The Nigerian military killed at least 25 suspected
Islamic militants on 18 April, while battling extremists who attacked a police station on 17 April in
Kano, days before the election. Shortly before voting began on 21 April, there was an alleged attempt in
Bayelsa State to kill
Goodluck Jonathan, who is the PDP vice-presidential candidate and the governor of the state, as well as a failed attempt to destroy INEC headquarters in
Abuja with a truck bomb. Following the gubernatorial and state assembly elections on 14 April, 18 political parties including those of Abubakar and Buhari, demanded on 17 April that the presidential election be postponed, that INEC be disbanded, and that the earlier elections be annulled; otherwise, they said that they would consider
boycotting the presidential election. On 19 April, however, both Buhari's ANPP and Abubakar's Action Congress said that they would not boycott the election. The 60 million presidential election ballot papers were kept in South Africa to prevent tampering. However, last-minute changes to add Abubakar to the list caused problems in distribution of ballots as papers did not arrive from South Africa until Friday evening. The reprinted papers were not serially numbered as was intended.
Observers Following the presidential election, groups monitoring the election gave it a dismal assessment. Chief
European Union observer
Max van den Berg reported that the handling of the polls had "fallen far short" of basic international standards, and that "the process cannot be considered to be credible", citing "poor election organisation, lack of transparency, significant evidence of fraud, voter disenfranchisement, violence and bias." One group of observers said that at one polling station in
Yenagoa, in the oil-rich south, where 500 people were registered to vote, more than 2,000 votes were counted. ==Results==