Buhari vows to take on Boko Haram

Nigeria’s president-elect promises he will spare no effort to defeat Islamist militants

A day after becoming the first politician in Nigerian history to succeed a sitting leader by ballot, president-elect Muhammodu Buhari promised to “spare no effort” to defeat Islamist militant group Boko Haram.

The 72-year-old general, who first came to power three decades ago via a military coup and campaigned as a born- again democrat, also promised to tackle corruption in Africa’s largest economy.

“Boko Haram will soon know the strength of our collective will. We should spare no effort,” Mr Buhari said. “In tackling the insurgency we have a tough and urgent job to do.” The group has killed thousands in its push to carve out a caliphate in northeastern Nigeria.

Despite the killing of more than a dozen voters by Boko Haram gunmen – who had pledged to derail the poll – the election was one of the most orderly in Nigeria’s history.

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Mr Buhari won the election with 15.4 million votes to outgoing president Goodluck Jonathan’s 13.3 million, a margin wide enough to prevent any challenge.

In an unprecedented step, Mr Jonathan phoned Mr Buhari to concede defeat and urged his supporters to accept the result, a signal of deepening democracy few had expected in Africa’s most populous nation.

Mr Buhari congratulated Mr Jonathan for peacefully relinquishing power yesterday. “President Jonathan was a worthy opponent and I extend the hand of fellowship to him,” Mr Buhari, wearing a black cap and kaftan, said to loud applause.

“We have proven to the world that we are people who have embraced democracy. We have put one-party state behind us.”

The rules state that Mr Jonathan must officially hand over on May 29th. His People’s Democratic Party has been in charge since the end of army rule in 1999 but had been losing support due to oil sector corruption scandals and the government’s lack of success in combating Boko Haram. “President Jonathan has placed his country’s interests first by conceding the election,” US president Barack Obama said.

Nigeria’s main stock index soared 8.3 per cent, posting its single biggest gain this year, and Nigerian dollar-denominated bonds climbed too on relief at the absence of the violence and fraud that blighted previous elections.

“The context has changed,” British high commissioner Andrew Pocock told BBC radio. “There have been 16 years of democracy, there’s a constitution, there are legal safeguards.”

Cautious optimism

Investors are cautiously optimistic that any crackdown on corruption will stimulate investment and boost flagging growth in the oil-dominated economy.

Cities in the largely Muslim north, where Mr Buhari’s core support base lies, erupted in celebration.

Meanwhile, Mr Jonathan’s appeal to his supporters that “nobody’s political ambition is worth blood” helped calm their frustrations, reducing the chance of violence that blighted the 2011 poll when Mr Buhari lost to Mr Jonathan.

Mr Buhari took power in a 1983 coup only to be thrown out 18 months later by another general. He subsequently embraced democracy, running in several elections and, despite losing, always bouncing back.

“I ask that we all be circumspect, respectful and peaceful . . . We must begin to heal the wounds,” he said.

Nigeria remains a complex ethnic mix of 170 million people, split between Muslims and Christians, with more than 500 languages. Though they mostly live side by side in peace, many harbour disputes that politicians have often used to stoke violence that has worsened over the years.

“He’s a man with a strong sense of mission and he has clear ideas about what he wants to do with Nigeria, on corruption, on restoring national discipline,” Mr Pocock said. But analysts say cracking down on graft in a country where it is so endemic could take decades.

– (Reuters)