LAGOS: Nigeria’s All Progressives Congress on Sunday made key gains in regional elections and kept power in the economic capital Lagos, strengthening its position nationwide after a historic win in the presidential vote last month.

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had controlled the presidency and a majority of Nigeria’s 36 state governments since the end of military rule in 1999.

But the APC will take charge nationally when president-elect Muhammadu Buhari is sworn in on May 29, in the first-ever democratic change of power in Africa’s most populous country and its top economy.

Official results from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said the APC had claimed the governor’s seat in Kaduna and Katsina, two northern states held by the PDP since democracy was restored.

The APC, formed just two years ago, was also poised to make gains elsewhere.

Experts say Nigeria’s gripping 2015 election cycle has highlighted democracy’s growing hold in a nation plagued by military coups and tainted elections since independence from Britain in 1960.While INEC described Saturday’s polls as “relatively peaceful”, the commission said polling on Saturday saw 66 incidents of violence, without giving further details or casualty figures.

The APC’s wins in Kaduna and Katsina were largely expected.

Rivers state, an oil-producing hub in the south, was the worst affected area with 16 separate outbreaks of unrest, an INEC statement said.

Voting was extended into Sunday in nine wards in Rivers after irregularities affected several polling stations.

The results in other parts of the state were thrown out after ballot papers were openly stolen, INEC’s top official in the state, Gesila Khan said.

The APC alleged widespread rigging after Jonathan won Rivers with more than 95 percent in the national polls two weeks ago, insisting it would not allow a repeat in the state vote.

Amaechi’s spokeswoman Ibim Semenitari on Sunday accused the PDP of orchestrating a massive ballot-stuffing campaign and called on the INEC to “ensure that the people’s voices are not silenced”.

INEC broadly praised the conduct of the vote nationwide, saying electronic voter identification devices — used for the first time in the presidential vote last month — generally worked well despite problems in some areas.

Fear of unrest was high in Lagos following a tough campaign between Akinwunmi Ambode of the APC and the PDP’s Jimi Agbaje.

But Agbaje conceded after losing by less than 200,000 votes in the megacity and surrounding state of Lagos, with no significant incidents of violence reported surrounding the polls.

A total of 29 governorship and deputy governorship positions were up for grabs as well as seats in all of the states’ legislatures.

The governor-elect in religiously divided Kaduna, Nasir el-Rufai, is a prominent APC leader and former cabinet member with a wide following in the state, while Buhari is a native of Katsina and the party was boosted by his presidential win.

Results from Adawama, a northeastern state hit hard by Boko Haram Islamist militants, had not yet been finalised, but PDP candidate Nuhu Ribadu issued a concession statement earlier on Sunday suggesting the APC had won there as well.

Published in Dawn, April 13th, 2015

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