John Kerry Meets With Nigerian Leaders to Encourage Peaceful Election says: "Perpetrators of violence in Nigeria will be denied visas for U.S"
Concerned that Nigeria could face post election turmoil, Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday urged President Goodluck Jonathan
and his principal political rival to respect the results of next
month’s presidential vote and to discourage their supporters from
carrying out violent protests.
The United States
will deny entry to anyone responsible for stoking violence during
Nigeria's election next month, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said
on Sunday, while urging the government not to delay the poll.
Kerry was in Nigeria to urge its rival political camps to respect the outcome of a Feb. 14 presidential election. Washington is concerned that post-poll violence could undermine the stability of Africa's top oil producer and hamper efforts to tackle the Islamist militants of Boko Haram.
"Given the stakes it's absolutely critical that these elections are conducted peacefully," Kerry told reporters in the commercial capital Lagos after meeting President Goodluck Jonathan and main opposition rival Muhammadu Buhari.
In the last election in 2011, when Buhari lost to Jonathan, three days of rioting killed more than 800 people and displaced 65,000.
"Nobody gains by violence, nobody gains by turning a political disagreement into a killing spree ... The proof will be in the actions that are taken in the course of the election and afterwards," Kerry said.
Kerry's visit highlights the stakes for Washington in what is expected to be Nigeria's closest election since its 1999 transition from military rule.
"Anyone who participates in, plans or calls for ... violence against the civilian population must be held accountable, including by ineligibility for an American visa," Kerry said. "Perpetrators of such violence would not be welcome in the United States of America."
"It is imperative that Nigeria holds its elections on time," Kerry added, an apparent response to remarks from Nigeria's national security advisor Sambo Dasuki this week that the poll should be delayed to allow more time to distribute voter cards.
He also phoned the electoral commission head Attahiru Jega to ask him to ensure the poll is credible and not to let the date slip, a State Department official who declined to be named.
Kerry said the United States remained committed to helping Nigeria fight Boko Haram, which has killed thousands, kidnapped hundreds and displaced over a million people during its campaign to carve out an Islamic state in northeast Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation. How the election is conducted will affect the U.S. ability to assist Nigeria, Kerry said.
Overnight Boko Haram attacked the main northeastern city of Maiduguri, leading to hours of fighting before Nigerian troops repelled the militants.
“It
is imperative that these elections happen on time, as scheduled, and
that they are an improvement over past elections,” Mr. Kerry said in a
news conference at the end of his visit here.
But a major attack
by Boko Haram militants on Sunday in Maiduguri, a major city in
northeastern Nigeria, demonstrated the challenge that confronts the
Obama administration as it tries to develop a strategy to help stabilize
the strategically important nation.
Mr.
Kerry said there was evidence that the militants from the Islamic State
group, which has declared a caliphate in eastern Syria and northern and
western Iraq, were now making an effort to forge alliances with
terrorist groups in Africa.
“It
is obviously a concern that they may try more aggressively to try to
spread to countries in center and southern and other parts of Africa,”
said Mr. Kerry, who added that there was no indication as yet that Boko
Haram has formally affiliated itself with the Islamic State.
Mr.
Kerry said that the United States was prepared to do more to help the
Nigerian military’s fight against Boko Haram, an Islamist group that
does have links to Al Qaeda. But underscoring his larger point, Mr.
Kerry warned that the level of American support would be influenced by
the determination of Nigeria’s politicians to carry out fair and
peaceful elections.
“Bottom
line, we want to do more,” he said. “But our ability to do more will
depend to some degree on the full measure of credibility,
accountability, transparency and peacefulness of this election.”
Mr.
Kerry met with Mr. Jonathan at the State House, a meeting that included
a 20-minute session in which the two spoke by themselves. Then Mr.
Kerry rode to the United States Consulate here, where he met with Muhammadu Buhari,
a retired general who is strongly challenging the Nigerian president in
a nation increasingly fearful of attacks by militants from Boko Haram.
Mr. Kerry also spoke by phone with Attahiru Jega, the head of Nigeria’s
independent election commission.
“There
has been a history of violence being fomented by political parties here
in previous elections,” a senior State Department official told
reporters before Mr. Kerry’s meetings.
“We
hope that if there is any doubt about the election that they will use
their court system and not encourage their supporters to go into the
streets,” said the official, who declined to be identified under the
department’s protocol for briefing reporters.
The
Nigerian public has become increasing alarmed by the army’s inability
to stop attacks and kidnappings by Boko Haram, which already controls
much of the northern part of Nigeria.
“There
is increasing concern about the future of Nigeria’s political stability
as the conflict continues,” noted a report by C.N.A. Corporations, a
research organization based in the United States, which recently issued a
report on the conflict with Boko Haram. “The inability of the military
to beat back Boko Haram, combined with an increasing number of bombings
in the south of the country and high-profile kidnappings, has eroded
support for President Jonathan’s administration (even within his
traditional southern support base) and has begun.”
The
election on Feb. 14 is expected to be closely contested, and it is
possible there could be at least one runoff, which would prolong
uncertainty and potentially open the door to violent protests.
Under
election rules, a candidate must get at least 50 percent of the overall
vote and 25 percent of the vote in two-thirds of Nigeria’s states to
win.
If
no candidate wins outright, a runoff will be held a week after the
initial vote under the same rules. If there is still not a clear victor,
a second runoff would be held seven days later, and the candidate who
receives the majority of the votes nationwide would be declared the
winner.
An
oil exporter, Nigeria has the biggest economy in Africa, but the
decline in world oil prices has shaken its economic prospects.
Complicating
the voting is Boko Haram. The Independent National Electoral Commission
has said that citizens who have been displaced by the fighting but
still reside in the same state in which they are registered will be
allowed to vote. But that will not help Nigerians who have fled the
violence in the north.
If
political violence erupts, it could have sectarian overtones, because
much of Mr. Buhari’s support comes from the predominantly Muslim north,
while Mr. Jonathan has support in the mainly Christian south.
Encouraged by Kofi Annan, the former United Nations secretary general, both candidates have issued statements opposing violence.
“That
said, there is a propensity for such violence to erupt, and we want to
get ahead of it,” said the State Department official.
The
American calculation seems to be that any push to expand the military
campaign against Boko Haram will need to follow the election.
How
specifically the United States plans to help Nigeria regain the
initiative against the group remains unclear. The abduction of more than
200 schoolgirls by Boko Haram in April provoked outrage in the United
States and Europe. But a breakdown in trust between the United States
and the Nigerian military has hampered cooperation against Boko Haram,
as have fears that the provision of heavy weapons to Nigerian forces
could lead to human rights abuses.
Mr.
Kerry said this month after meeting with Philip Hammond, the British
foreign secretary, that the attacks by Boko Haram constituted war
crimes, and he asserted that the United States was planning a “special
initiative” to counter the group.
But Mr. Kerry did not provided details of what that initiative was on Sunday.
President
Obama is planning to convene an international meeting on combating
violent extremism on Feb. 18, and that could be an opportunity for
discussing new ideas, the State Department official said.
Mr.
Jonathan became acting president in 2010 when his predecessor was
ailing, and he won an election the next year. His party has governed
Nigeria since the end of military rule in 1999, but his election in 2011
dispensed with the tradition of rotating the presidency between the
largely Christian south and the predominately Muslim north.
Mr.
Buhari became head of state in 1983 through a military coup but
governed only until August 1985, when he was removed from power by
another coup. During his term in office, he imposed austerity measures
and restrictions on the press. But he is now presenting himself as the
strongman Nigeria needs to confront Boko Haram.
Kerry was in Nigeria to urge its rival political camps to respect the outcome of a Feb. 14 presidential election. Washington is concerned that post-poll violence could undermine the stability of Africa's top oil producer and hamper efforts to tackle the Islamist militants of Boko Haram.
"Given the stakes it's absolutely critical that these elections are conducted peacefully," Kerry told reporters in the commercial capital Lagos after meeting President Goodluck Jonathan and main opposition rival Muhammadu Buhari.
In the last election in 2011, when Buhari lost to Jonathan, three days of rioting killed more than 800 people and displaced 65,000.
"Nobody gains by violence, nobody gains by turning a political disagreement into a killing spree ... The proof will be in the actions that are taken in the course of the election and afterwards," Kerry said.
Kerry's visit highlights the stakes for Washington in what is expected to be Nigeria's closest election since its 1999 transition from military rule.
"Anyone who participates in, plans or calls for ... violence against the civilian population must be held accountable, including by ineligibility for an American visa," Kerry said. "Perpetrators of such violence would not be welcome in the United States of America."
"It is imperative that Nigeria holds its elections on time," Kerry added, an apparent response to remarks from Nigeria's national security advisor Sambo Dasuki this week that the poll should be delayed to allow more time to distribute voter cards.
He also phoned the electoral commission head Attahiru Jega to ask him to ensure the poll is credible and not to let the date slip, a State Department official who declined to be named.
Kerry said the United States remained committed to helping Nigeria fight Boko Haram, which has killed thousands, kidnapped hundreds and displaced over a million people during its campaign to carve out an Islamic state in northeast Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation. How the election is conducted will affect the U.S. ability to assist Nigeria, Kerry said.
Overnight Boko Haram attacked the main northeastern city of Maiduguri, leading to hours of fighting before Nigerian troops repelled the militants.
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