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The Independent National Electoral Commission says 6, 906, 411 Nigerians registered to vote between April 2017  when the Continuous Voter Registration began  and March 2018.


This brings the total number of registered voters in the country to 75, 739, 887.

The Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, revealed this at a civil society colloquium organised by the Independent Service Delivery Monitoring Group in Abuja on Tuesday.

INEC had revealed that 5, 162, 289 Nigerians had registered by the end of January. The new figure implies that in less than two months, over 1.74 million Nigerians have registered.

The INEC chairman said the new registration figures were captured in about 1,446 centres across the country.

Yakubu said Rivers had the highest number of newly registered voters.

Other states that followed in order of sequence include: Anambra, Borno, Delta, Lagos, Cross-River, Osun, Enugu, Kano and Plateau.

He added that a comprehensive list of the newly-registered voters would be published on the commission’s website before the end of the week.

Yakubu described the high number of registration as a laudable achievement because approximately seven million people would have been disenfranchised in the 2019 general elections.

In his remarks, Chima Amadi, convener of the colloquium, described the progress recorded by INEC under its new leadership as an indication of an organisation responding positively in the build-up to the 2019 general elections.

Amadi said, “It is our considered opinion that INEC has been the most responsive of all government agencies involved in the election value chain, taking advice and constructive criticisms and adjusting its activities to reflect same.

“This much cannot be said about others within that chain, the security agencies continue to behave true to type and are even getting worse, while political gladiators continue with their manipulative stock-in-trade.

“However, we are resolved to take them to task with the same resilience that we used in getting INEC to act properly, for the 2019 elections.”

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