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Nigeria Halts Rivers Election Process Amid Violence, Disruption

Nigeria Halts Rivers Election Process Amid Violence, Disruption

(Bloomberg) -- Nigeria’s election body suspended vote-counting in the oil-rich Rivers state, citing widespread violence and disruption including the abduction of some staff.

The Independent National Electoral Commission said the election processes will be halted until further notice after ballot materials were destroyed in the region of southeast Nigeria.

“The safety of our staff appears to be in jeopardy and the commission is concerned about the credibility of the process,” it said. Voting ended Saturday.

The INEC acted after the British High Commission in Nigeria said it is concerned by reports that “military interference” has been observed during the process in the state.

“INEC staff must be allowed to do their job in safety, without intimidation," the U.K. body said Sunday on Twitter.

The main opposition People’s Democratic Party separately in an emailed statement condemned the confiscation of the state’s governorship vote results by soldiers.

“Such a barefaced assault is only akin to a coup d’état and should not be allowed to stand,” the party said. “The use of soldiers to ambush the electoral process and confiscate results is an extreme scheme by the APC and the Buhari Presidency to enmesh the Rivers state governorship election in controversy."

A spokesman for the presidency, Femi Adesina, declined to comment when reached by phone on Sunday.

The military has increased its presence in states such as Rivers and Benue in central Nigeria, where clashes have erupted between crop farmers and cattle herders over grazing land. Because President Muhammadu Buhari’s All Progressives Congress has been banned from fielding a gubernatorial candidate in Rivers over internal party disputes, it’s supporting the African Action Congress against the PDP.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tope Alake in Lagos at talake@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sophie Mongalvy at smongalvy@bloomberg.net, Steve Geimann, James Amott

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