2023: US Plans Visa Restriction on Violent Promoters

The United States of America (USA) has revealed that it would impose visa restrictions on anyone who promotes violence in the forthcoming 2023 general election in Nigeria.

 

The Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Africa, Mr Michael Gonzales gave the warning at an international conference with the theme, ‘United States Policy and Nigeria’s National Decisions in the 2023 Elections’, held at Johns Hopkins University, United States.

The conference, held virtually at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington DC, brought together Nigerian and American policy communities to discuss the 2023 general election.

It was organised by the policy research centre – Nextier Nigeria, in partnership with SAIS at Johns Hopkins University; the School of International Service at the American University and the Centre for Peace, Democracy and Development at the University of Massachusetts

Gonzales said the United States government “will continue to use our messaging as well as other diplomatic channels at our disposal, including visa restrictions, where war- ranted, to dissuade those who may be tempted to use violence to undermine Nigeria’s democratic process.”

According to him, the US government remains committed to working with Nigeria to uphold its conventions toward ensuring a peaceful power transition in 2023.

The conference, moderated by Dr Ndubuisi Nwokolo, a partner at Nextier and Honorary Research Fellow, School of Government and Society, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom, among other global scholars, therefore, stated that Nigeria should maintain existing political conventions that guarantee peace.

Other event moderators at the conference were Dr Carl LeVan, (Professor, School of International Service, American University and Chair, Comparative and Regional Studies) and Dr Darren Kew (Professor of Conflict Resolution, University of Massachusetts, Boston and Executive Director of Centre for Peace, Democracy and Development

Patrick Okigbo, Nextier’s Founding Partner, clarified that the reason for hosting the conference in the United States was to elevate the election issues and conversations to the international stage. He reiterated the need for Nigeria’s international partners to assist in upholding its democratic process, even as he pointed out that “democracy is not an end state but a project that requires continuous nurturing.”

Other panelists highlighted the insecurity risks and the need to manage the 2023 elections properly, in addition to other points raised at the conference.

Among these points were the issue of faltering political developments as they concerned elitism and Nigeria’s progress, as it was observed that since 1999, the Nigerian elite had found a way to maintain a modicum of stability for elections and “eventually share the dividends of the election outcomes.”

In his contribution, retired Brigadier-General Saleh Bala observed that “security challenges in Nigeria are true, present and tangible but what is consistent is the lurking shadow of elite interests and how they serve their interests.”

On insecurity threats to Nigeria’s democracy, the conference found that poor management of the elections, especially the rotational presidency convention, could threaten Nigeria’s democracy against the backdrop of pervasive insecurity, the proliferation of small arms and light weapons, rise of self-help groups, and increased secessionist agitations in southern Nigeria.

Director of the Centre for Democracy and Development, Ms Idayat Hassan, noted that political parties during the Anambra State governorship election cycle could not campaign due to insecurity, expressing fear that worse scenarios could happen in 2023.

Hassan asserted that zoning the presidency to the South, particularly the South-East, will give the region a sense of belonging in Nigeria.

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