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Politics

Nigeria to launch 2007, 2015 election investigations

April 2, 2018

Cambridge Analytica affiliate SCL Elections is to be investigated for improper involvement in elections and personal data-hacking of Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari. Charges may follow, a government spokesman said.

President Muhammadu Buhari at his inauguration in May 2015
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/S. Alamba

A Nigerian government committee is looking into claims that Strategic Communication Laboratories (SCL), which is linked to UK-based firm Cambridge Analytica, organized anti-election rallies to dissuade opposition supporters from voting in 2007, Garba Shehu, a spokesman for President Muhammadu Buhari, said on Monday.

The committee is also looking into claims that Buhari's personal data was hacked in 2015 when he was an opposition candidate in the elections, which he went on to win.

The investigation will examine whether the then-ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) broke Nigerian law "or infringed on the rights of other parties and their candidates."

PDP candidate Umaru Yar'Adua won the 2007 vote but died in 2010 and was succeeded by his deputy, Goodluck Jonathan. Jonathan's name was not on the list of 73 party members and officials accused by the Buhari government last Friday of looting government coffers between 2011 and 2015.

Read more: African users opine on Facebook's data scandal

Election campaigns from US to UK and Africa

Cambridge Analytica has been accused of improperly accessing data from Facebook to target voters ahead of the US presidential election in November 2016 and Britain's referendum on leaving the European Union in June 2016.

Read moreWhat role did Cambridge Analytica play in the Brexit vote?

"Global election management agency" SCL was set up in 1993 by Nigel Oakes, who serves as its CEO, to mine and analyze data which is then used to develop communications to target key audience groups with the aim of modifying behavior in line with the client's goals.

Christopher Wylie answered questions in Britain's House of CommonsImage: picture-alliance/dpa/Uncredited/PA

Whistle-blower Wylie

Canadian whistle-blower Christopher Wylie, who was a research director at SCL in 2014, released documents, including an SCL brochure, to a committee of the British House of Commons last week. The SCL brochure indicated that an option of bribing Nigerian voters in 2007 was discarded because the company believed voters had a contempt for politicians and would take the money and then vote for someone else.

Instead, according to the brochure presented by Wylie, the advice was to persuade opposition voters not to vote at all "by organizing anti-election rallies on the day of polling in opposition strongholds" conducted by local religious figures.

European Union observers reported the election fell "far short" of basic standards.

Read moreFacebook's Cambridge Analytica data scandal: What you need to know

Buhari won the 2015 election despite all campaigns against himImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/B. Curtis

Disinformation campaign 2015

In his testimony, Wylie said SCL and its partners interfered in elections in Nigeria and Kenya and the Caribbean.

Wylie said the Canadian consulting firm which he helped to launch — AggregateIQ — had worked with Cambridge Analytica in a disinformation campaign during the 2015 presidential election in Nigeria to discredit Buhari.

AIQ distributed "incredibly anti-Islamic and threatening" videos via social media portraying Muslims as violent and claiming Buhari would impose sharia law on the whole country, Wylie said.

Despite the campaign, Buhari won the 2015 elections and is still in power.

jm/tj (Reuters, AFP)

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