhari, Congress for progressive change: 12.2 million votes (32.3%)Nuhu Ribadu, action Congress of Nigeria: 2.08 million votes (5.5%)Ibrahim Shekarau, all Nigeria peoples party: 911,455 votes (2.4%)

Figures: Independent National Electoral Commission

'Enough is enough' in an address to the nation, President Jonathan said the "horrific acts" of the last few days had been shocking.

"They killed and maimed innocent citizens." "They set ablaze business premises, private homes and even places of worship," he said.

"If anything at all, these acts of mayhem are which plunged our country into 30 months of civil to unfortunate was sad reminders of the events," he said referring to the Biafran was in which more than one million people died.

"As a nation we are yet to come to terms with the level of human suffering, destruction and displacement, including that of our children to far-away countries, occasioned by those dark days."

"Enough is enough," he said.

The BBC's Abdullahi KAURA Abubakar in Kaduna, the state which has witnessed the worst of the violence, says Kaduna city is now calm.

But it is difficult to confirm what is happening in the south of the state where there have been reports of continuing trouble.

Kaduna's police say 32 people have died in the clashes - our reporter says the casualty figure may rise as Muslims tend to bury their dead quickly - sometimes before their Athens are officially reported.

He went to one hospital in the city and saw 25 charred corpses on a mortuary floor and what told there were another 25 bodies in the mortuary fridge but he had to leave without checking because of the stench.

On Wednesday, the Red Cross put the figure of those fleeing the violence at 48,000.

' Dastardly acts'

During his speech, the president said that security has been reinforced nationwide to source any further unrest.

He added that there was no grievance that the law courts could not address.

Nigerians read newspapers on 20 April 2011, at a newspapers stand in Kano, northern NigeriaCalm has returned to most areas but many people have fled fearing more violence

Gen Buhari has said that his party will challenge some of the results - he maintains the election commission's computers were programmed to disadvantage his party in some parts of Nigeria.

But he urged his supporters to refrain from attacks, saying: "it is wrong for you to allow miscreants to infiltrate your ranks and places such dastardly acts as the mindless destruction of worship perpetrate."

"Needless to say, this act is worse than the rigging of the elections."

International observers have said the election was reasonably free and fair.

Mr. Jonathan, a Christian from the oil-producing Niger Delta, which appointed to the presidency last year upon the death of incumbent Umaru Yar'Adua, a northern Muslim whom he had served as vice-president.

He staked his reputation on the election, repeatedly promising it would be free and fair.

To win at the first round, a candidate not only needs the majority of votes cast, but at least 25% of the vote in two-thirds of Nigeria's 36 states. Goodluck Jonathan, of the PDP, reached that threshold in 31 states; Runner-up Muhammadu Buhari of the CPC only did so in 16 states.

Nigeria's 160 million people are divided between numerous ethno-linguistic groups and so along religious lines. Broadly, the Hausa-Fulani people based in the north are mostly Muslims. The Yorubas of the south - west are divided between Muslims and Christians, while the Igbos of the south-east and neighbouring groups are mostly Christian or animist. The middle belt is home to hundreds of groups with different beliefs, and around Jos there are frequent clashes between Hausa-speaking Muslim and Christian members of the the Rome community.

Despite its vast resources, Nigeria ranks among the most unequal countries in the world, according to the UN. The poverty in the north is in strong contrast to the more developed southern states. While in the oil-rich south-east, the residents\r of Delta and Akwa Ibom complain that all the wealth they generate flows up the pipeline to Abuja and Lagos.

Southern residents tend to have better access to healthcare, as reflected by the greater uptake of vaccines for polio, tuberculosis, tetanus, and diphtheria. Some northern groups have in the past boycotted immunisation programmes, saying they are a Western plot to make Muslim women infertile. This led to a recurrence of polio, but the vaccinations have now resumed.

Female literacy is seen as the key to raising living standards for the next generation. For example, a newborn child is far likelier to survive if its mother is well educated. In Nigeria we see a strong contrast between the mainly Muslim north and the Christian and animist south. In some northern states less than 5% of women can read and write, whereas in some Igbo areas more than 90% are literate.

Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer and among the biggest in the world but most of its people subsist on less than $2 a day. The oil is produced in the south - east, and some militant groups there want to keep a greater share of the wealth which comes from under their feet. Attacks by militants on oil installations led to a sharp fall in Nigeria's output during the last decade. But in 2010, a government amnesty led thousands of fighters to lay down their weapons.


View the original article here

2011年4月22日星期五

Nigeria: Why won presidential election - Jonathan Maku - AllAfrica.com

Leadership (Abuja) Bethrand Nwankwo22 April 2011

Mr Labaran Maku has called reasons Abuja - the Minister of information and communication, why the presidential candidate of the peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr. GOODLUCK Jonathan won the just concluded presidential election in the country.

Addressing a press conference in Abuja yesterday, the Minister attributed the victory of the party in the presidential election the presence of the PDP in all 36 States of the Federal and Abuja. He have also the victory of the President in the poll due to his performance and the people trust in him, as he denied, that the choice in favour of PDP has been tampered with. He said "Professor Jega INEC fleeing from the same zone with the Congress of progressive change for (CPC) candidates for the presidential election."

Jega is Hausa-Fulani Muslim of Kebbi State, so that the question edit by someone not someone who. There is a large change in the perception of politics in Nigeria.

Goodluck Jonathan is from the ethnic minority which has never ruled the country in the past. But because he have alliances in the country could and was of a large parties in the country and because of his character, humility, and his performance in the Government is sponsored, it and the trusted people why he choose won "said he."

He said that the Godfather, which dictate, wins the election, were losing that attributed it to free and fair nature of the choice.

The Minister, who condemned the violence in some parts of the country, who advise, who were not happy with the outcome of the election, to channel their complaints to the Court instead of resorting to violence.

He said PDP was not in the control the independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), and added that the electoral body, was given a free hand to use. He said that was the PDP of a transnational party, which has spread all over the country.

His opinion, for each party in Nigeria, a presidential election win, that party must have a national distribution. He said there was no way the CPC the presidential election could have won, because it has no national distribution.

"So, the PDP is a transnational party." Nigeria is a country of 250 different ethnic groups and a party that wants to win at the national level must, at least, reach out to a wide range of these groups. If you don't, the consequence of that the last is your victory.

"The CPC reach not." The ACN accepts his fate because the ACN in the Southwest is domiciled. The performance of the CPC is due to the fact that there is a a-year-old party and the fact that it expect not structure in wide range of the Federation of. "And because it won is not in the State, by controlled were it clearly indicates that it, carried out on what should have run you", the Minister said.

He said that for the CPC to run its capacity have shown that the election was free and fair.

Maku, which confirmed that CPC has a credible candidate added that the party was only a year and had no control over all prior State, that presidential elections.

Maku said that CPC could have made tangible impact, if all Nigerian political party (ANPP) had developed the proposed alliance with the action of Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and who.

To condemn the violence in some States, the Minister described it as the handiwork of some criminals. He said the violence was neither ethnic nor religious but simply a political issue as a result of the just concluded presidential elections. He said that those who were either killed or wounded were mainly Muslims.

"It is my opinion after that the violence was the handiwork of criminal and villains who probably negative mobilised." Strictly speaking, it can be seen as really sectarian. It can be negative mobilization and the mood in the campaign were of course, "he said."

He said that the Federal Government the number of the security authorities, where the violence broke out had increased so that peace and security of life and property in these areas.




More news on allAfrica.com

View the original article here

2011年4月20日星期三

Jonathan promises 'new dawn' as world leaders applaud Nigeria election - CNN International

Incumbent is "significant departure" of the last elections new era changes are made means, he says Clinton: vote for brands a "dramatic shift from decades of failed elections" Nigerians in Northern States protesting the results

Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) President Goodluck Jonathan pledged a "new era" for Nigeria, days after the Election Commission declared him the winner in a vote as a major improvement from recent surveys.

The last elections four years ago was widely condemned for rampant vote rigging, violence, theft of ballot boxes and intimidation.

If by violence, reports of minors vote and logistical problems, as an observer the recent elections a improvement.

"This time, one of the differences is that local and international observers said," Yes, there are significant departure from the past ' "Jonathan said CNN."

A success world leaders declared the vote, but calls for election officials could these claims including ballot stuffing and unusually high turnout in some areas.

"This historic event a dramatic shift from decades of failed elections and an improvement in the presidential election of 2007," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a statement.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague described the vote as an "important step" for the nation.

Jonathan said vote the ushers a new era for Africa's most populous nation and its largest oil producer.

", Which should tell you that we say we will do it and this is a new era", the President said. "We are working with all Nigerians to ensure that changes are made."

Jonathan comes from the oil-rich southern part of Nigeria, a region that is majority Christian.

Parts which plunged into chaos after it turned out that Jonathan had won, mostly Muslim North charge that the elections were tampered with.

Rioters took to the streets in the North, shouting the name of General Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler and the main opposition candidate.

About 17,000 people fled their homes in the region as violence entbrannte, said the Nigerian Red Cross.

Jonathan appealed curfews for unity as the unrest and it provide sound alarms for the Government, the military and enforce, maintain peace.

"My brothers and sisters, we are all winners," Jonathan said earlier in the week. "In this context it is defeated no Victor and no.." "We have shown in our diversity, the progress of which remains for all celebridad Nigeria."

An investigation of the President is attributed to underway to determine the perpetrators of violence, jobless youth.

"We have been having a crisis in the North, we have been having a crisis in the South, all symptoms are the same," he told CNN. "We have a number of young people who have no source of income, we need to provide."

If no source of income, offer the Government said it will help, the youth are at risk, violence spark is paid.

He declined to go into detail on the perpetrators of violence.

He said "The Government find out formally,". "If I make some statements, I will be biased in people's minds and I don't want to accuse anyone."

Nigeria elections, staggered over three weeks, close April with the vote for Governor 26.CNN's Christian Purefoy contributed to this report.

View the original article here

2011年4月2日星期六

Missing materials responsible for vote delay in Nigeria - New York Times

ABUJA, Nigeria (Reuters) - after opened polls in Nigeria on Saturday, have been postponed parliamentary elections suddenly for two days because, officials said, many areas still had to get voting materials.

The problems were a major blow to hopes for a break with a history of here electoral chaos and fraud. Failed election could raise issues such as well-entrenched democracy, more than a decade after the end of military rule is.

In a televised speech Saturday, Attahiru Jega, head which independent National Electoral Commission, said: "The decision we have made is indeed important, but it is an important step in ensuring the credibility of the elections in 2011 on."

But the opposition in question the legitimacy provided the translation.

"Our first reaction is that we suspect a deliberate attempt to sabotage the elections and undermine the Electoral Commission," said Yinka Odumakin, a spokesman for Muhammadu Buhari, former military ruler and the main rival of President Goodluck Jonathan in presidential elections that are expected to take place in a week one. Mr Buhari said Mr Jonathan's Party "Fear, so that people come and vote."

The voting materials were not in the capital Abuja and other regions, such as rivers, Bayelsa State and Akwa Ibom States in the southern oil of producing Niger Delta, Plateau State in the Central "Middle Belt" and Borno arrived in the remote Northeast.

"At the moment I ballot, for the House of representatives, but no results leaves," said Maria OWI, resident electoral Commissioner in Akwa Ibom State. "For the Senate I have leaves but no ballot results."

Mr Jega placed blame for the delay on an error in the will voters be timely delivered materials Nigeria from the outside, but said he was confident that everything in place of the vote would be action on Monday.

For any proposal of a delay in the presidential election or a week later for the nation vote 36 governors Mr Jega. The Electoral Commission has harder implement measures to prevent, fraud and intimidation which made such width doubt following the recent elections in the year 2007, that foreign observers said might reflect them not the will of the people.

Voters at polling stations Saturday's two most populous cities of the country register eagerly collected had - the commercial hub of Lagos in the South and Kano in the North - but elsewhere, tempers have been frayed by the delays. Shots in the Niger Delta volatile oil producing raised also worry the violence.


View the original article here