Port Harcourt - Nigeria's president Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday
took his re-election campaign to the Niger Delta, knowing that victory
in the key region will help to determine overall victory in next month's
vote.
The head of state, who is looking for a second, four-year
term, was in Port Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State, which is
controlled by the opposition and is seen as a pivotal election
battleground.
Rivers was run by Jonathan's Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) until the defection of its governor Rotimi Amaechi in late
2013 to the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC).
It
has since been a flashpoint for violence between supporters of the two
parties, with long-standing complaints from Amaechi about a personal
campaign against him by the government in Abuja.
Rising tensions
Rising tensions
Last
Saturday, unknown gunmen stormed and bombed the site of a planned APC
rally outside Port Harcourt in a sign of rising tensions and fears of a
repeat of widespread violence that hit polls in 2011.
There was a heavy presence of armed police and soldiers at the PDP rally venue before Jonathan's arrival.
As
a southerner and Christian from neighbouring Bayelsa state, he would
ordinarily be expected to count on widespread support from his kinsmen.
But
apparent momentum for the APC on the campaign trail - and predictions
that the party could even seize power - has given added importance to
control of the major urban centre.
Rivers State information
commissioner Ibim Semenitari said the APC was "not worried" about the
PDP challenge, even though Jonathan was from the Delta.
Poor performance
Poor performance
"It won't change anything to their favour," she told AFP.
"We
know we have the people, goodwill and track record of performance on
our side and these will be determining factors in the election.
"We have the required numbers of voters that will sustain us in power."
APC
chairperson for the state, Davies Ibiamu Ikanya, also said he was
confident of victory in the 14 February presidential and parliamentary
polls, as well as the governorship and state assembly vote two weeks
later.
"Rivers state, with Port Harcourt as capital, is strategic because it is the hub of the country's oil and gas sector," he said.
"President
Jonathan won massively in the state in 2011 but he has lost that
goodwill because of poor performance in office. The people are
clamouring for a change which is the APC is ready to bring about."
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