Power in Nigeria: “Democracy thrives when elections” are stolen

In an exclusive article from the prestigious British newspaper The Guardian, it turns out that voters' data in the country with the largest population in Africa, Nigeria, are statistically impossible, the Periscope is sent to Albanian. There is a great fear of election manipulation, or as it is known in our country as their industrial age. Number [...]
In an exclusive article from the prestigious British newspaper The Guardian, it turns out that voters' data in the country with the largest population in Africa, Nigeria, are statistically impossible, the Periscope is sent to Albanian.
There is a great fear of election manipulation, or as it is known in our country as their industrial age.
The number of voters in the African country from January 2018 has increased to the same percentage as any country within Nigeria, according to the first documents and analysed by The Guardian.
Voters will have to choose between the ruling man, Muhammadu Buharit and his main rival, Atticu Abubakar, but more than 70 other candidates.
But, Buhari's party chief may have discovered the truth with a language slip, Frodiaine, at a news conference in September, when he declared: “for democracy to flourish, people should accept the theft of the language, pardon my defeat when they participate in the election. /Periscopi











