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Biden calls for peaceful, transparent election in Nigeria

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Biden calls for peaceful, transparent election in Nigeria

Biden calls for peaceful, transparent election in Nigeria

U.S. President Joe Biden has called for a peaceful and transparent election ahead of Saturday’s presidential and National Assembly elections

The U.S. president also urged candidates and parties to accept the results as announced by the country’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Of the 18 candidates vying to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari, three stand a chance.

Former Lagos Governor Bola Tinubu, 70, the ruling party (All Progressives Congress) candidate; former Vice President Atiku Abubakar (Peoples Democratic Party), 76, the main opposition candidate; Peter Obi (Labour Party), 61, a challenger popular among young voters.

More than 93 million people are registered to vote.

There will be about 176,600 polling stations across the country, including in camps for people displaced by the conflict between Islamist insurgents and federal troops in the northeast.

RELATED STORY: “Respect human rights at elections,” AIG charges officers

INEC says it has taken measures to ensure this election will be free and fair – a major concern in a country with a long history of electoral discord and violence.

Voters will present their voting cards and be identified by a Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) that uses fingerprints and facial recognition.

This is aimed at reducing the risk of fraudsters voting several times.

On voting day, results from individual polling stations will be pasted outside for citizens to view and sent through BVAS to an INEC portal.

The results will be displayed on the portal in real-time and accessible by the public, INEC says.

It is hoped this will reduce the risk of the figures being manipulated along the way.

INEC says that citizens wishing to witness the sorting and counting of ballot papers at polling stations should do so from a distance of 300 metres.

In the past, one of the forms of vote-rigging seen in Nigeria was the intimidation of electoral officials by thugs paid by politicians.

A presidential candidate must receive the largest number of votes cast nationwide and at least a quarter of the vote in no fewer than 24 of Nigeria’s 36 states.

If no one clears both hurdles, the top two candidates will compete in a run-off. The constitution says the run-off must take place within 21 days of the announcement of the result.

No run-off has been necessary since the transition to democracy in 1999.

For the parliamentary poll, candidates for a seat in the House of Representatives or the Senate must win a simple majority of votes in the constituency or senatorial district they are contesting to win.

The counting and collating process is expected to take several days.

While INEC has not said exactly when it would declare official results, this is expected to take place in the first half of next week.

Biden calls for peaceful, transparent election in Nigeria

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South Korean president apologises over scandal involving gift to wife

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South Korean president apologises over scandal involving gift to wife

South Korean president apologises over scandal involving gift to wife

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has apologised for his wife’s decision to accept a luxury handbag as a gift, revelations of which have caused a scandal.

Yoon’s wife, Kim Keon Hee, was secretly filmed by a hidden camera accepting the expensive handbag from a third party.
The ensuing controversy has also politically ensnared the conservative president himself.

Yoon said on Thursday that his wife had behaved unwisely at the time and that her behaviour had caused unrest for which he apologised.

His remarks came at Yoon’s first press conference since August 2022, and several weeks after his party was soundly defeated in April’s general election.

The scandal surrounding the first lady was also seen as one of the factors that helped determine the outcome of the election.

Yoon, who previously served as South Korea’s attorney general, rejected the political opposition’s call for additional special investigations into the handbag scandal.

There are already investigations into the incident, he said, and dismissed calls for a special prosecutor as a “political manoeuvre.”

The YouTube channel Voice of Seoul published a video in November that allegedly shows Kim accepting a designer handbag worth around three million (2. 2 thousands U.S. dollars) from the hands of a pastor in Seoul.

The pastor is said to have worked with the YouTube channel and was wearing a hidden camera on his watch during the meeting with Kim.

The channel had reported Kim on allegations that she had violated the anti-corruption law, although it remains unclear whether she actually violated the law, which would require a direct connection between her behaviour and her husband’s political office.

South Korean president apologises over scandal involving gift to wife

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Helicopter crashes in India’s Maharashtra, pilot injured

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Helicopter crashes in India’s Maharashtra, pilot injured

Helicopter crashes in India’s Maharashtra, pilot injured

A pilot was on Friday injured after a private helicopter he was flying crashed in India’s western state of Maharashtra, police said.

The PJ helicopter crashed while the pilot was attempting to land at a makeshift landing strip in Mahad of Raigad district.

This is about 170 km south of Mumbai, the capital city of Maharashtra.

According to officials, the chopper was scheduled to pick up Sushma Andhare, a leader of the Shiv Sena political party.

Sushma was for a public rally in connection with the ongoing general elections in the South Asian country.

Helicopter crashes in India’s Maharashtra, pilot injured

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King Charles III returns to public duties after cancer treatment

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King Charles III returns to public duties after cancer treatment

King Charles III returns to public duties after cancer treatment

King Charles III is returning to public duties after the positive effect of his cancer treatment.

King Charles has been receiving care as an outpatient since early February, and sources have said that in spite of the welcome news the king still has cancer and will continue to be treated for the undisclosed form of the disease.

Charles and Queen Consort Camilla will visit a cancer treatment centre on Tuesday to meet medical specialists and patients.

The event aims to raise awareness of the importance of early diagnosis and to highlight innovative research, supported by Cancer Research UK, taking place at the hospital.

King Charles’s diary of events will not be a full summer programme, and attendance will be announced nearer the time and “subject to doctors’ advice,” with “adaptations made where necessary to minimise risk” to his recovery.

It is understood the warmer weather would allow events to be staged outside and lessen the risk posed by other people that many cancer patients face.

In January, King Charles spent three nights in hospital for a procedure on an enlarged prostate, during which his cancer – not prostate cancer – was discovered.

After his diagnosis was announced on February 6, he postponed all public engagements but continued with his duties as head of state behind palace walls, conducting audiences and Privy Council meetings.

Meanwhile, William, the prince of Wales, is to carry out engagements in the North East on Tuesday, visiting an Earthshot Prize finalist firm which makes low-carbon construction materials in Seaham, and opening James’s Place – a centre offering free, life-saving treatment to suicidal men in Newcastle.

A previously unseen portrait of the prince and Kate, princess of Wales, was released by Kensington Palace on Monday in celebration of the couple’s 13th wedding anniversary.

Kate, who is undergoing chemotherapy for an undisclosed cancer, married future king William in 2011.

The photograph by Millie Pilkington – who took the most recent picture of the King and Queen to mark Charles’s return to public duties – shows William and Kate on their wedding day.

The black and white image was posted on the Waleses’ social media accounts on Monday, captioned “13 years ago today!”

King Charles III returns to public duties after cancer treatment

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