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And in the megacity of Lagos, streets normally clogged with traffic, vendors and pedestrians were desolate early Saturday. Young boys in one neighborhood took advantage of the deserted roads to set up soccer goalposts. "I don't think the same people can bring change in the next four years," Ita Emmanuel, 32, a social worker, said as he waited to cast his ballot for opposition candidate Ribadu. Many hope Saturday's vote will help Nigeria atone for years of marred polls since it became a democracy only 12 years ago. International observers roundly rejected Nigeria's 2007 poll as being rigged and marred by thuggery, though it represented the nation's first civilian-to-civilian transfer of power. Both Jonathan and the leader of the country's Independent National Electoral Commission have promised a free and fair vote Saturday. However, election workers have clamored for life insurance and police protection. During legislative elections last weekend, violence erupted in northeastern Nigeria, where a radical Islamic sect operates, leaving a hotel ablaze, a politician dead and a polling station and a vote-counting center bombed. On Friday night, Nigerian television networks began showing a video captured on YouTube of what appeared to be a woman at a polling place in last week's election pressing her thumb to a number of fraudulent votes. The individuals who posted the video did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press, which could not immediately verify the authenticity of the footage.
[Associated
Press;
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