Elections in Africa: half-full, half-empty?

Author (Corporate)
Series Title
Series Details No.29, June 2015
Publication Date 12/06/2015
ISSN 2315-1129
Content Type

It is common for Nigerians to say of their country that ‘the best is impossible but the worst will not happen’. This aphorism found expression in opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari’s victory in 2015 elections which were widely considered free and fair. Buhari is an army general with a track record marred by a coup d’état and period of authoritarian rule. But the violence and conflict that some thought would engulf Nigeria in the event of Buhari’s victory did not materialise.

Nigeria’s election was good news in a continent where authoritarian governance is still widespread, as the recent round of ‘elections’ in Sudan shows. In a sham contest bereft of any real opposition, President Bashir and his fifty-strong entourage cantered home, ensuring that his unchecked, repressive rule continues. Half-way through a year that many dubbed ‘a milestone for African elections’, the picture of the continent that emerges comes in different shades of grey.

Issue Alert by Cristina Barrios.

Source Link https://publications.europa.eu/s/dnCI
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