Nigeria’s Falz and Teni back INEC’s voter registration drive

In our series of letters from African writers, novelist Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani writes that many young Nigerians feel empowered and believe they can put their votes to good use in elections.

Thousands of Nigerians gathered at a free concert recently in the commercial hub of Lagos that was headlined by celebrities including rapper Falz and singer Teni.

The only requirement for entry was a permanent voter’s card (PVC), which shows that the holder has registered to vote in next February’s general elections.

“If you haven’t registered yet, come and register at the venue on the day!! It’s a critical moment for us. Tell someone to tell someone please. Prime entertainment meets civic responsibility,” Falz wrote in an Instagram post.

Although the elections are eight months away, the concert, organised by the Independent National Electoral Commission (Inec), civil society group Yiaga Africa, and the European Union (EU), was just one of many drives to get more Nigerians to register to vote.

Social media influencers have been encouraging their followers to register. Religious leaders have been doing the same, with a Roman Catholic priest recently going viral for announcing to his congregants that they would be denied entry to Mass if they did not show their PVCs.

Popular videos have shown everyday people on buses, in their communities, and at different random venues, motivating others to register and get their PVCs.

Most of these efforts are aimed at the youth, who make up more than half of Nigeria’s population of more than 200 million. Many of them will be first-time voters, as 18 is the voting age.

The anti-police brutality protests which swept across the country in October 2020, under the Twitter hashtag #EndSars, were mostly led by young people. Thousands of them took to the streets, sometimes bringing commercial activity to a halt.

Some Nigerians are put off by the torturous conditions under which voting often takes place.

People have been known to stand under the blazing sun for countless hours while waiting to cast their vote, especially when essential materials like ballot papers and boxes were delivered late to the polling unit, or when machines failed to function.

Sometimes, voting can become dangerous, with spontaneous gunshots and violence at polling stations.

At other times, people find it difficult to resist the temptation of selling their PVCs to politicians, deciding that the immediate gratification of a few thousand naira in cash is better than voting for someone who has made glowing electoral promises that they may never fulfil.

The candidate’s agents who buy the PVCs are then free to collaborate with corrupt officials to manipulate figures at polling units.

Widespread corruption sometimes makes people worry that their votes may not count. Even if they defy all the obstacles to wait and fulfil their civic responsibility, the rigging that has plagued a number of Nigerian elections may render their effort a waste.

As a way to curb rigging, activists have been pushing for Nigerian elections to become digitised – and they will be in the elections due next year.

With digitised votes, it should be more difficult for corrupt officials and candidates to manipulate election results by altering figures.

Political parties are currently choosing their candidates, with the governing All Progressives Congress (APC) unveiling former Lagos governor Bola Tinubu as its candidate and the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) selecting former Vice-President Atiku Abubaker.

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