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NEWS & LETTERS, JUNE 2003

Our Life and Times by Kevin A. Barry

Nigeria elections

Voters recently elected Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo to a second term, giving him a two-to-one margin over his nearest rival, Muhammadu Buhari. Both Obasanjo and Buhari are former military dictators, but Obasanjo was later elected in a multi-party vote in 1999.

Buhari faced two obstacles as a national candidate. First, he has backed attempts by many of the states in the predominantly-Muslim North to impose Islamic Shari'a law, which has included public whippings or even sentences to death by stoning for "adultery." Second, older voters remembered Buhari's actions as military ruler from 1983 to 1985, when he ordered soldiers to carry out corporal punishments of civilians on the streets.

During this year's election, international observers reported instances of violence and vote-rigging, especially in the oil-rich Southeast. While this may have boosted Obasanjo's margin of victory, few claimed that Buhari could have won, even in a more honest vote.

Corruption and authoritarianism, as well as ethnic and religious violence, which marked Obasanjo's first term, are likely to continue. In addition, while Obasanjo has promised to stop any executions for "adultery," his commitment to secular law is of a limited nature. He has allowed women like Amina Lawal, sentenced to death by stoning, to go through lengthy trials and appeals before northern judges and has not intervened as brutal public whippings have been carried out under Shari'a law.

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