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‘Now or never’: Young Nigerians pin hopes on key election

Published:Thursday | February 23, 2023 | 12:40 AM
Supporters of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Nigeria’s ruling party, ride on a rickshaw outside the venue of an election campaign rally at the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Lagos, Nigeria, on Tuesday.
Supporters of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Nigeria’s ruling party, ride on a rickshaw outside the venue of an election campaign rally at the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Lagos, Nigeria, on Tuesday.

ABUJA (AP):

Frustrated by high unemployment and worsening violence, many younger Nigerians are flocking to a candidate outside the political mainstream in this month’s presidential election.

Despite being Africa’s largest economy and one of its top oil producers, Nigeria is in economic crisis. A currency reform effort has left many unable to access their own money, even to buy food. Meanwhile, extremist violence has continued, leaving thousands dead in the past year. Many young people have left the country, seeing no future at home. But many of those who have stayed hope the February 25 election will bring real change.

So many people registered to vote that many spent days waiting in line to collect permanent voter cards, which are required to cast a ballot. Nigeria’s election commission extended the deadline to collect the cards by two weeks in response.

On February 25, voters will choose among 18 candidates in a first-round vote to succeed incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari, who is winding down his second and final term. A runoff will be held unless one candidate gets at least one-quarter of the votes in each of at least two-thirds of all the states.

“Either we get things right now in Nigeria, or never,” said Kingsley Chima, 26, as the first-time voter waited to collect his voting card from Nigeria’s election commission.

Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country, with more than 210 million people, and it has at least 93 million registered voters, almost 40 per cent of whom are under 35. The country has one of the world’s largest youth populations, with about 64 million people aged 18-35 and a median age of 18.

Young people have made a third-party candidate with social media appeal into a serious contender in the polls.

That’s surprising in a country where elections have long been usually dominated by Nigeria’s two largest parties.

Bola Tinubu, 70, of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has served as governor of Nigeria’s economic hub of Lagos, while Atiku Abubakar, 76, of the Peoples Democratic Party has served as Nigeria’s vice president. Tinubu was an important backer of the current president, and is known as a key funder for the ruling APC. Abubakar, one of Nigeria’s richest businessmen, ran for president in 2019 and lost to Buhari.

Both men have been fixtures in Nigerian politics since 1999.

In 2015, Buhari rode a wave of goodwill to power by promising to curb Nigeria’s rampant corruption and extremist insurgency, but he failed to make headway on either challenge. Frustration with mainstream parties made room for former governor Peter Obi, 61, to position himself as a change candidate.

“The hopes we placed in the current president have been crushed,” said Rinu Oduala, a youth activist. Oduala was among the leaders of unprecedented nationwide demonstrations held in 2020 by young Nigerians to protest police brutality and bad governance. Now, she’s mobilising voters, supporting Obi.

Initially seen as an underdog with little political experience, Obi has emerged as a leading candidate, coming ahead of or close behind Tinubu and Abubakar in most polls. He’s the candidate of the Labour Party, which won 5,074 votes in the 2019 presidential election, under a tenth of one per cent of the vote.

He’s spoken to young people, promising jobs, and to Nigeria’s vast diaspora, promising changes that will give them a reason to return.