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Peter Obi asks court to cancel result of 2023 presidential election

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Insecurity: 700 Nigerians kidnapped in three weeks - Peter Obi
  • No presidential election has been reversed before
  • Legal challenge could take several months
  • Nigeria’s two big parties maintain political dominance

Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi has filed a petition seeking to cancel results from last month’s disputed presidential election, court papers showed, kicking off what could be a long legal campaign lasting several months.

There have been numerous legal challenges to the outcome of previous Nigerian presidential elections but none has succeeded.

Obi asked the Appeals Court to invalidate the election won by Bola Tinubu of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) party, accusing the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) of breaching the law by failing to use electronic machines to upload polling station results.

Peter Obi said in an affidavit that the election was invalid because of “corrupt practices and non-compliance with the provision of the Electoral Act.”

He sought an order “cancelling the presidential election … and mandating the (first) respondent (INEC) to conduct a fresh election.”

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Tinubu has defended the election as credible.

Bola Tinubu speaks at the National Collation Centre in Abuja, Nigeria, March 1

Bola Tinubu, Nigeria’s president-elect

Peter Obi campaigned as an outsider, galvanized young and first-time voters and had appeared to throw the contest wide open, raising some voters’ hopes for change after years of hardship and violence under outgoing President Muhammadu Buhari, 80, a former army general.

But Obi came third behind Tinubu and main opposition People’s Democratic Party’s (PDP) Atiku Abubakar, both of whom had powerful political machines and decades of networking behind them.

The APC and PDP have, between them, governed Nigeria since the end of military rule in 1999.

Election observers from the European Union, the Commonwealth and other groups reported a range of problems, among them failures in systems designed to prevent vote manipulation.

The observers criticised the INEC for poor planning and voting delays, but they did not allege fraud. The commission itself apologised for the technical problems during the count.

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The Appeals Court has 180 days to hear and make a ruling on Peter Obi’s challenge. Atiku has also said he would petition the court and has until midnight on Wednesday to file his papers.

If a candidate is not satisfied with the outcome of the tribunal, they can approach the Supreme Court, which will deliberate on an appeal within 60 days.

Nigeria’s next president will be sworn in on May 29.

Violence and voter intimidation marred last month’s presidential vote as well as last weekend’s governorship polls. Turnout was low despite the highest number of registered voters, at 93 million.

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